Saturday, June 27, 2026

Water Storage Potential in Alberta's Thalwegs and Paleochannels



Executive Summary

Alberta sits atop a vast, largely unmapped underground network of buried valleys — the subsurface imprints of ancient river systems carved before and during glaciation. These paleochannels, mapped as thalwegs in the province's geological survey data, host some of the most productive aquifers in the Canadian Prairies. As surface water supplies face growing pressure from climate change, population growth, and agricultural demand, these subsurface corridors represent a strategically important — though technically complex — water storage frontier.


1. What Are Thalwegs and Paleochannels in Alberta?

A thalweg is technically the deepest line along a valley or watercourse — the path a stream would follow. In Alberta's geological usage, thalwegs refer specifically to the mapped traces of the lowest points of bedrock valleys, whether those valleys are currently occupied by rivers or are entirely buried under glacial drift. The Alberta Geological Survey (AGS) has developed one of the most comprehensive provincial datasets of these features.[^1]

In 2018, the AGS published an updated GIS shapefile (Digital Data 2018-0001) that includes over 1,350 new valley thalwegs, representing more than 50 years of cumulative mapping. This dataset captures not only pre-glacial buried valleys but also bedrock channels incised by glacial meltwater and even modern river valleys that have cut into bedrock. Each thalweg is attributed with fields describing its age, genesis, the catchment stream it belongs to, and the depositional basin it drains into, making the dataset a powerful resource for hydrogeological planning.[^1]

Paleochannels are ancient river valleys no longer occupied by flowing surface water. In Alberta, they formed primarily during preglacial (Tertiary) times and were subsequently buried under thick glacial till and outwash during repeated Pleistocene glaciations. The sediment infill — typically sequences of sand and gravel grading upward to silt and clay — is what makes them hydrogeologically important. The buried valleys exist as a province-wide network, connecting from the foothills in the west to the Saskatchewan border in the east.[2][3]


2. Geological Character and Distribution

2.1 Scale and Dimensions

Alberta's buried paleochannels vary enormously in scale:

  • Width: from less than 0.4 km (¼ mile) to more than 16 km (10 miles)[^2]
  • Depth of incision: typically 15–90 m below the surface, though incision can exceed 100–150 m in major systems[4][2]
  • Length: individual channels extend from less than 10 km to more than 200 km[^5]
  • Fill sediments: sand and gravel sequences, sometimes exceeding 14 feet (4.3 m) of permeable material in productive sections, overlain by finer-grained silts and clays[^6]

In the Athabasca Oil Sands region north of Fort McMurray, channel widths can range from less than 500 m to over 30 km for the largest preglacial valley systems. The buried valleys in the Cold Lake area are particularly large, containing a thick and complex assemblage of sediments with many regionally mappable aquifers.[7][8][^5]

2.2 Key Named Paleochannel Systems

Several major paleochannel systems have been identified and at least partially characterized across Alberta:

Valley / System

Location

Notes

Beverly Valley

Central Alberta / Industrial Heartland

Fining-upward Empress Formation gravels sands silts; yields 160–650 m³/day[^9]

Onoway Valley

West of Edmonton

Associated with North Saskatchewan drainage[^10]

Vegreville Valley

Central-east Alberta

Extends toward Saskatchewan border[^11]

Drayton Valley System

West-central Alberta

Part of North Saskatchewan basin buried network[^11]

Edson Buried Valley

West-central Alberta

Tested at 210 imp. gal/min sustained yield for three town wells[^6]

Calgary Buried Valley Aquifer (CBVA)

Canmore–Calgary corridor

Ancient glacially carved channel; well yield 2.5–3.0 m³/min (4,000 m³/day)[^12]

Muskwa, Red Earth, Gods Valleys

Northeast Alberta

Major buried valleys in Peerless Lake area[^13]


The Beverly Channel Aquifer is particularly well-characterized. Originating in the Rocky Mountains, the pre-glacial Beverly Valley trends east toward its confluence with the Helina Valley near Cold Lake. The aquifer material consists of Empress Formation preglacial deposits — a fining-upward sequence from gravels to sands and silts — and has been monitored at Fort Saskatchewan since 2005 by a 13-well network maintained by the Northeast Capital Industrial Association. Water quality is generally good, with total dissolved solids (TDS) typically ranging from less than 500 mg/L to about 1,000 mg/L in most locations.[^9]

2.3 Geological Origins

Alberta's paleochannels were formed through two primary processes:

