Climate Resilience

Prince Edward County, Ontario, Canada.

Vital Signs Data
flooding - climate change

Updated December 21, 2023

The new Official Plan, beginning July 8, 2021, includes a number of key policies aimed at protecting natural heritage systems and protecting agricultural resources.

Climate change

PEC is experiencing the early effects of climate change – increasing weather volatility, wind storms, increasingly frequent polar vortices and ice storms; hotter, longer droughts, unpredictable thaws and extraordinary flooding events and predictable long-term effects of hotter climate and intermittent, sustained droughts and flooding like desertification, soil erosion and greater risk of grass and forest fires. (Prince Edward County, Climate change resolution, May 16, 2019, Item 6.11)

 

The average temperature in the Quinte Region is expected to rise by approximately 2 to 3 degrees Celsius by 2050 if climate change is left unabated, resulting in more frequent extreme weather events and risk to humans, wildlife and agriculture. (Research Gate. Recent climate change in the Prince Edward County winegrowing region)

Municipal action on climate change

Municipalities are tasked with land-use planning and management and are responsible for more than half of Canada’s infrastructure. They’re also the ones dealing most directly with the effects of extreme weather on their populations. Prince Edward County is forming a new Climate Action Plan Working Group under the Environmental Advisory Committee, which will focus on the community-based action plan (2023).

 

Municipal governments currently have direct or indirect control over approximately 44 per cent of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.  (Federation of Canadian Municipalities.  Partners for Climate Protection) Prince Edward County Council has committed to a 20 percent reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions generated as a result of the municipality’s operations and services by 2033, using 2019 as the baseline year. Council also endorsed the vision of the municipality becoming carbon neutral by 2050. (Quinte News)

Check the County’s Environment and Sustainability Resource Hub for information about the response to the climate emergency and how you can be part of the solution.

 

thecounty.ca/sustainability

Will the Great Lakes region become a climate haven?

With plenty of fresh water and a moderate climate, the Great Lakes region could be seen as a climate haven. Already, two American cities, Buffalo NY and Duluth MN have been declared as climate havens, and Toronto ON is looked at as a model for development that is preparing for the mass migration of popuations from areas most affected by climate change — coastal flooding, heat extremes, wildfires.

 

What will it take to build communities that can withstand emergencies to come? What economic opportunities and challenges are presented by this prospect?

Examining the environmental reasons why the Great Lakes region could provide security in a climate-destabilized future is Steve Paikin of TVO’s The Agenda, along with a panel of three environmental experts. 

Weather & Environment

Water quality

Lake Ontario | Bay of Quinte | Picton Bay | Watershed

Lake Ontario
About 90% of water samples taken over the last 10 years from the Great Lakes contain microplastic levels that are unsafe for wildlife, a new peer-reviewed paper from the University of Toronto finds. (The Guardian, 2023) More than 10,000 tonnes of plastic are dumped into the Great Lakes every year—they now have a higher concentration of plastic pollution than the ocean garbage patches. The Great Lakes contain 84 per cent of North America’s surface water. The federal government has banned six single use plastics in 2022 and has a goal of eliminating plastic pollution by 2030. (Environmental Defence)

Climate change is disrupting weather patterns, exacerbating water scarcity and contaminating water supplies – leading to increased competition for water, even conflict.

Nature Canada is proposing a National Marine Conservation Area in Lake Ontario that could protect up to 5,000 square kilometres of freshwater and shoreline habitat. (Nature Canada)

Bay of Quinte
The Bay of Quinte Remediation Action Plan (BQRAP) announced in February 2022 that 8 of 11 serious environmental challenges have now been addressed and are “now deemed unimpaired” raising hopes that restrictions on fish & wildlife consumption will be fully alleviated.  www.bqrap.ca

Picton Bay
Save Picton Bay was formed to raise awareness of the impact of Picton Terminals on the Prince Edward County brand, local environment, drinking water and infrastructure. facebook.com/groups/SavePictonBay

Quinte Conservation Watershed Report Card 2023 findings: (Quinte Conservation, Watershed Report Card 2023)

PE Groundwater (2023)

  • All of the groundwater monitoring wells met the Ontario Drinking Water Standard for nitrate and nitrite concentrations.
    • All except one of the groundwater monitoring wells met the Ontario Drinking Standard for chloride.
    • Private wells may vary significantly from that of proximate monitoring wells in their drinking water quality, and should be inspected and tested regularly.

