BC Promised to Protect Old Growth. How Is It Doing?

Greens and environmental groups criticize lack of progress, but others defend efforts to make big changes.

The Tyee
March 11, 2021

RedCedarLogs.jpg
Logged old-growth red cedar in Kwagu’ł First Nation territory in northern Vancouver Island. Photo by TJ Watt, Ancient Forest Alliance.

Six months after releasing a major report on managing and protecting old-growth forests, British Columbia is either at a turning point, a standstill or both, depending who you ask.

Katrine Conroy, the minister responsible, says change is underway but takes time. Environmentalists give the progress so far a failing grade.

One of the report’s authors, Garry Merkel, captures the uncertainty when asked if there has been noticeable change. “‘Yes’ is the short answer, but ‘no,’ depending how you look at it.”

Merkel is a professional forester with 45 years of experience and a Tahltan Nation member. He and Al Gorley, a professional forester whose similarly wide experience includes a stint as chair of the B.C. Forest Practices Board, wrote A New Future For Old Forests: A Strategic Review of How British Columbia Manages for Old Forests Within its Ancient Ecosystems.

In the report they made 14 recommendations that would totally overhaul the management of old-growth forests, starting with grounding the system in a government-to-government framework involving both the provincial and Indigenous governments.

Their second recommendation was to “prioritize ecosystem health and resilience” so that the health of forests comes first. It would mean a shift from seeing forests primarily through a financial lens where ecosystem health is viewed as a “constraint.”

Building on that base, other recommendations included protecting more old forests, improving the information available to the public about forest conditions and trends, and planning for an orderly transition of the industry away from a reliance on old growth.

They submitted the report to the government nearly a year ago, and it was released to the public in September.

Since then, the government has repeatedly said it’s committed to implementing the report’s recommendations and immediately deferred logging in some areas, though there’s disagreement about exactly how much threatened old growth those areas include and how much they leave unprotected.

The NDP won re-election last October with a platform that included promising to implement the recommendations and protect more old growth.

After the election, Premier John Horgan’s mandate letter to Conroy, the new minister of forests, lands, natural resource operations and rural development, instructed her to work towards protecting “more” old growth, without specifying how much, where or when.

Torrance Coste, national campaign director with the Wilderness Committee environmental advocacy group, says it’s positive that the government has committed to implementing the report’s recommendations and protecting old growth.

But while the government delays implementation, plans to log in sensitive areas like the Fairy Creek watershed near Port Renfrew on Vancouver Island continue, he said. Teal Jones was in court this week seeking an injunction to remove blockades and prevent people from interfering with logging. The hearing will resume March 25.

“Nothing’s different on the ground,” Coste said. “It’s exactly the old ‘talk and log.’”

The Wilderness Committee and two other groups, Sierra Club BC and the Ancient Forest Alliance, today released an “old-growth report card” that considered the Horgan government’s performance in five areas.

They give a “D” for the logging deferrals the government introduced last fall, saying they include only about 3,800 hectares of at-risk old growth, less than one per cent of what’s threatened in the province. They want the government to immediately defer logging of all at-risk old growth.

Conroy said of the 353,000 hectares where logging was deferred, about 196,000 hectares are old growth. “You can’t protect an old-growth tree by itself. You have to protect the area around it.”

The environmental groups gave the government “F”s on the four other areas they looked at. There needs to be a three-year work plan with milestone dates, they said. And so far, there’s no funding to implement the transition of the industry from dependence on old growth, including the report’s recommendation for “Indigenous-led long-term conservation solutions and economic alternatives to old-growth logging.”

Nor has the government followed through on the need for legislation that will give decision-makers like the chief forester and district managers the legal authority to implement the major shift to prioritizing ecosystem integrity and biodiversity.

Finally, the government hasn’t done anything to improve transparency and communication, they said. The launch of the old-growth report was itself an example of “inaccurate and misleading” communication, they said, with claims that 353,000 hectares of old growth had been protected “when much of this area is not old growth and much of it is forest that is already protected.”

Meanwhile little seems to have changed in how the forests are managed, Coste said. If First Nations want to conserve forests in their territories, there are significant barriers. But the doors are wide open if they want to log them. The status quo remains as the government and industry consult First Nations with a goal of facilitating logging, he said.

When the default position remains to continue logging while discussions continue, Coste added, “that’s not a paradigm shift.”

The government is saying many of the right things, but “we’re worried about the urgency,” he said.

BC Green Party Leader Sonia Furstenau criticized the lack of progress during question period at the legislature today.

“One of the key recommendations is to immediately defer logging of the most at-risk old growth to prevent loss of rare ecosystems,” she said, referring to the old-growth strategy report. “The report specified that this must happen within six months. Here we are, and this government still has not taken any meaningful action to protect these forests. Instead, we’re losing critical old-growth stands, as the old strategy of talk and log continues.”