  • Preglacial fluvial erosion — Tertiary-era rivers carved broad, deep valleys into the bedrock (primarily Cretaceous shale and sandstone of the Paskapoo and Wapiti Formations). These preglacial channels are generally wider and filled with Empress Group sands and gravels.[^8]
  • Subglacial meltwater erosion — Glacial meltwater under high hydraulic head cut narrower, deeply incised, and often discontinuous tunnel channels directly into bedrock. These features are commonly narrow, anastomosing, and unconstrained by the pre-existing topography.[^3]

Subsequent glacial deposition of till and clay effectively masked nearly all surface expression of these valleys, making them invisible in ground-level surveys and largely detectable only through borehole drilling and geophysical methods.[^3]


3. Water Storage Potential

3.1 Natural Groundwater Storage

Alberta's buried valleys function as strip aquifers — long, narrow conduits of permeable sand and gravel bounded by low-permeability till and bedrock. In the North Saskatchewan basin alone, the province-wide buried valley network is recognized as one of the most significant groundwater reservoirs, but the total stored volume remains largely unquantified at a provincial scale.[14][11]

Key confirmed yields from documented systems:

  • Edson Buried Valley: Single wells capable of sustained yields up to 125 imperial gallons per minute (imp. gal/min); three town wells combined produced 210 imp. gal/min on a long-term basis[^6]
  • Beverly Channel Aquifer (Fort Saskatchewan): Yields of 160 to 650 m³/day per well[^9]
  • Calgary Buried Valley Aquifer (CBVA): A recently drilled MD of Bighorn well at 190 m depth yielded 2.5–3.0 m³/min (approximately 4,000 m³/day) with minimal drawdown[^12]
  • Water Wells That Last (Alberta Agriculture): Buried valley wells can produce yields sometimes exceeding 300+ gallons per minute (gpm)[^15]
  • Fort McMurray area channels: Source wells show high deliverability due to groundwater mounding effects[^5]

A 2022 study from the University of Alberta used MODFLOW numerical groundwater flow modelling to examine pumping scenarios for three buried valley aquifers near Edmonton. The study found that each aquifer displayed unique hydrogeological responses to pumping — a pattern expected of narrow strip aquifers, where drawdown propagates much farther and much faster than in broad sheet aquifers of equivalent transmissivity. The research was motivated by Edmonton's need for alternative water sources should the North Saskatchewan River face drought or contamination events.[16][14]

3.2 Groundwater Depletion Trends

A 2018 GRACE satellite study of 11 river basins in Alberta found that groundwater storage is declining in five of the eleven basins. Depletion was most pronounced in basins dominated by agriculture and industrial extraction, with some basins showing rates as high as −0.20 cm/year (e.g., the Athabasca River basin). Historical groundwater recharge modeling (1960–2009) showed negative trends in eight of the eleven basins, suggesting that recharge has been progressively declining over decades. This trend intensifies interest in formally quantifying and carefully managing what is stored in paleochannel aquifers.[^17]

3.3 Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR) Potential

Beyond passive reliance on natural recharge, paleochannel systems are well-suited to Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR) — the deliberate injection of surface water or treated water into an aquifer during wet periods, followed by extraction during drought. The permeable sand and gravel fill of buried valleys offers the hydraulic conductivity needed for injection, while the confining till overburden protects stored water from surface contamination.[^18]

Alberta's provincial Water for Life strategy recognized that the combination of comprehensive knowledge, improved water capture options, and better conservation practices is needed to address looming water scarcity. Groundwater, particularly in buried valleys, is explicitly positioned as a strategic backup supply. The Ardley reservoir feasibility study and a review of over 100 potential water storage sites across the province (announced December 2024) reflect the urgency of this search for additional storage capacity.[19][11]


4. Opportunities and Strategic Applications

4.1 Climate Resilience and Drought Buffering

The Canadian Prairies face an accelerating trajectory toward aridity — lower summer streamflows, retreating glaciers, falling lake levels, and increasing frequency of dry years. In this context, buried valley aquifers serve several distinct strategic roles:[^20]

  • Emergency supply: Edmonton's sole surface water source (North Saskatchewan River) could be contaminated or face severe low-flow events. Delineated buried valley aquifers near the city represent a viable emergency water source.[^16]
  • Drought-year buffer: Recharging paleochannel aquifers during high-flow spring runoff and withdrawing during summer droughts mirrors the logic of surface reservoirs but at lower evaporative loss.[^21]
  • Municipal and industrial water supply: In jurisdictions under moratorium on surface water licenses (e.g., the South Saskatchewan River Basin), the Calgary Buried Valley Aquifer offers a licensed-independent alternative.[^12]

