Managing Flooding and Erosion at the Watershed-Scale: Guidance to Support Governments Using Nature-Based Solutions

Watershed Report Cover

by Joanna Eyquem

April 2023

This paper recommends 1) development of consistent provincial approaches to integrated watershed management, 2) direction of funding for river flood management to high-risk watersheds and 3) routine consideration of nature-based solutions for river flood and erosion management. Several opportunities for standardization to support these three recommendations are also identified.


PRESS RELEASE

April 26, 2022

Seeking upstream solutions: new CSA Group report turns to nature to limit Canada’s costliest climate impact – flooding.

The report presents three key recommendations:

  1. Develop consistent provincial approaches to integrated watershed management. Canada has best practices for watershed management that support nature-based solutions in some provinces. However, approaches vary significantly between provinces. Ontario is the only province where watershed-scale organizations (Conservation Authorities) have a legal mandate that combines river flooding, erosion, and nature-based conservation. This can serve to inform other provinces.
  2. Direct funding for river flood management to high-risk watersheds. Currently, funding is often directed to municipal governments that may not have the jurisdiction to implement nature-based solutions at the scale of the watershed. Going forward, projects funded at a local scale should be part of a watershed flood strategy.
  3. Routinely consider nature-based solutions for river flood and erosion management alongside built infrastructure. Nature-based solutions represent a credible choice and should be considered as a viable alternative to built solutions for providing long-term benefits to people and nature.

The report also identifies how future standards could support implementation of the three recommendations, including to support consistent approaches to watershed management planning, selection of flood risk options and the use of nature-based solutions that would enhance and support existing standards to mitigate flood risk.

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