Forests Minister Conroy responded by saying B.C. has long had a “divisive and patchwork” approach to managing old-growth forests. “Those who are calling for a return to the status quo are putting B.C.’s majestic old growth and vital biodiversity at risk, and those who are calling for an immediate moratorium are ignoring the needs of thousands of workers and families in forest-dependent communities right across our province,” she said.

“Our government is dedicated to implementing the recommendations to ensure new, holistic approaches to how we manage B.C.’s old-growth forests.”

Speaking to The Tyee earlier in the week, Conroy said the government is committed to implementing Merkel and Gorley’s recommendations and is working towards that.

There have been delays due to the COVID-19 pandemic, she allowed, but work continues steadily at the staff level, there are government-to-government discussions happening with First Nations and the timelines set out in the report were never meant to be deadlines.

“The timeline wasn’t a hard timeline,” Conroy said. “I know there’s a lot more work to do when we’re protecting old growth, but we have to do it in a comprehensive way across the province. We can’t rush this. We have to do it properly.”

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Old-growth red cedar logged in the Granite Creek watershed near Port Renfrew in Pacheedaht territory. Photo by TJ Watt, Ancient Forest Alliance.

People on all sides, including the industry, acknowledge there needs to be change, she said. The government’s focus is on bringing everyone to the table to develop a provincewide strategy that will help avoid the valley-by-valley conflicts to which the province is prone.

Conroy said she had to be careful what she says about the highest profile of those conflicts, Fairy Creek, while it’s before the courts. “I respect people’s right to peacefully protest and hopefully there’s going to be a safe resolution to it.”

Conroy also noted that some 2,000 hectares in the Fairy Creek area are already protected, including in an old-growth management area and a wildlife habitat area to protect endangered marbled murrelets, a seabird that nests there.

People opposed to logging in the watershed say there’s so little forest like it left that the whole area should be protected.

“From my perspective, I think of it as a generational issue,” Conroy said, mentioning her nine grandchildren. When they are adults, they should have the option to work in a sustainable, well-managed forest industry if they choose, but also the ability to go for a hike in an intact forest.

In December, Horgan told The Tyee implementing the recommendations from Gorley and Merkel’s report requires engaging with workers, companies that have tenure and, most importantly, Indigenous peoples who have rights and title.

“There are many Indigenous communities that very much want to protect and preserve their territory, but there are also many, many who want to do sustainable forestry,” he said. “We need to make sure we’re finding that balance, and those discussions don’t happen overnight, and they involve multiple stakeholders.”

Report co-author Merkel said that while it’s important to keep the government’s feet to the fire, the move he and Gorley have recommended involves a complete change of culture and that will take time.

It includes two major transitions, he said, one in the move to government-to-government relationships with First Nations and one in giving priority to ecosystem health in land management decisions.

“When you’re moving on a shift that’s big, it’s hard to have a sense of momentum,” he said.

He compared the change to a person moving to a country that’s completely foreign to them and trying to adapt. “Maybe you could as a person, if you had to, but when you’ve got a whole society and they depend on what you’re changing, it doesn’t happen that fast. It just doesn’t.”

On top of that, he said, he and Gorley hadn’t properly accounted for the delaying effects of implementing the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act or the COVID-19 pandemic, he said.

“Right now, it’s an implementation challenge,” he said. “I empathize with government because they’re going through massive changes and dealing with COVID at the same time.”

There is appetite for change, Merkel said, adding both he and Gorley were pleasantly surprised by how much consensus they found that the shift is needed and that it needs to be on a big scale. “I see a real strong movement right now to figure out this whole transition.”

The Union of BC Indian Chiefs passed a resolution in September calling on the government to implement the recommendations.

In a February press release, Grand Chief Stewart Phillip said the majority of old-growth forests that are at risk remain open to logging, including vulnerable, biodiverse areas like the Fairy Creek watershed.

“What governments and corporations need to do is to take a step back and view old-growth forests not as commercialized products to be harvested and sold, but as the bedrock foundations of a healthy, biodiverse environment that First Nations have been stewards over since time immemorial,” he said.

“Old-growth forests help sustain our livelihoods and possess incalculable cultural and spiritual value that is far from pecuniary.”

Phillip called for immediate deferrals of all logging of old growth and the inclusion of First Nations in developing and implementing an old-growth protection strategy.

Also in late February, Susan Yurkovich, the president and CEO of the BC Council of Forest Industries, and Jeff Bromley, the chair of the Wood Council of Canada with the United Steelworkers union, co-wrote an opinion piece published in the Vancouver Sun that supported the government’s plans to review the province’s forest policy.