PEC Surface Water Quality (2023)

PEC rating is C Fair. Surface water quality grades are calculated using concentrations of phosphorus and the health of the benthic invertebrate communities at Provincial Water Quality Monitoring and Quinte Conservation monitoring stations.

Forest Conditions (2023)
Environment Canada recommends a minimum of 30% forest cover, 10% interior, and 50% riparian forest cover.

PEC rating is B Good.

  • Approximately 32% of the Prince Edward Region Watershed is forested and 7% is forest interior. Forest covers approximately 44% of the riparian areas in this watershed.

Wetland Cover (2023)

PEC rating is A Excellent.  Approximately 19% of the Prince Edward Region Watershed is covered by wetlands. Watersheds with higher water quality grades tend to have a greater abundance of forests and wetlands, which can aid in the filtering of surface water.

Green spaces

Nature & Conservation

Ecologically significant areas

Ostrander Crown Land Block and Point Petre Provincial Wildlife Area are two ecologically significant areas along the southern shore of Prince Edward County. They are currently designated as provincial Crown land, managed by the Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry. The South Shore is recognized as a unique and globally significant Important Bird and Biodiversity Area and an International Monarch Butterfly Reserve. In 2023, Monarch Point Conservation Reserve now permanently protects almost 4,000 acres of PEC’s rare and fragile South Shore.

Conservation organizations

The Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) is Canada’s leading land conservation organization and to date has worked with partners to protect over 2,200 acres in Prince Edward County. The NCC has made the South Shore a conservation priority as pressure to develop continues to increase. The NCC is currently working with a local landowner who donated the McMahon Bluff (241 acres) to the NCC to make the property an Ecological Gift. natureconservancy.ca

Quinte Conservation is one of 36 conservation authorities and covers a region of over 6,000 square kilometres, including Prince Edward County. Quinte Conservation conducts foundational watershed management activities that include monitoring, data collection, green infrastructure, and education outreach. quinteconservation.ca

The Hastings Prince Edward Land Trust (HPELT) owns ten properties in its catchment area and protects nearly 850 acres of land in the County. hpelt.org

The Ontario Farmland Trust (OFT) helps to protect Ontario’s quickly disappearing farmland. The OFT recently entered into its first conservation easement agreement in PEC with the protection of the Hudson’s 210 acre property near Black Creek. The farm will now be protected in perpetuity for sustainable agriculture. The Hudson’s farm also holds a great deal of biodiversity that provides habitats for animals, including the at-risk Blanding Turtle. ontariofarmlandtrust.ca

Prince Edward Point Bird Observatory (PEPtBO) is a bird observatory located in the Prince Edward Point National Wildlife Area, located on Prince Edward Point in the south-east corner of PEC. The National Wildlife Area was established in 1978 covering 560 hectares. The South Shore is an internationally recognized Important Bird and Biodiversity area (IBA).and 750,000 migrating birds rest on the island in Spring and Fall. PEPtBO’s mandate is to monitor, report on and promote analysis of bird migration and to act as official caretaker of this area. peptbo.ca

The South Shore Joint Initiative works to permanently protect and improve biodiversity along Prince Edward County’s internationally recognized South Shore, Canada’s largest and last undeveloped Lake Ontario natural landscape and shoreline. www.ssji.ca

Friends of South Shore are citizens keeping Prince Edward County’s South Shore rural, natural, wild! friendsofsouthshore.ca

Friends of Sandbanks Park is a charitable, non-profit organization that supports Park staff in the maintenance, enhancement and protection of this unique natural wonder. friendsofsandbanks.org

Friends of Wellers Bay is a board of volunteers dedicated to enhancing the enjoyment of the waters and beaches of the bay. friendsofwellersbay.org

Prince Edward County Field Naturalists provide an educational forum for the study, promotion, appreciation, and conservation of the flora and fauna of the County. facebook.com/Prince-Edward-County-Field-Naturalists

The County Sustainability Group is involved in examining the specific challenges we will inevitably face because of global warming, climate change, peak oil, and resource constraints.
https://countysustainabilitygroupcom.wordpress.com/about-us-2/

Transition PEC was formed for the purpose of building community resilience in Prince Edward County.They have presented workshops, films and speaker events which are directed towards raising public awareness about the inevitable economic and social changes we are facing due to natural resource depletion, climate change, and their economic consequences.
facebook.com/groups/209072755788344/

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

SDG 13. Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts
SDG 15. Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage trees, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss.

Also see …

Protection of farm land

Every day in Ontario, we lose 319 acres

Climate Resilience

The new Official Plan, beginning July 8, 2021, includes

Environment – Actions

Environment: Advancing well-being together