Indigenous Wisdom Seeking + Research
KOW has an interdisciplinary/holistic approach to our work and being an Indigenous-led organization, we honour and acknowledge that Indigenous Peoples are inherent to this land and carry knowledge in their stories and songs, going back to the time of Creation.
In the work we do, we are looking at all of these aspects and bringing forward this knowledge to make decisions that are in line with the environment and with ecosystems. Below you’ll find more information about our past research projects.
Indigenous People and Fresh Water Management: Establishing a Canada Water Agency - Community Booklet
This survey will help us understand Indigenous Peoples' needs and concerns when it comes to Fresh Water, with the intention of helping to create change that will help protect fresh water for now and future generations.
A media conference and information session was held February 2, 2017 to discuss the Hay River Basin pollution investigation.
Alberta conservation groups have sent information on the decline of woodland caribou in Alberta to the people organizing the February 17 Washington Rally to stop Keystone XL. This information was added to the organizers list of reasons for President Obama to turn down this pipeline.
Keepers of the Athabasca has released a report by Helene Walsh, titled Alberta's Oil Sands Development is Not Responsible - Moratorium Needed.
A new report has been published in The Wilson Journal of Ornithology by Kevin P. Timoney and Robert A. Ronconi, showing annual bird mortality in the bitumen tailings ponds of northeastern Alberta greatly exceeds industry estimates.
A new report has been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by Erin N. Kelly, David W. Schindler, Peter V. Hodson and Jeffrey W. Short, linking high levels of toxic pollutants in the Athabasca River system to oilsands mining.
Researchers showed that the oil sands industry releases the 13 elements considered priority pollutants (PPE) under the US Environmental Protection Agency's Clean Water Act, via air and water, to the Athabasca River and its watershed.
The extent to which pollution from tar sands industrial activities in northeastern Alberta, Canada affects ecosystem and human health is a matter of growing concern that is exacerbated by uncertainty. In this paper we determine whether physical and ecological changes that result from tar sands industrial activities are detectable.
Recent research has revealed significant risks to huge underground freshwater channels from tar sands activity north of Lac La Biche and Cold Lake.