Today's CBC Interview with the Endangered Ecosystems Alliance’s (Note: Not the Ancient Forest Alliance) executive director Ken Wu on the newly announced Biodiversity and Ecosystem Health Framework, the potential ecosystem-based protection targets that it may usher in, and how it relates to the new conservation financing funds in BC worth over $1 billion…and what it all means for old-growth forests.
Read moreKen Wu and Cliff Atleo jr. on CBC’s The Current: Old-Growth Forests in BC, First Nations and Financing Alternatives
The following is the transcript for an interview today on CBC Radio One’s “The Current” with host Matt Galloway, with guests professor Cliff Atleo Jr. of the Nuu-Chah-Nulth and Tsimshian Nations, and Ken Wu, the Executive Director of the Endangered Ecosystems Alliance.
The Interview with Patrick Canning, lawyer for the Rainforest Flying Squad over the Fairy Creek blockade, follows.
Read moreEEA's Ken Wu on CBC's All Points West with Kathryn Marlow on federal Support to Protect BC Old-growth
Here is a transcription of an interview between EEA’s Ken Wu and CBC’s Kathryn Marlow on All Points West where they discuss how the B.C. government needs to take advantage of federal funding to preserve old-growth forests and provide First Nations with an economic alternative to logging on their traditional lands.
Aired June 6, 2021
Read moreOld-Growth Media: Town Hall Zoom Event with EEA's Ken Wu and Sonia Furstenau
Here on Facebook is an Old-Growth Town Hall Zoom event where 700 people attended, with the EEA's Ken Wu, Green MLA's Sonia Furstenau and Adam Olsen, scientists Andy MacKinnon and Rachel Holt, and Kwakiutl councilor Dorothy Hunt.
Read moreEEA's Ken Wu on the Capital Daily Podcast discussing the Politics of Old-Growth BC Forests with Sonia Furstenau
Here is a radio podcast in the Capital Daily News where the EEA's Ken Wu and Green leader and Cowichan Valley MLA Sonia Furstenau talk about the politics of old-growth forests in BC and how the BC government has to provide the critical conservation financing for First Nations land use plans and protected areas if they are serious about implementing the recommendations of the Old-Growth Strategic Review panel.
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