“It is also important to get this review right and ensure the result is an evidenced-based, balanced, provincewide strategy not only for old growth, but all of B.C.’s forests,” they wrote. “A strategy that ensures healthy and resilient forests, helps tackle climate change, and provides stability and predictability for First Nations, labour, industry and communities.”

Merkel said the government needs to start building measures and targets and tracking its progress at a bigger scale. It’s a matter of setting the right conditions, then starting to measure the things that need to change. “It will go there over time.”

Big changes are coming over the next couple of years, and though there will no doubt be growing pains, the results will play out over a couple of generations, he said. “You’ll see a whole different standard of care.”

Overall, he said, he believes the government is headed in the direction he and Gorley set out. Maybe a little slowly, and the change is hard to see, but “I don’t feel bad about it yet.”

Each region will have its own opportunities and challenges, said Syeta’xtn, a spokesperson for the Squamish Nation who is also known as Chris Lewis.

The Squamish Nation wants to start protecting the last remaining old-growth stands in its territory and looking at forestry differently, and is excited to be involved in those discussions and working with the provincial government and neighbouring nations, he said.

In his experience, he said, “the willingness of the provincial government to look at things differently is absolutely there.”

The Squamish Nation and the provincial government recently reached an agreement that will protect the Dakota Bowl area of Mount Elphinstone, a 71-hectare area that includes some 77 culturally-modified trees and that Lewis said is a last stand of yellow cedar that provides bear habitat.

“It’s a signal of goodwill,” he said of the agreement, adding it was 10 years in the making. “It’s a signal we want to change direction, and hopefully that’s the case.”

There are other areas though, where there have previously been impacts and it may make sense to continue logging and allowing for economic opportunities, he said.

“It’s just around that balance,” he said. “Definitely I’m optimistic about finding a balance.”

Ultimately, Lewis said, the hope is that the current goodwill and optimism can be turned into reality, with regional decisions feeding into a provincewide shift. “It’s something that’s very much generational and it’s not going to change overnight, but we have to change somewhere,” he said.  [Tyee]

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BC not on track to meet milestones for old-growth, First Nations and forestry transition

Environmental organizations issue report card six months after publication of old-growth panel recommendations

View the old-growth report card
Read the old-growth report card backgrounder

VICTORIA/unceded Lekwungen territories — Ancient Forest Alliance, Sierra Club BC and Wilderness Committee issued a report card today assessing the B.C. government’s progress on protecting old-growth forests. Today marks exactly six months since the provincial government published the report from its independent old-growth panel. Premier John Horgan promised to implement the panel’s recommendations “in their totality” shortly after.

The panel called for a paradigm-shift to safeguard the biodiversity of B.C.’s forests with a three-year framework, including logging deferrals for all at-risk old-growth forests within the first six months. Half a year later almost all at-risk forests remain open for logging and the B.C. government has not developed a plan with milestone dates and funding. 

“Government promised a ‘new direction’ for old-growth forests and then spent six months dragging its heels and refusing to protect the most endangered stands,” said Andrea Inness, campaigner for the Ancient Forest Alliance. “The government published the recommendations six months ago, but it received the report containing them on April 30, 2020 — by any measure they’ve missed this crucial deadline.” 

Endangered old-growth stands across the province continue to be targeted by logging companies and the exact forests the panel called for urgent action to protect are being lost. At the same time, the lack of a concrete plan is leaving First Nations and forestry workers with uncertainty about whether conservation, economic diversification and the transition to sustainable second-growth forestry will be adequately funded. 

“As long as we continue to rely on a dwindling supply of endangered old-growth forests, B.C.’s forest sector will continue to face uncertainty and instability,” said Cam Shiell, environmental sustainability officer with the Public and Private Workers of Canada, a union that represents thousands of workers in the B.C. forest industry. 

“The provincial government can’t delay action any longer, it must take meaningful steps to protect old-growth forests, lead the transition to sustainable, value-added second growth forestry and create the forest industry of the future.”

The organizations’ report card grades progress on five key areas related to the 14 recommendations: immediate action for at risk forests (D), three-year work plan with milestone dates (F), charting a new course prioritizing ecosystem integrity and biodiversity (F), funding for implementation, First nations conservation and forestry transition plans (F) and transparency and communication (F).

“Promising a new direction and then avoiding any meaningful action to ensure the most at risk old-growth forests are protected is not a ‘paradigm shift,’ it’s the same old talk and log,” said Jens Wieting, forest and climate campaigner at Sierra Club BC. “The Horgan government is getting terrible grades on old-growth, and is currently failing to keep one of its key election promises.”

