Bioremediation
HEALING THE LAND. HEALING THE PEOPLE.
Bioremediation:
news
Photo Album
Bioremediation = To Remedy/To Heal
Climate change crisis events, industrial pollutants, and environmental contaminants leave behind toxic landscapes and waterways, impacting human, animal, and aquatic health and environmental resilience. Disaster relief and industrial remediation methods are costly, slow, and inadequately designed to deal with the impacts on human and environmental over the long term. Indigenous communities and territories are disproportionately impacted by industrial disasters, and often left with fewer resources to deal with the toxic landscapes left behind. Bioremediation provides a sustainable solution, utilizing plant, fungi, and micro-organisms to remove, accumulate, or reduce toxins in the land and water.
Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition has a growing interest in the use of bioremediation to heal the land, water, and people. Since 2021, we have worked with Leila Darwish, a community organizer, perma-culturalist, and bioremediation expert to provide oversight and education on local, grassroots bioremediation and earth repair projects.
Our goal is to increase access to the tools and knowledge of bioremediation for community members, provide relevant research and field-testing opportunities, develop and support community driven projects to address environmental contamination concerns, re-build health in the land, and support future resilience to climate and environmental impacts.
Bioremediation in the news:
Click the image to go to the CBC Listen website to listen to the interview
The Firetech Podcast – Partnerships on the Frontlines: Season 2 (2025)
“Partnerships on the Frontlines: COCO and Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition”
The Northword Magazine
Find out more about bioremediation and how it aligns with SWCC’s values and purpose in Northword Magazine (pages 20-21)
Frequency News
You can find more updates about SWCC’s projects in our newsletters:
Special thanks to our valued partners!
Smithereens Mushroom is located in Smithers, BC. Founded by Marie-Eve Arseneault and Alexis Galus, they are dedicated to nuturing health through nature's bounty.
For more information head over to their website by clicking here.
Our Fire Grand Challenge technical partner, mycologist, and cold-fire expert; Jeff Ravage from Coalitions and Collaboratives.
The Gitxsan community of Sik-E-Dakh, an innovative community advancing Indigenous led food security, energy sovereignty, and wildfire resilience projects rooted in Gitxsan values and culture.

Learn about our community-led coldfire project that trained local fungi to rapidly decompose waste wood.