Water Conservation & Soft Path
Communities around the world are beginning to realize the economic, social and environmental benefits of water conservation. Planners and water managers are moving away from supply side solutions that problem solve by expanding reservoirs, building bigger pipes and digging deeper wells. Instead, communities are looking to long-term, comprehensive, integrated approaches to water management to ensure adequate quantities of high quality water for the future. This progression from supply side solutions to soft path planning can be visualized along a water management spectrum. The soft path for water goes beyond demand side management and its primary focus on efficiency by simultaneously targeting water-use habits, technologies, and practices to embed conservation as the foundation of governance and management.

The first three major WSP research reports address key issues surrounding urban water demand management and conservation. Flushing the Future and What the Experts Think are the examination and diagnosis of the urban water sector in Canada, while The Future in Every Drop provides a comprehensive prescription for developing sustainable urban water management. The Water Conservation Planning Guide for British Columbia's Communities applies findings from the first three WSP reports and summarizes core research on water-wise tools and practices in an easy to use step-by-step guidebook.
Discussion Papers, Briefing Notes and Case Studies
A briefing note submitted to federal Minister of Environment Jim Prentice. This initiative was a joint project of POLIS, the Alliance for Water Efficiency, FLOW Canada, and the Canadian Water and Wastewater Association (CWWA).
A report for the Capital Regional District's Water Advisory Committee outlining ways to apply the soft path in a municipal setting.
The WSP team contributed to a Foundation Research Bulletin on the topic of Water Conservation in Oliver, BC published by Smart Growth on the Ground in April 2006.
The POLIS Water Project and BC's Ministry of Water Land and Air Protection collaborated on this presentation at the CWRA conference "Water - Our Limiting Resource" in Kelowna, BC in February 23-25, 2005.
A briefing paper presented at a workshop for BC's Ministry of Water, Land and Air Protection on July 20, 2004. The WSP team presented POLIS' proposed action plans for the provincial government to implement urban water demand management.
This background paper for Environment Canada provides viable action plans with federal leadership for a comprehensive and long-term approach to freshwater management in Canada.
