Environmental Defence unveils plan to fight Great Lakes algae
Toledo water ban was result of toxins from algae earlier this month

An environmental organization has come up with a four-point plan on how to stop algal blooms from blanketing the Great Lakes.
- Toledo tap water drinking ban lifted after toxin scare
- Water safe to drink, Windsor Utilities Commission reports
- How blue-green algae is taking over Canadian lakes
- Lake Erie's algae explosion blamed on farmers
The report called Clean, Not Green: Tackling Algal Blooms in the Great Lakes was unveiled in Kingsville, Ont., Wednesday, southeast of Windsor.
“The Great Lakes supply drinking water for millions of people, and are critical to Ontario’s fishing, boating and tourism industries,” said Nancy Goucher, water program manager with Environmental Defence. “Allowing them to be covered in green slime every summer is simply not an option.”
The plan includes suggestions on finding creative ways to pay farmers to stop nutrient pollution that drains into the water.
Environmental Defence is pushing for the Ontario government to start looking into "market mechanisms such as tax-shifting, pollution taxes, and nutrient trading to transfer money from undesirable acts like polluting to desirable ones that reward farmers for “doing the right thing”."