Healthy Waters Program
Healthy waters for salmon, whales, and people.
Working with Indigenous communities and organizational partners, Healthy Waters has built a community-oriented water pollution monitoring capacity that is providing insight into the quality of water for human consumption and for the habitats of salmon and whales.


Water is essential
Water is essential for life and is shared among all living things. Water creates and sustains healthy habitats for salmon and for killer whales, and provides drinking water for people. From pesticides to tire particles in salmon streams, from PCBs in killer whales to microplastics in zooplankton, from bacteria to lead in tap water – we are all impacted by water pollution. With 80% of ocean pollution coming from land, we are all connected to the ocean.
An invisible crisis
There is no single agency responsible for the pollution of water in all its forms, and there is an urgent need for a more comprehensive approach to monitoring water pollution in British Columbia. One that seamlessly captures and analyzes water along its journey from headwaters to homes, street runoff to rivers, and rivers to the ocean. And one that helps to identify solution-oriented priorities for all of us.
Community water monitoring
We are creating a new approach to monitoring water pollution by working with Indigenous Nations, communities, and governments. Watersheds are serving as the basis for characterizing water quality from mountain peaks to the sea, and providing an opportunity to identify pollution sources or land use practices that degrade fish habitat. We have launched our work in select watersheds that drain into the Fraser River and Salish Sea. Our goal is to combine a high quality analysis of water in all partnering watersheds, with a mix of engagement and capacity building activities as suited to each partner.


Help us build our mobile lab, Tracker
We are designing, converting and equipping a new cargo van to serve as a fully functional mobile laboratory. This vehicle, Tracker, will bring our scientific and technical capacity to watersheds in BC, and provide a community-oriented, mobile water pollution monitoring service in support of healthy ecosystems. Tracker will allow us to measure a variety of contaminants of concern in fish habitat.
Help us realize this dream, as we aim to deploy Tracker in the spring of 2024!
Contaminants of concern in water
Water pollution is complicated by the potential presence of thousands of contaminants. We have selected for analysis key classes of contaminants of historical, current, or emerging concern. These include basic pollutants as nutrients, fecal coliform, metals, but also complex and emerging pollutants categories such as hydrocarbons, pesticides, pharmaceuticals, perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), sucralose, alkyl phenols, and automobile tire-related chemicals. Some of these contaminant categories have dozens of individual compounds.
Our findings will provide an overall assessment of the health of fish habitat, inform the identification of sources and land use practices that are releasing harmful contaminants into water, and enable priority setting and solution initiatives that protect and restore fish habitat.


Spill response
Accidents happen, and our Healthy Waters team is ready to apply its expertise and capacity to the inevitable spill of oil or chemicals into BC waters. While prevention remains a top priority, experience shows that harmful products are inevitably lost from trains, trucks, and ships, with often significant impacts to fish, whales, and their habitats.
When a spill happens, expert intervention is critical to understand the threats to vulnerable species and Indigenous foods, and to reduce the potential for environmental damage. We are available for expert support during spills and related incidents, and will be conducting high resolution analysis of samples to inform source identification, protection of the environment and recovery after a spill.
We publish our findings in user-friendly reports, web articles and scientific publications.
Crossroads: Economics, Policy and the Future of Grizzly Bears in British Columbia (2004)
Crossroads assembles a wide range of information from a variety…
Journal of the Wolf Project – May 2003
This spring has sprung the 4th full season for the…
Foraging behaviour by gray wolves on salmon streams in coastal British Columbia
Darimont, C.T., T.E. Reimchen and P.C. Paquet. 2003. Foraging behaviour…
Preliminary Modeling of Deer Winter Range in Heiltsuk Territory of the Central Coast of British Columbia (2003)
The Raincoast Wolf Project has modeled winter range habitat for…
Ghost Runs: The Future of Wild Salmon on BC’s North and Central Coasts
Raincoast’s recently published report on BC’s salmon stocks says new…
Losing Ground: The decline in fish and wildlife law enforcement capability in BC and Alaska
Authored by Dr. Brian Horejsi, Losing Ground analyzes the respective…
Losing Ground: Executive Summary
Authored by Dr. Brian Horejsi, Losing Ground analyzes the respective…
Intra-hair stable isotope analysis implies seasonal shift to salmon in gray wolf diet
Darimont, C.T., and T.E. Reimchen. 2002. Intra-hair stable isotope analysis…