First Nations Land Flood Protection Projects
Owen Sound Stormwater Facility Design & Construction
Smart_IoT_Stormwater Grid Partnerships
Great Lakes Protection & Restoration Initiatives
Innisfil 6th Line Urbanization & Road Upgrade
Belle Aire Community Landscape Architecture
Simcoe County Flood Forecasting & Warning System
Lake Erie Community Infrastructure Systems Design
Blue Mountains Watermain Design & Construction
Indigenous People Environmental Collaborations
Ontario Watershed Planning Guidance Manual
Emergency Management Services Facility
Cobourg Creek Assimilative Capacity Study
Waterloo Stormwater Management Facility Retrofit
Penetanguishene Main Street Construction.
Sudbury Waterfront & Trail Plan
Development Review Services (South Georgian Bay Region)
Cobourg LiDAR Floodline Mapping Study
Assessment of Options for Round Goby Removal
Lefroy-Belle Ewart Community Municipal Servicing Plan
Carp River Restoration Plan - Third Party Review
Water Budget and Stress Assessment Modeling
Town of Walkerton Floodline Mapping
Riverside Development and Minnesota Street Sanitary Sewer Improvements
Collingwood Industrial Area Sanitary Servicing Project
Graham and Wilmot Creeks Subwatershed Studies
Mississippi Valley Conservation Authority
On behalf of the Mississippi Valley Conservation Authority, we would like to thank you and your consulting firm for your technical capacity in completing the CANWET model with baseline conditions in our watershed.
I have worked closely with Greenland Consulting Engineers (Greenland) over the past two years as part of this project. We also value your staff’s ability to troubleshoot issues and respond on time. Greenland’s commitment, thoroughness, and professionalism have led to the success of this project with the addition of a new routine to the CANWET software.
It has been a great pleasure to work with Greenland and we look forward to using your expertise again in the near future.
Sobhalatha Kunjikutty, Ph.D, P.Eng.
Water Resources Engineer
Mississippi Valley Conservation Authority
February 19, 2015
University of Guelph
The reappearance of excessive nutrient loading in Lake Erie and the subsequent algae blooms is an extremely complex issue and is quite different in nature than the previous phosphorous loadings in the 1970s. Unlike the issue in the 1970s, there are far more sources adding nutrients to the late and these sources are diverse in nature ranging from rural to urban. In order to understand the nutrient loading, both in the temporal and spatial domains, more complex analytic and predictive tools are required in order to help policy make sound, science based, and defendable solutions.
The University of Guelph is uniquely positioned to help address the issues around Lake Erie with long standing core strengths in both the agricultural sector and the environmental field. In conjunction with our partner, Greenland Consulting Engineers, and their watershed evaluation tool (CANWETTM), we believe that we have the engineering and technology to extrapolate CANWETTM from the watershed level up to the lake basin level and provide decision-making support for the entire Lake Erie basin.
Hussein Abdullah, Ph.D., P. Eng.
Director, School of Engineering
University of Guelph
January, 26 2015
Interdisciplinary Centre on Climate Change
We are pleased to write in full support of the Canada-Europe Partnership, particularly the collaboration of the Interdisciplinary Centre on Climate Change (IC3) and the
Partners for Action (P4A) network to support incorporation of climate change considerations in the project and assist in testing FLOODVIEW with Canadian municipalities and insurers.
P4A and IC3 are dedicated to consideration of climate change in Canada’s approach to flood risk management, and dissemination of knowledge and best practices to the insurance industry, government decision-makers, and the Canadian public. We look forward to partnering with you to identify effective solutions to minimize urban flooding.
Dr. Daniel Scott
Executive Director
Interdisciplinary Centre on Climate Change
Faculty of Environment University of Waterloo
October 20, 2015