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Posted: December 15, 2018

An important year for the Columbia River Treaty

Letter to the Editor

It has been an important year (2018) in the history of the Columbia River Treaty.

This past spring, negotiators representing Canada (including B.C.) and the United States sat down together in Washington, D.C., to start talking about the future of the treaty and how it could be improved.

After subsequent negotiation meetings in Nelson and Portland, this week the conversation resumed in Vancouver, where negotiators discussed a variety of topics, including flood-risk management, scientific information on ecosystems, energy co-ordination and Libby Dam (pictured) operations.

This has also been a year in which the B.C. government has furthered its commitment to sustained engagement with Indigenous Nations affected by the Columbia River Treaty. We have been working closely with Canada and Columbia Basin Indigenous Nations to ensure that our common interests are addressed.

We have also strengthened our engagement with communities in the Columbia Basin through a series of local meetings. While talks with the United States continue, it’s essential that communities in the basin are consulted and that we keep them informed and give them a chance to make their voices heard.

The next round of Columbia River Treaty negotiation meetings will take place in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 27 and 28, 2019.

Katrine Conroy,

B.C. Minister Responsible for the Columbia River Treaty


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