BCBusiness

April 2015 30 Under 30

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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A t the time B.C.'s Water Act was written, Sir Wilfrid Laurier was prime minister and Ty Cobb was still the home-run king. A lot has changed since 1909, of course: B.C.'s population has grown from 350,000 to over 4.6 mil- lion, while the level of industrial activity has taken off. Now, cli- mate change is putting further pressure on what the provincial government describes as B.C.'s "most precious resource." And while, on a global scale, B.C. is water rich, we're also water hogs. Regions including the Okanagan and the Peace River have seen water resources taxed to the limit by the demands of a thirsty population and industry. For the past sev- eral summers, community mem- bers in the Cowichan Valley on Vancouver Island have had to transport salmon by trucks up the trickling Cowichan River to save spawning chinook. "This sort of thing, I think, is probably going to happen a lot more fre- quently—having very dry peri- ods during the summer where surface water resources are threatened because of drought," says Diana Allen, a professor of hydrogeology at SFU. Just how much consumer and industrial demand has increased is unknown. The most glaring shortfall of the century-old legis- lation is the failure to track total freshwater use from both surface water sources—lakes and rivers— and groundwater from beneath John E Marriott (gEtty iMagEs) april 2015 BCBusiness 15 t he mon t hly in for mer TMı "The idea of breaking bread carries a lot of significance. A meal can become a social endeavour to bring your employees together" – Cori Maedel, p.25 "this is probably going to happen more: very dry periods in summer where surface water resources are threatened" –Diana Allen, SFU prof A p r i l 2 0 15 Water, Water Everywhere? N a t u r a l R e s o u r c e s B.C.'s water resources are taxed to the limits. new legislation hopes to ease the strain–in no small part by making industry pay more by Dene Moore INSIDE Sci-fi Central ... Pot, then and now ... making the most of mentors ... A free lunch + more ... OIL AND WATER B.C. oil and gas operations used 1.9 million cubic metres of water from Northern B.C.'s Liard River over the first nine months of 2014

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