The following is a news article from CBC News about the BC government’s announcement regarding old-growth forests in the province. Read some excerpts below:
Chad Pawson, Emily Vance
CBC News, Oct 26 2023
Premier says fund represents modern stewardship between government, First Nations, conservationists, industry
B.C. has announced a new $300-million fund to protect threatened ecosystems in the province.
Premier David Eby made the announcement from a part of Victoria's Beacon Hill Park framed by fir, hemlock and cedar trees, along with Minister of Forests Bruce Ralston and Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship Nathan Cullen, and Minister of Environment and Climate Change George Heyman.
The province has committed $150 million to the project, which will be matched by the B.C. Parks Foundation. The money will be used to purchase and protect land from development or industrial activities, such as logging, by designating them as parks or Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas.
The funds will be managed by the foundation and will be overseen independently from government by a special committee made up of experts, half of whom will be from First Nations.
Eby says the fund, which the province hopes other groups or individuals contribute to, represents government, First Nations, conservationists and industry coming together to provide modern stewardship for the province's natural spaces and biodiversity, "to protect the beauty of this province for generations to come."
Thursday's announcement comes on the heels of the three-year anniversary of a provincially initiated report that made 14 recommendations to drastically shift the way old trees in biodiverse forests are logged, in order to prioritize ecosystem health.
The 2020 report A New Future for Old Forests calls for engaging Indigenous leaders on forestry policies, increased transparency about forest conditions, and deferring development in old-growth forests until a new management strategy can be implemented.
Funding, like what was announced Thursday, was also part of the 14 recommendations.
"Conservation financing is a core tool that can help us to preserve options for the future and to advance our ability to properly manage, maintain and conserve ecosystem health, biodiversity and our oldest and rarest trees," said Garry Merkel, co-author of the report — also known as the Old Growth Strategic Review — in a provincial release.
The financing will enable the province, working with First Nations, to conserve critical habitat, better manage climate change, protect more of B.C.'s lands and waters and implement the Old Growth Strategic Review, those at the announcement said.
Conservation funding a 'critical piece': conservationists
For Ken Wu, executive director of the Endangered Ecosystem Alliance, the announcement comes after years of campaigning the provincial and federal governments to provide financial alternatives for First Nations looking to diversify their economies.
He said for communities that are reliant on logging revenue, providing funding for protected areas is a "critical piece."
"No major human population is just going to jettison their primary source of income and jobs for protected areas unless there is support for the alternatives," Wu said.
While the group's overall reaction to the funding is positive, Wu said there are still gaps when it comes to protecting old-growth logging. He wants to see the province create specific conservation targets regarding the types of ecosystems that will be protected.
"The protected areas will skirt around, potentially, the areas of big timber of high economic value for logging, and those areas will still get logged unless you have ecosystem-based targets," Wu said.
"That includes the areas with the big trees and the most at-risk and least represented ecosystems."
New stewardship plans
Ralston also announced new forest landscape planning that replaces existing stewardship plans, devised under the Old Growth Strategic Review and in partnership with local First Nations.
They establish objectives for the long-term management of old growth, biodiversity, climate change and wildfire risk, the government release said.
"Indigenous sustainability teachings, such as Gwelx ye'enst [a Gitanyow sustainability principle] have much to offer the creation of new provincial land and water protection measures for salmon, water and wildlife resources," said Tara Marsden, with the Gitanyow hereditary chiefs, in a provincial statement.
The locations of five new forest landscape plans are the Bulkley Valley in the west-central Interior, 100 Mile House and Williams Lake in the Cariboo, and east-central and west-central Vancouver Island.
Past 3 years 'challenging' for forests sector
The B.C. Council of Forest Industries, which represents the majority of forestry industry companies in the province, called the fund a "new and innovative" approach to maintaining ecosystems and biodiversity in the province.
In a statement released by CEO Linda Coady, the organization said the past three years have been "challenging" for the sector in light of the province's deferral on logging in some areas of old-growth in November 2021.
The organization said they look forward to working with Indigenous and local communities on forest management and conservation "while also creating more predictability for workers, communities, and forest-related businesses across B.C."