Yukon River Inter-Tribal Watershed Council

The Yukon River Inter-Tribal Watershed Council (YRITWC) is made up of 66 First Nations and tribes in Alaska and Canada, living along the Yukon River.[1] The council serves as a lobby group for protecting and cleaning up the Yukon.[2]

Vision

"To be able to drink water directly from the Yukon River."

History

The YRITWC was founded in 1997, Indigenous governments living within the watershed come together and pledged to collaborate to give to profer solutions to various environmental governing authority issues impacting the environmental quality of the River and its watershed. These groups from Yukon Territory and British Columbia, Canada and Alaska signed a treaty called the Yukon River Watershed Inter-Tribal Accord ("the Accord") which defined the purpose of the YRITWC and established a council. YRITWC is a multi-government advisory, advocacy, and monitoring group with a two-fold mission "to protect the environmental integrity of the River's watershed and to preserve the cultural vitality of the indigenous communities that are dependent upon and part of the watershed".[3]

Programs

The Yukon River Inter-tribal council are focused on 5 main areas- mining, water quality, brownfields, solid waste and science. YRITWC promotes the use of indigenous traditional knowledge in explaining the science and in developing programs to combat the twin threats of climate change and environmental degradation in the Yukon River Basin.[4]

A new study has shown melting permafrost is changing the chemistry of the Yukon River, just one of many climate-related changes affecting the Yukon and beyond. This research led by scientists from the USGS. tested water samples collected from the Yukon and Tanana rivers over a period of thirty years. Results showed that melting and refreezing of upper layers of the permafrost cause ground water to percolate deeper into the soil and carry more materials into rivers. Tests show elevated level of minerals like calcium, magnesium and sulphates, though not necessarily harmful to humans but could possibly become a health hazard with time. Mercury, a powerful neurotoxin, is another substance that is being monitored because of its health effects.

Funding

YRITWC receives its funding from both government agencies and private initiatives it also accepts donations from members of the public.

References

  1. Power, Brian (July 9, 2008). "Energy challenges and opportunities within the Yukon River watershed". Capital City Weekly.
  2. Katz, Paul (November 8, 2005). "Honoring Nations Awards 14 Tribal Initiatives". The Harvard Crimson.
  3. Lawrence Duffy, La’Ona De Wilde, Katie Spellman, et al., “Resilience and Adaptation: Yukon River Watershed Contaminant Risk Indicators,” Scientifica, vol. 2018, Article ID 8421513, 12 pages, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/8421513.
  4. Nicole J. Wilson, Indigenous water governance: Insights from the hydrosocial relations of the Koyukon Athabascan village of Ruby, Alaska, Geoforum, Volume 57, 2014, Pages 1-11, ISSN 0016-7185, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2014.08.005.
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