4.2 Agriculture and Rural Communities

Across central Alberta, buried valley wells historically serve domestic, agricultural, and small municipal purposes where surface water is unavailable or over-allocated. Well yields in the Whitecourt area, for example, reach 25 imp. gal/min or more in buried valley sands, a meaningful supply for farm operations and small communities. The Springate Water Co-op in Saskatchewan noted that well-managed buried valley aquifers can weather drought periods of up to a decade before meaningful depletion, as long as extraction rates are not excessive.[22][23][^9]

4.3 Conjunctive Use with Surface Water

Buried valleys in hydraulic connection with rivers — such as the Beverly Channel Aquifer's connection with the North Saskatchewan River at Fort Saskatchewan and the CBVA's connection with the Bow River — enable conjunctive use: managed coordinated withdrawal from both surface and groundwater to optimize overall basin yield. This approach is common in mature water management jurisdictions and increasingly advocated for Alberta.[24][11][^12]


5. Challenges and Constraints

5.1 Strip Aquifer Drawdown Behavior

Narrow buried valley aquifers behave very differently from broad sheet aquifers. Pumping from a strip aquifer leads to much greater drawdown and much more distant drawdown effects than would occur in a laterally extensive aquifer with equivalent transmissivity and storage coefficient. This means that well interference between multiple production wells can be severe, and sustainable extraction rates must be carefully modeled — not simply estimated from single-well tests.[^14]

5.2 Water Quality Variability

Water quality within paleochannel aquifers is spatially variable. In the Beverly Channel Aquifer, locations near remnant marine Bearpaw Formation material show elevated chloride and sodium concentrations, indicating upward migration of deeper, more saline bedrock water. Stable isotope analysis (¹O, ²H) has been used to distinguish local recharge from bedrock contributions, but this requires dedicated monitoring networks.[^9]

In general, groundwater in till-covered areas tends toward higher sulfate content, while areas with sand and gravel have lower TDS — but proximity to oil and gas wells, tailings ponds, and agricultural land can compromise quality. The AER's Lower Athabasca Regional Groundwater Management Framework specifically maps buried channel aquifer locations to prioritize quality protection near oil sands operations.[25][24]

5.3 Incomplete Characterization

Despite decades of mapping, the total storage capacity of Alberta's paleochannel network remains unquantified. The North Saskatchewan Watershed Alliance noted in 2009 that "little detail is known of how much usable groundwater is stored in the basin, or of its dynamics of recharge and discharge, or ambient quality". This knowledge gap persists. The AGS thalweg dataset provides spatial extent but not aquifer thickness, hydraulic properties, or storage estimates for most systems.[^11]

5.4 Recharge Limitations

Recharge dynamics in confined buried valley aquifers depend heavily on the bulk permeability of the overlying confining layer (typically till). Where till is thick and low-permeability, natural recharge rates may be slow, meaning these aquifers can behave like a finite, slowly replenished reserve rather than a dynamic, rapidly rechargeable system. The Spiritwood Buried Valley study in Saskatchewan identified potential hydraulic connections from surface recharge to deep buried valley aquifers, but confirmed that these connections are spatially limited.[26][18]

5.5 Regulatory and Governance Gaps

Alberta's Water Act governs surface water under a prior allocation (first-in-time, first-in-right) system, but groundwater regulation is less fully developed. As of the late 2010s, groundwater licensing in Alberta was still largely complaint-based for non-domestic use, with significant gaps in monitoring and enforcement. Public engagement in 2024 revealed strong community concern over aquifer integrity and insufficient data on groundwater quantity and quality across rural areas. Several public submissions specifically called for better mapping and monitoring of groundwater before further allocations are granted.[27][28]


6. Practical Pathways: What Would Storage Utilization Look Like?

6.1 Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR)

ASR involves injecting treated or untreated water into a permeable aquifer (the buried valley sand and gravel) via injection wells during periods of water surplus, and recovering it through production wells during periods of scarcity. This approach has been piloted at small scales in Alberta (e.g., off-stream storage studies) and is well-developed internationally. The permeable fill, existing confinement by till, and good natural water quality in many paleochannel aquifers make ASR a technically feasible pathway.[^29]

Key site selection criteria include:

  • Sufficient aquifer thickness (>10 m of saturated sand and gravel)
  • Low ambient TDS (<1,000 mg/L)
  • Hydraulic connectivity enabling injection rates sufficient for meaningful storage
  • Adequate separation from saline formation water at depth
  • Distance from contamination sources (oil and gas infrastructure, industrial facilities, high-density agriculture)

