Cottagers fume as Lake Huron sinks

(ON) The Toronto Star – Erosion of the St. Clair River has caused the water level in Lake Huron to drop by 12 centimetres over the past half-century, but nothing should be done about it, a much-anticipated binational Great Lakes Water study concludes. That’s because — contrary to claims by a group of cottagers — the river’s erosion was caused naturally by one treacherous ice jam in 1984, not by dredging. And since then, the river’s flow has returned to normal. “Given the fact (the erosion) is not ongoing, it’s definitely stabilized and it’s not human-driven, there isn’t any real compelling case to go to remediation at this time,” said Ted Yuzyk, co-chair of the study on the St.

Potential water raids unite Great Lakes states; adequacy of protection questioned

Matthew Cimitile

Once seen as a region of endless water, the Great Lakes watershed is under stress thanks to inadequate water management, unrestrained growth and other pressures. Climate change stands only to make conditions worse, experts say, as increasingly thirsty neighbors look for additional water and changing weather harms quality and supply. Out of such gloom, however, has emerged what analysts describe as a most significant feat: Earlier this year, after almost a decade of talks, local and state leaders throughout the Great Lakes set aside differences and agreed to coordinate the protection of this vast but finite resource. The Great Lakes Compact, signed into law in October, controls transportation of Great Lakes water to parched areas outside the region. Thrust for this regional resolution came via fears of a 1998 plan by a Canadian firm to transport tankers of Lake Superior water to arid parts of Asia.