Abstract
The Habitat Conference in Vancouver exposed the issue of interjurisdictional cooperation and the need for clean water supply on a global scale, a situation reflected also in the Great Lakes Basin. Progress under the 1972 Canada-United States Agreement on Great Lakes Water Quality is reviewed. New contaminants are complicating clean-up attempts, but new tools are being developed to monitor and regulate such threats the federal contaminants legislation, Ontario ’s environmental assessment act and regional planning and development strategies, exemplified by Nanticoke.
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