6.2 Enhanced Monitoring Networks

Given the strip aquifer geometry and the complex spatial variability of both water quality and hydraulic head, any serious storage program would require a dedicated multi-well monitoring network. The NCIA's 13-well Beverly Channel Aquifer network at Fort Saskatchewan is a model for this approach — 13 consecutive years of monitoring have revealed stable long-term water level conditions but significant spatial heterogeneity requiring ongoing characterization.[^9]

6.3 Integration with GIS and Remote Sensing

The AGS's 2018 thalweg shapefile and the companion bedrock topography maps (AGS Map 610, Version 2, 2020) provide a powerful spatial foundation. Combining these with GRACE satellite-derived groundwater storage anomalies, GOWN (Groundwater Observation Well Network) data, and modern geophysical surveys (electrical resistivity tomography, seismic reflection) could substantially close the characterization gap for priority paleochannel segments.[30][17][^1]


7. Current Policy Context

Alberta's provincial government conducted a Water Availability Engagement in late 2024, collecting public input on water storage options and policy priorities. Over 100 sites across the province are currently being assessed for water storage potential, with feasibility studies underway for some top-ranked sites including the Ardley reservoir. While much of the public and political discourse focuses on surface reservoirs and dams, groundwater — particularly buried valley aquifers — is explicitly identified within Alberta's Water for Life strategy as a critical complement to surface storage, especially for emergency and drought-year supply.[19][27][^11]

The Alberta Energy Regulator's AGS division continues to publish and update the thalweg and bedrock topography datasets as open data, supporting research and development by municipalities, industry, and academic institutions. Recent work by the University of Alberta on Edmonton-area buried valley aquifers represents a new wave of quantitative characterization that directly informs this conversation.[31][16]


Conclusion

Alberta's thalwegs and paleochannels represent a genuinely significant but insufficiently exploited water storage opportunity. The province contains a vast underground network of buried glacial and preglacial valleys filled with productive sand and gravel aquifers capable of well yields from tens to thousands of cubic metres per day. Key systems like the Beverly Channel, Calgary Buried Valley, and Edson Valley have been partially characterized and are actively used for domestic, municipal, and industrial supply.

The strategic opportunity lies in moving from passive, opportunistic extraction to deliberate Aquifer Storage and Recovery — banking water during surplus periods and drawing on it during drought. This requires closing critical knowledge gaps: quantifying total storage volumes, characterizing recharge pathways, mapping water quality spatially, and developing a governance framework that integrates groundwater into Alberta's broader water allocation system.

As the prairie climate becomes progressively more water-stressed, the ancient river valleys buried beneath Alberta's plains may prove as important to water security as the modern river systems visible at the surface.


References

  • Thalwegs of Bedrock Valleys, Alberta (GIS data, line features)
  • Page 17 - Water Wells That Last - Page 17 - Water Wells That Last
  • Buried Channels and Glacial-Drift Aquifers in the Fort McMurray ...
  • [PDF] Buried tunnel valley aquifers in the Fort McMurray region, northeast ... - Typically, these valleys are between 0.5 and 3 km wide and 10 and 30 m deep, although in some cases ...
  • [PDF] Buried Bedrock Channels in the Athabasca Oil Sands Region - ESAA
  • The Preglacial Edson Buried-Valley Aquifer
  • [PDF] Distribution of aquifer-hosting sediments above bedrock in Alberta - The buried valleys in the Cold Lake area are large and filled with a thick, complex assemblage of se...
  • [PDF] Buried Bedrock Channels in the Athabasca Oil Sands Region ... - Channels that were formed by pre-glacial river systems are generally wider, with observed widths up ...
  • Regional Characterization of the Beverly Channel Aquifer ...
  • Bedrock topography and valley talwegs of the Edmonton map area
  • [PDF] North Saskatchewan River Basin - Across the central area, the most prominent of these are the Onoway, Drayton, Beverly, and Vegrevill...
  • MD of Bighorn Innovative Water Source & Geothermal Projects - Site Investigation and Planning: Groundwater potential was assessed, and internal consultation led t...
  • Bedrock Thalwegs of Peerless Lake Area, Alberta (NTS 84B) (GIS ...
  • The unusual and large drawdown response of buried-valley aquifers ... - The buried-valley aquifers that are common in the glacial deposits of the northern hemisphere are a ...
  • [PDF] Water Wells that Last - Open Government program - Water wells completed in such buried valley aquifers can often produce high yields, sometimes up to....
  • EXAMINING THE RESPONSE OF THREE BURIED ... - Abstract
  • Estimating long-term groundwater storage and its controlling factors in Alberta, Canada - Abstract. Groundwater is one of the most important natural resources for economic development and en...
  • [PDF] Groundwater Recharge in a Confined Paleovalley Setting ... - Recharge dynamics in buried-valley aquifers depend greatly on the bulk permeability of the con- fini...
  • Over 100 sites in Alberta being looked at for water storage potential - More than 100 sites are being studied across Alberta as potential locations where dams, reservoirs o...
  • Chapter 7 - Prairies - Key Findings
  • [PDF] Assessment of Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR) and ... - Gov.bc.ca
  • Hydrogeology of the Whitecourt area, Alberta
  • [PDF] Groundwater Connections - Springate Water Co-op Ltd.
  • Hydrogeology of the Edmonton Area (Northwest Segment), Alberta
  • [PDF] Lower Athabasca Region groundwater management framework ... - Buried Channels and Glacial-Drift Aquifers in the Fort McMurray. Region ... Alberta Geological Surve...
  • [PDF] Spiritwood Buried Valley 3D Geological Modelling - indicates potential hydraulic connections from surface recharge to the deep buried-valley aquifer an...
  • Water availability engagement – Phase 1 October 2024
  • November 2018
  • [PDF] Aquifer Storage and Recovery For Off-Stream Storage
  • Bedrock Topography of Alberta, Version 2
  • Alberta Geological Survey - The Alberta Geological Survey (AGS) Open Data Portal features a subset of GIS data related to the ge...

