Beaver Damn Analogue

Natural Infrastructure for Water Supply and Drought Mitigation

Water supply is strained under increasing demand and declining natural water storage capacity. Natural infrastructure can help retain and detain water to capture, store, and gradually release snowmelt and rainfall across a landscape.

The Canadian Prairies face growing water supply and drought challenges, driven by drained and altered landscapes, which reduces water storage capacity. Water demand keeps rising from population growth, industry, and agriculture. Climate change adds to the complexity, expected to make droughts longer and more intense.

Changes in water availability have far-reaching consequences—affecting communities, industry, agriculture, and natural ecosystems. Droughts build slowly, often lasting years, and are among the costliest climate hazards. The 2001–2002 drought in Canada caused a CAD 5.8 billion drop in gross domestic product, with the most significant impacts being to the Prairie provinces largely due to agricultural production loss, estimated at CAD 3.6 billion. 

Traditional grey water infrastructure, like reservoirs, water pipes, and pumping stations, are essential to securing reliable water supply, especially during drought. These systems store, move, and treat the water communities and economic sectors depend on. Many grey infrastructure systems are decades old, designed based on historical climate conditions, undersized, or poorly located, and they may be due for upgrade.

Nature is often overlooked—not only for its potential to store water through natural systems, but for its essential role in building resilience across landscapes. From wetlands and floodplains to healthy soils and beaver dam analogues, we can store more water, slow runoff, recharge groundwater, and support baseflows. While it can’t prevent drought, it buffers the impacts—boosting resilience during dry periods, providing critical water to Prairie farms, and supporting the health of watersheds.