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Status and
trends in stream restrictions
are indicative of the intensity
of water use, pressures on water
supply and the intensity of
water management.
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State of Environment Reporting
Status
and Trends in Water Use
Percentage
of Licensed Stream Length that has Water Allocation
Restrictions by Decade
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SOURCE:
Ministry ofSustainable Resource Management, 2001. NOTES: Each bar
represents the percentage of licensed stream length that had water
allocation restrictions during that decade. The bar for 2000 represents
the percentage of licensed stream length that had allocation restrictions
during 2000 and 2001. The word stream covers all freshwater
in British Columbia including rivers and lakes. Restrictions apply
to all water upstream of the restriction.
Status
and trends in water use
- The
provincial government places water allocation
restrictions on streams when the demand
for new water licenses threatens the human
and non-human users of the water supply.
- The
percentage of licensed stream length that
has water allocation restrictions is indicative
of the intensity of water use in the province,
pressures on water supply and the intensity
of water management that is required to
maintain that water supply.
- Approximately
28% of licensed stream length in the province
is currently restricted and has been since
the 1990s.
- Water
use restrictions have been increasing
since the 1920s with the biggest rise
in restrictions occurring during the 1980s.
This is likely due to the recognition
of instream flow requirements for fish.
Prior to the 1980s, generally only human
requirements received consideration.
- Stream
restrictions are used as a management
tool to ensure that water supply in the
province is maintained. Restrictions may
range from including minimum fish flow
clauses in a water
license, to suspending the issuance of
any further licenses on a water body.
Why
is it important?
- Water
is recognized as natural capital, a resource
that increases the well being and natural
wealth of a nation.
- Water
has numerous and often competing users.
These include human uses such as agriculture,
recreation, industry processes and waste
disposal; domestic uses, including drinking
water; and non-human uses such as habitat
for aquatic organisms.
- While
British Columbia is perceived to have
an abundance of water, it is not always
accessible. The majority of new license
applications are for water bodies with
existing licenses.
- Demand
for water influences stream flows and
water levels. Demand tends to be highest
in summer, when water supplies are usually
at their lowest.
- Since
1950, the global renewable freshwater
supply per person has fallen 58% as the
worlds population increased from
2.5 to 6 billion.
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