Red Deer River (Waskasoo Seepee) Water Storage Proposals


Off-Stream Storage vs. the Ardley Dam: A Comparative Analysis of Water Storage Options on the Red Deer River


  • The Ardley Dam is an on-stream reservoir proposed for the Red Deer River about 40–70 km east of the City of Red Deer, now in a $4.5-million provincial scoping-and-feasibility study (Hatch Ltd., October 2024 to fall 2026); unofficial estimates put it at four times the size of Gleniffer Lake and $2–4 billion, but no government has committed to building it and key specifics (storage volume, dam height, footprint) remain unpublished.
  • Off-stream storage — diverting high flows into an adjacent reservoir — generally offers lower environmental impact (better fish passage, sediment transport, and instream-flow protection) but typically yields less total storage, needs pumping energy, and on the Red Deer has mainly been proposed downstream (the Special Areas Water Supply Project), which has stalled at the post-EIA-terms-of-reference stage with poor benefit-cost results.
  • The honest bottom line: for the Red Deer system, the choice is not purely either/or. The Red Deer is the least-allocated sub-basin in a heavily-allocated South Saskatchewan River Basin, so new storage could unlock real drought resilience — but the case for a multi-billion-dollar on-stream dam is unproven pending the 2026 feasibility study, and off-stream and non-structural alternatives (conservation, natural infrastructure, demand management) have not been rigorously compared head-to-head by the province.

Key Findings

1. The Ardley Dam is a century-old idea now being formally studied again. A diversion/storage project near the hamlet of Ardley dates to a 1914 plan by irrigation engineer William Pearce, was studied in the 1940s–60s (including by the Saskatchewan-Nelson Basin Board), and was shelved repeatedly. Budget 2024 allocated $4.5 million for a feasibility study; Hatch Ltd. was retained and work runs October 2024 to fall 2026. The study is led by Alberta Environment and Protected Areas (Minister Rebecca Schulz, later Grant Hunter).

2. The project is being driven by municipalities and irrigation interests, not by a single proponent committed to construction. The Red Deer River Municipal Water Users Group (RDRMUG) — which represents about three dozen municipalities serving 350,000 residents from the river's Clearwater County headwaters to the Saskatchewan border (per the Red Deer Advocate, April 10, 2026) — has lobbied for additional storage for years, arguing Gleniffer Lake/Dickson Dam is the system's "only lever to pull" in drought and provides only about one year of supply before running low.

3. Scale and cost are large but unofficial. Rudy Friesen, RDRMUG's executive director, told Olds town council on May 5, 2025 (reported by The Albertan) that "the cost to build the Ardley dam and reservoir could range between $2 and $4 billion," that "conventional wisdom" says it would take about 25 years to build, and that "this reservoir would be about four times the size of Gleniffer." The province has identified three options (Low, Medium, High) but has not published storage volumes, surface areas, or dam heights — these are outputs pending the fall 2026 report.

4. Off-stream storage is the lower-impact alternative in principle, and is the model used for the Special Areas Water Supply Project (SAWSP) and Springbank (SR1). Off-stream reservoirs capture only excess/high flows via diversion, leaving baseline flows in the river — reducing harm to fish passage, sediment transport, and riparian habitat. But they require pumping energy, lose water to evaporation, and on the Red Deer have been proposed mainly as downstream irrigation delivery (SAWSP), which stalled.

