Public invited to Columbia River Treaty info session

The B.C. government will host a virtual information session about the recent Columbia River Treaty (CRT) agreement-in-principle (AIP).

Canada and the United States reached a milestone in their negotiations to modernize the CRT in early July.

“Modernizing the Columbia River Treaty is a once-in-a-generation chance to look beyond the original treaty’s goals of power generation and flood-risk management,” said Katrine Conroy, B.C. Minister Responsible for the CRT.

The AIP is a series of guiding principles that will be used to guide the finalized version of the Treaty.

The AIP ensures the new treaty will have pre-planned flood control and cooperation on hydropower along the Columbia River.

Negotiators also agreed to new provisions including increased flexibility for how B.C. operates its treaty dams, ecosystem health, restoring salmon populations, Indigenous cultural values, adaptive management and collaborative engagement on Libby Dam operations.

The virtual information session will go ahead on Sept. 17 from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Pacific time (7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Mountain time).

Members of the Canadian negotiation team will be available to provide details and answer your questions about the AIP.

You can register here and submit questions to [email protected] by Sept. 8.


Be the first to know! Don’t miss out on breaking news and daily updates in your area. Sign up to MyKootenayNow News Alerts.

Continue Reading

cjat Now playing play

ckqr Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Crime declines in downtown Trail

The move of the temporary homeless shelter to Riverside Dr has reduced the amount crime in downtown Trail.

Updated: Search warrant yields firearms, drugs, cash and stolen property

The Highway 3B between Warfield and Rossland is now re-opened in both directions.

Canada Infrastructure Bank backs B.C. Ferries’ China-built vessels with $1B loan

The Canada Infrastructure Bank is providing B.C. Ferries an additional $1 billion in low-interest loans to support service upgrades – including the purchase of four new vessels from a Chinese shipyard.

No injuries after early morning blast outside MLA Bowinn Ma’s Vancouver office

North Vancouver RCMP say no one was injured in an early morning explosion outside an office building in North Vancouver.

Rustad faces leadership vote as B.C. Conservatives feud with splinter group

About 9,000 B.C. Conservative Party members are eligible to cast votes this summer in a leadership review of B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad.
- Advertisement -