Against the flow: Which households drink bottled water?
Gone fishing: A profile of recreational fishing in Canada
Canadian industry’s expenditures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
The Canadian Environmental Sustainability Indicators: On population-weighted ground-level ozone
Canada’s ecozones and population change, 1981 to 2006
Chart 1 High-income households are most likely to drink bottled water, 2006
Chart 2 University-educated households are less likely to drink bottled water, 2006
Chart 3 Seniors prefer the tap, 2006
Chart 4 Households in apartments are less likely to drink bottled water, 2006
Table 1 Share of households drinking bottled water, by income group and education level, 2006
Chart 1 Active resident anglers as a proportion of adult population, 2005
Chart 2 Number of active resident anglers, 1995, 2000 and 2005, Canada
Chart 3 Average number of days fished by resident anglers, 2005
Chart 4 Comparison of fish caught and kept, Canadian resident anglers, 1995 and 2005
Table 1 Number and average age of active resident anglers, by gender and jurisdiction, 2005
Table 2 Direct recreational fishing expenditures made by resident anglers, 2005
Table 3 Fish caught and kept by resident anglers, 2005
Table 3 Expenditures for greenhouse gas technologies per employee, by establishment size, 2004
Table 4 Total expenditures for greenhouse gas technologies, by establishment size, 2004
Table 5 Distribution of energy conservation processes and technologies, by establishment size, 2004
Chart 1 The good days are getting worse and the bad days remain the same
Table 1 Biophysical characteristics of terrestrial ecozones
Table 2 Population, by terrestrial ecozone, 1981 to 2006