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A University of Waterloo press release.

Ontario may seem to be a water secure region, but new research out of the University of Waterloo challenges the myth of water abundance in the Great Lakes watershed. 

Using a first-of-its-kind risk analysis, researchers connected water quality, quantity, regulations and public concern to obtain a more comprehensive picture of water security at the local level. The novel approach revealed that at least half of the studied watersheds had a moderate to high potential for risk.  

Water Economics class
Water economics students visit a local wastewater treatment plant.

In an era defined by the complex interplay of climate change, population growth, and globalization, efficient and equitable management of water resources is more crucial than ever. Water scarcity, pollution, and unequal access to water and sanitation have emerged as pressing issues, underscoring the necessity for a well-prepared workforce armed with a deep understanding of water economics.

On August 31st, the Applied Economics Teaching Resources (AETR) journal published a special issue entitled "Contemporary Adjustments Needed for Teaching Water Economics In Light of Challenges Facing the Water Sector and its Users".

The Water Institute is pleased to welcome six new faculty members who have joined over the past several months. 

Roy Brouwer, Executive Director of the Water Institute, offered a warm welcome to the incoming faculty members and expressed excitement for the expertise they’ll bring to enhance the Institute’s research initiatives. “I am delighted to welcome our new members and I look forward to exploring new collaborations with our network of water researchers from across campus!”

Join us in welcoming:

The Society of the Water Institute Graduate Students (SWIGS) are preparing for a new term filled with the best-in-class educational workshops, networking opportunities, social events, writing cafés, and community outreach activities they have become known for.

Annual elections for the new 2023-24 SWIGS executive committee were held in July and the results are in!

Join us in welcoming the incoming SWIGS executive team:

Resource economist and Water Institute executive director Dr. Roy Brouwer shares his expertise on the economic value of the Amazon rainforest and the recent vote by Ecuadorians to stop oil drilling with Time Magazine.

Ecuadorians voted on Sunday to stop an oil-drilling project in the Yasuni region of the Amazon with 59% voting yes on a proposition that will end the practice.

Dr. Roy Brouwer, a resource economist and executive director of the Water Institute at the University of Waterloo, who conducted a study on the economic value of the Amazon rainforest, says that Indigenous populations tend to place an extremely high value on the environmental sanctity of the forest. 

“They've lived in the Amazon for 11,000 years. How are you going to compensate these people by taking away their livelihood, cutting the forest and having them move out of the area where they live for 11,000 years? There's no monetary compensation for that.”

Read the full article in Time here.

Water Institute member Dr. Susan Elliott, Professor and University Research Chair in Medical Geography talks about the Women Rise Together Across the Life Course (Write-life) project.

Around the world, women and girls have disproportionately suffered from the socio-economic impacts of COVID-19. Women have borne the brunt of layoffs and loss of livelihoods, sacrificed their own health at the frontlines of the pandemic response and disproportionately shouldered the burden of the additional caregiving associated with COVID-19.

There are over two billion bikes in the world, and an equivalent number of people without safe drinking water. The leaders of a new University of Waterloo initiative, Water Cycles Expeditions, believe the connection between water and cycling is more than a mere coincidence. Next month, all are invited to join the Water Cycles Bikes and Blues Festival, held in Belwood, ON on September 9th to explore how cycling can reconnect people and water and help to empower communities to understand and address local water challenges.

Professor David Simakov is developing innovative technologies to solve complex environmental challenges

By Nicola Kelly, Faculty of Engineering

David Simakov, a professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering, is actively engaged in two bold interdisciplinary collaborations with Canadian and international partners to advance UN Sustainable Development Goals. These initiatives are focused on two areas: affordable clean energy and clean water. Simakov’s research focuses on the conversion of CO2 into renewable synthetic fuels and sustainable hydrogen generation.