5. The water-management context is decisive. The Bow, Oldman and South Saskatchewan sub-basins have been closed to new surface-water allocations since 2006; the Red Deer River remains open and lightly allocated, making it the basin's main remaining source of flexibility — and the focus of inter-basin-transfer concerns. Alberta must also pass 50% of South Saskatchewan Basin natural flow to Saskatchewan under the 1969 Master Agreement on Apportionment.

6. Recent drought (2023–2024) catalyzed the current policy push. Alberta signed its largest-ever water-sharing agreements in 2024 and launched a $125-million Drought and Flood Protection Program plus a province-wide Water Storage Opportunities Study of more than 100 sites.

Details

The Ardley Dam proposal

Location and configuration. The study area covers a roughly 40-km stretch of the Red Deer River from just east of the City of Red Deer to the Content Bridge at Highway 21, spanning Lacombe County, Red Deer County, and the County of Stettler No. 6. The reservoir would be an on-stream impoundment near the hamlet of Ardley, variously described as 40–70 km east of Red Deer. The province is evaluating three options — a "Low" (smallest footprint), "Medium," and "High" reservoir.

Purpose. The province lists irrigation, drought management/water security, flood protection, and supply for growing communities and industry as the rationale. The Red Deer River supplies water to hundreds of thousands of people including Red Deer, Drumheller, and many smaller communities, plus irrigation, industry, and oil/gas. About 46% of allocated consumption in the Red Deer basin is for irrigation and about 29% for industrial/fossil-fuel uses. RDRMUG argues new storage could nearly double the licensing capacity of the Red Deer River.

Size, cost, and timeline. Unofficial RDRMUG figures (Rudy Friesen to Olds town council, May 2025): ~4× Gleniffer Reservoir, $2–4 billion, and about 25 years to build (though Friesen noted Springbank is expected to take ~10 years). By comparison, Gleniffer Lake (behind the 1983 Dickson Dam) has a maximum storage of about 203,100 dam³ (roughly 203 million m³) with a surface area of 17.6 km². The province has not released official Ardley figures. Whether the dam would generate hydroelectricity (like Dickson Dam) is undecided — the province has said there is "no commitment to that" at this stage. A decision on whether to proceed will follow the fall 2026 feasibility report; detailed engineering, design, and regulatory approvals would come only after.

Status. As of mid-2026, the project is in the feasibility phase with field studies (geotechnical, vegetation, wildlife, fish habitat, groundwater, cultural resources, drone/bathymetric surveys). Public engagement ran through summer 2026 (online survey to July 30, 2026; in-person sessions July 14 and 16, 2026). The County of Stettler council and Rural Municipalities of Alberta have voiced support; the City of Red Deer has not taken a formal position.

Environmental and social concerns

The Red Deer River Watershed Alliance (RDRWA) is explicitly neutral ("does not have a position on the Ardley dam") but its associated experts have flagged the loss of ecosystem services. Tricia Stadnyk, Canada Research Chair in hydrology, told CBC News that cost-benefit analyses do "a poor job" valuing the loss of natural-state ecosystem services: "Where we do a poor job these days — and this is globally, not just here — is in quantifying the loss of the benefits of the ecosystem service of the land in its natural state... wetlands, beavers, things that depend on natural water level fluctuations not being flooded — all of that is lost when we flood land."

Specific concern categories:

  • River valley, habitat, and wetlands. Flooding the valley would inundate riparian cottonwood communities and wetlands. General concerns about peat-forming wetlands such as fens are relevant because flooding raises water tables and kills peatland vegetation, releasing stored carbon — though the specific presence of a notable tamarack fen in the Ardley footprint could not be confirmed in available public sources.
  • Fish passage and sediment. On-stream dams block fish migration, alter flow and temperature regimes, and trap sediment and nutrients needed by downstream ecosystems — impacts the RDRWA and provincial sources both acknowledge.
  • Greenhouse gas emissions. Reservoirs emit CO₂ and methane from decomposing flooded organic matter. Per Soued et al., Nature Geoscience (2022), reservoir methane emissions are rising and "accounted for 5.2% of global anthropogenic methane emissions in 2020." Cold-climate reservoirs emit substantially less than tropical ones, but emissions are not zero and persist for decades.
  • Agricultural land and infrastructure. The reservoir would inundate private and leased Crown agricultural land; infrastructure near the valley (roads, bridges, the Highway 21 Content Bridge) could be affected.
  • Indigenous interests. The province says it will "work directly with Indigenous communities and organizations." Treaty 7 First Nations participated in the 2024 water-sharing agreements. Specific Indigenous positions on Ardley were not publicly documented in the sources reviewed.

