You are invited to join the discussion!
The NSWA is engaging with community leaders who live and do business within the North Saskatchewan Watershed. Discussion began in February 2009 with Rural Municipalities. A second meeting was held with this group in December 2009. We are now opening up these meetings to other community leaders in the watershed. You are invited to join the discussions taking place in each of the Headwaters, Central and Downstream sub-regions.
Please go to our Planning Forums section for more details...
The State of the Saskatchewan River Basin
Excerpted from Partners for the Saskatchewan River Basin
Originating on the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains of Alberta and Montana, the Saskatchewan River Basin extends from the continental divide through Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba to a vast inland sea – Lake Winnipeg, the eleventh largest freshwater lake in the world. The name Saskatchewan is taken from the Cree Indian word, kisiskâciwanisîpiy, meaning ‘swift-flowing river’. Although it is part of the larger Saskatchewan-Nelson system, which flows into Hudson Bay, the Saskatchewan River system itself is the fourth longest in North America. The river travels about 1940 kilometres from the Rocky Mountains to Lake Winnipeg. It drains a surface area of some 405,864 square kilometres – almost the size of France.
Purpose
This report is aimed at satisfying, at least in part, the goal that persons who are making decisions and recommendations concerning the waters and associated resources within the Saskatchewan River Basin do so with an understanding of and an appreciation for the entire basin. One of the objectives is to examine the overall condition of the basin by assembling existing information so that it can be reviewed by groups throughout the basin. This will contribute to integrated water resources management in the basin.
The report pays particular attention to hydrology, water use, water quality, and biodiversity aspects of the basin. The report uses currently available data and information. No new data were obtained for this report although some of the interpretations of existing data are new. To the extent possible, information from all basin jurisdictions is brought to a common language and terminology.
Water management in the Saskatchewan River Basin is complex. To assist a better understanding of the agencies and organizations having some responsibility for water management, the report identifies and describes water-related institutional arrangements in the basin.
Downloadable Documents
Summary Document
Large Basin Map (note - large file, may take a while to download. approx 36MB)
State of the Basin Report (Full Report)
Chapter 3 - Institutional Arrangements
Chapter 5 - North Saskatchewan River
Chapter 8 - Bow & Oldman River
Chapter 9 - South Saskatchewan River
Chapter 10 - Saskatchewan River
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