Canada Water Agency's 2025-2026 Departmental Plan: At a glance

A departmental plan describes a department’s priorities, plans and associated costs for the upcoming three fiscal years.

Key priorities

The Canada Water Agency’s top priorities for 2025-26 are as follows: 

Highlights

In 2025-26, total planned spending (including internal services) for the Canada Water Agency is $84,831,831 and total planned full-time equivalent staff (including internal services) is 223. For complete information on the Canada Water Agency’s total planned spending and human resources, read the Planned spending and human resources section of the full plan.

The following provides a summary of the department’s planned achievements for 2025-26 according to its approved Departmental Results Framework. A Departmental Results Framework consists of a department’s core responsibilities, the results it plans to achieve, and the performance indicators that measure progress toward these results.

Core responsibility: Freshwater Stewardship

Planned spending: $72,675,393 

Planned human resources: 165

Departmental results:

  • Canada has healthy freshwater ecosystems
  • Partners and stakeholders are meaningfully engaged in freshwater stewardship

Strengthening federal freshwater leadership to ensure Canada meets its growing freshwater challenges is a priority for the federal government. Fresh water sustains life and is an irreplaceable natural resource. It is fundamental to the Canadian economy, communities, human health and well-being, and the environment. It is an integral part of Canada’s national identity and Indigenous cultures and sacred traditions. However, climate change, land-use change, pollution, and other factors are driving significant changes in freshwater quality and quantity in Canada. The Government of Canada is taking action to address these interlinked freshwater challenges, including establishing the Canada Water Agency and making major investments in a strengthened Freshwater Action Plan. Effective, large-scale freshwater stewardship requires shared goals, coordinated responses and funding, and collaborative decision-making. Through national and regionally responsive actions, convening and collaborating with freshwater partners and stakeholders, and policy leadership, the Canada Water Agency is working to ensure the country’s nationally significant freshwater ecosystems are clean and sustainably managed.

More information about Freshwater Stewardship can be found in the full plan.

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