Off-stream storage alternatives

How it works. A diversion structure pulls water from the river during high flows into an adjacent (off-channel) reservoir; baseline and low flows remain in the river. This is the model for the Springbank Off-Stream Reservoir (SR1) on the Elbow River (a flood-control diversion completed before the 2025 flood season) and California's proposed Sites Reservoir (1.5 million acre-feet, capturing only excess Sacramento River flows). Off-stream designs "avoid many of the negative environmental impacts associated with on-stream dams" by leaving water in the river for fish and wildlife.

On the Red Deer specifically. The principal off-stream proposal is the Special Areas Water Supply Project (SAWSP) — a pump station and 97.5-km pipeline diverting Red Deer River water (near Stettler/Nevis) at a design rate of 2.5 m³/s to storage reservoirs at the headwaters of Sounding and Berry Creeks, distributed through existing streams, improved channels and canals to the drought-prone Special Areas. Proponent: Alberta Transportation with the Special Areas Board.

  • Status: Final Terms of Reference for the EIA were issued March 22, 2018; the registry then shows "Awaiting submission of the EIA/Application." The project appears dormant/stalled, with no evidence of formal approval, cancellation, or recent (2023–2026) activity.
  • Cost and economics: Most recent estimate ~$410.3 million (2018), with annual operating costs ~$5.5 million (~$3.2 million energy). A government-commissioned socioeconomic review by Klohn Crippen Berger, as cited by the Alberta Wilderness Association, found costs far exceeded benefits: "Even in the optimistic 'high supply' scenario, only 12.8 cents is produced for every dollar invested into this project, and total costs are expected to exceed regional benefits by $704 million. In the 'low supply' scenario, total costs exceed regional benefits by $708 million."
  • Environmental footprint: Per the Alberta Wilderness Association citing the project EIA, "as it is currently designed, 25% of the SAWSP area overlaps with native grasslands," and roughly 11% of the local study area is wetlands; the AWA opposed it, arguing it would benefit relatively few people at high cost, energy, and environmental risk, and that the project "has been studied many times and was abandoned for good reason."

There is also a separate, newer MD of Acadia & Special Areas Joint Irrigation Project (~108,000 acres, distinct off-stream reservoirs), which is in feasibility — easily conflated with SAWSP but administratively separate.

Storage potential and cost of off-stream generally. Off-stream reservoirs are typically sized smaller than major on-stream dams and their cost is dominated by excavation/embankment and (where needed) liners, plus ongoing pumping energy. They trade lower environmental impact and flexibility for higher per-unit operating cost and lower total yield.

Direct comparison: Ardley (on-stream) vs. off-stream storage

DimensionOn-stream (Ardley)Off-stream
Water yield/reliabilityHigher total storage; can capture full range of flows; "4× Gleniffer" claimedLower; limited to diverted high flows; depends on diversion capacity
Capital costVery high ($2–4B unofficial)Lower per project (SAWSP ~$410M) but poor benefit-cost on Red Deer
Operating costLower (gravity); possible hydro revenueHigher (pumping energy)
Fish passageBlocks migration unless mitigatedLargely preserved (river left intact)
Sediment transportTrapped behind damLargely maintained in river
Riparian habitatValley/cottonwoods inundatedAdjacent land affected, river corridor spared
GHG emissionsReservoir CO₂/CH₄ from flooded landSimilar reservoir emissions but smaller flooded area; plus pumping energy
EvaporationLarge surface = significant lossSmaller surface, but can be deep/compact to limit loss
Flood controlStrong (controls mainstem outflows)Moderate (diversion can shave peaks, e.g., SR1)
Drought/water securityStrong (large carryover storage)Moderate (depends on fill opportunities)
Land requirementLarge valley inundationSmaller, sited on less-sensitive land
FlexibilityFixed once builtGreater operational flexibility

The province's own framing (RDRWA Q&A) favors a single large reservoir on cost-efficiency grounds: "Larger reservoirs generally provide more total storage and operational flexibility at lower costs relative to a series of multiple smaller reservoirs." Critics counter that this calculus omits ecosystem-service losses and that the comparison to off-stream/natural-infrastructure options has not been done rigorously — the Ardley study's own scope is limited to the on-stream reservoir, with natural-infrastructure work directed to separate programs.

Broader water-management context

  • Allocation. Since 2006, the Bow, Oldman and South Saskatchewan sub-basins are closed to new surface-water allocations; the Red Deer River sub-basin has a low degree of allocation and remains open, making it the key remaining source of new water in the SSRB. As Bow/Oldman use intensifies, the Red Deer is expected to "contribute more" to meeting downstream needs.
  • Apportionment. Under the 1969 Master Agreement on Apportionment, Alberta must pass 50% of the SSRB's natural flow to Saskatchewan; as Red Deer allocations are more fully used, the share passed downstream is predicted to decline toward 50–60%.
  • Climate/drought. Climate projections for the basin point to earlier snowmelt, higher spring flows, and lower summer/fall/winter flows — more extreme droughts and floods. The 2023–2024 drought saw dozens of water-shortage advisories province-wide. A 2014 Irrigation Council-funded study concluded there is "limited opportunity for additional water storage in southern Alberta" within current regulations and apportionment — a finding that cuts against large new builds.
  • Special Areas needs. The Special Areas (constituted after the 1930s Dust Bowl) are chronically drought-prone; "drought-proofing" via reliable Red Deer supply is the long-standing rationale for SAWSP.

Recent developments (2024–2026)

  • Budget 2024: $4.5M for Ardley study; a Drought and Flood Protection Program of $125 million over five years ($25 million per year from 2024-25 through 2028-29, announced by Minister Rebecca Schulz on March 4, 2024); and $35M+ for water management/wetlands.
  • 2024: largest water-sharing agreements in Alberta history (Red Deer, Bow, Oldman, Southern Tributaries); 37–38 major licensees representing up to 90% of Bow/Oldman and 70% of Red Deer allocations; activated May–October 2024, expired end of 2024.
  • Dec 2024: province-wide Water Storage Opportunities Study (100+ sites; MPE/Englobe), expected 2025.
  • 2025: Eyremore Dam (near Brooks) and Belly River/Waterton-St. Mary feasibility studies (WSP Canada); Dickson Dam spillway upgrades completed.
  • 2026: Ardley feasibility field studies and public engagement; consultant report due fall 2026; no decision timeline set.

Recommendations

  1. Treat the fall 2026 Hatch feasibility report as the key decision gate. Until it publishes storage volumes, dam height, footprint, yield, and a transparent benefit-cost analysis (including ecosystem-service losses and GHG emissions), the $2–4 billion and "4× Gleniffer" figures should be treated as advocacy estimates, not facts. Benchmark to change position: a credible, peer-reviewed yield figure and a benefit-cost ratio above ~1.0 that internalizes environmental costs.
  2. Demand an explicit alternatives comparison. The province should require the study (or a parallel one) to compare the on-stream Ardley option against (a) off-stream storage on the Red Deer, (b) raising/optimizing Dickson Dam/Gleniffer, (c) demand management and irrigation efficiency, and (d) natural infrastructure (wetlands, headwaters/riparian restoration). The current scope's exclusion of these is the analysis's biggest weakness.
  3. Resolve the inter-basin-transfer question early. RDRMUG's "very high level of concern" about inter-basin transfers should be addressed transparently: is Ardley storage intended primarily for the Red Deer basin, or to backstop Bow/Oldman/Special Areas demand? This determines who benefits and who pays.
  4. Engage Indigenous nations and downstream Saskatchewan interests before, not after, a build decision. Apportionment obligations and Treaty rights are material; the absence of documented Indigenous positions is a gap to close.
  5. For near-term drought resilience, prioritize lower-regret measures — water-sharing agreements, conservation, efficiency, and natural infrastructure — which deliver benefits within years rather than the 10–25-year horizon of a megadam.

Caveats

  • Key Ardley specifics are unpublished. No official storage volume, dam height, footprint, or cost exists yet; the "4× Gleniffer" and "$2–4 billion" figures are RDRMUG (Rudy Friesen) estimates carried in local media, not government/engineering-confirmed numbers.
  • The tamarack fen concern could not be verified in the specific Ardley context from available public sources; it should be checked against the forthcoming environmental field surveys.
  • SAWSP status is "dormant/stalled," inferred from the regulatory registry and advocacy sources — no explicit 2023–2026 government statement of cancellation or revival was found.
  • Off-stream vs. on-stream environmental comparisons are partly drawn from analogues (Springbank, Sites Reservoir) and general reservoir science, not Red Deer-specific modeling.
  • Drought conditions improved in 2025–2026 relative to 2023–2024, which may reduce political urgency; conversely, climate projections argue for long-term preparation. Both framings appear in the sources.
  • Some figures (Gleniffer capacity, Dickson Dam height) are corroborated across sources but precise values vary slightly by source.