In its initial response in September, the province acknowledged status quo management of old-growth forests had “caused a loss of biodiversity,” recognized the “need to do better” and announced nine deferral areas encompassing 353,000 hectares. Horgan and the BC NDP have claimed these deferrals ‘protected old-growth,’ but a closer review revealed most of this area is either already under some form of protection or is second growth forest and still open to logging.

According to independent experts, as of 2020, only about 415,000 hectares of old-growth forest with big trees remain in B.C., mostly without protection. Only 3,800 hectares, or one per cent of the remaining fraction of this kind of forest was included in the government’s deferral areas. Old-growth logging continues at an average rate of hundreds of soccer fields per day, always targeting the biggest accessible trees that remain. 

Reflecting polling results show more than 90% support for old-growth protection, the old-growth panel report found broad agreement for a paradigm-shift to respond to the biodiversity crisis in B.C.’s forests. The lack of social license for continued old-growth logging in the province is also highlighted by the ongoing blockades at Fairy Creek on unceded Pacheedaht territory (southern Vancouver Island), which have been in place for seven months.

“Nothing the Horgan government has done so far is preventing the most endangered old-growth forests in the province from being mowed down, and the public knows it,” said Torrance Coste, national campaign director for the WIlderness Committee. “The BC government must immediately defer logging in at-risk old-growth and commit substantial funding to support the economic diversification of First Nations and forestry communities to ensure the long term sustainability of both jobs and the environment.”

Ancient Forest Alliance, Sierra Club BC and the Wilderness Committee will continue to mobilize their tens of thousands of supporters and hold the government accountable on it’s old-growth promises. The next report card will be issued on Sep. 11, 2021.

Thank you to Patagonia Victoria!

We would like to extend a HUGE thank you to Patagonia Victoria for generously donating $3,500 to the Ancient Forest Alliance! The donation is part of Patagonia Victoria’s commitment to the environment and to the 1% for the Planet program. We are enormously grateful for their continuous and outstanding support!

Photos Raise Alarm Over Old-Growth Logging in British Columbia

Photographer TJ Watt hopes his before-and-after images will spur people to action.

TreeHugger
March 4, 2021

TJ Watt stands next to a tree
Before and After: Photographer TJ Watt of the Ancient Forest Alliance stands next to an old-growth tree in B.C.TJ Watt/Ancient Forest Alliance

There are few sights as magnificent as an ancient tree. The towering cedars, firs, and spruces of Canada’s Pacific Northwest can reach diameters of up to 20 feet as they grow over hundreds of years. Some are a thousand years old. They provide wildlife habitats, sustain immense biodiversity that’s still being discovered, and store up to three times more carbon than younger forests. 

The old-growth forests of British Columbia remain the world’s largest intact stand of temperate rainforest, but they are under threat from logging. Despite the provincial government’s promises to protect old-growth forests, an area equivalent of 10,000 football fields is razed every year on Vancouver Island alone. This is a devastating loss that TJ Watt of the Ancient Forest Alliance tells Treehugger makes no sense whatsoever.

Watt is a photographer from Victoria, B.C., who has spent countless hours bushwhacking through forests and driving the logging roads of Vancouver Island to capture images that convey both the sheer grandeur of these trees and the unfortunate destruction they face. A recent series of before-and-after shots – depicting Watts standing next to massive trees that are later reduced to stumps – has captivated and alarmed viewers around the world. Indeed, it’s what brought Watt to Treehugger’s attention and started our conversation. 

There are few sights as heartbreaking as the death of an ancient tree. When asked why he thinks these pictures have resonated so deeply, Watt said, “It’s not like it’s a black-and-white photo from 1880. This is full color, 2021. You can’t feign ignorance about what we’re doing anymore. It’s just wrong.” He points out that it will be the year 3020 before we see anything like it again, and yet logging companies keep decimating them with the government’s permission.

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A gorgeous pair of cedars destroyed. TJ Watt/Ancient Forest Alliance

Watt hunts for these endangered behemoth trees by using online mapping tools that show where there are pending or approved cutting operations and by spending time in the bush, looking for flagging tape. It’s an ongoing challenge. “There’s no public information saying where five-year logging plans are, but we’re looking for the exact same thing [as the logging companies] – the biggest and best trees, those grand old growth forests – except that I’m looking with the goal of preserving them, and they’re looking with the goal of cutting them down.”

Old-growth trees are desirable for their sheer size (logging companies get more wood for less work) and the tight growth rings that make for beautiful clear wood. But this ancient wood often ends up being used for purposes that wood from second-growth forests could do just as well, minus the environmental damage. “There are ways to manage second-growth forests to gain characteristics that old-growth forests have,” Watt explained. To start, “let them grow longer. There are also new engineered wood products that mimic the quality and characteristics of old wood without having to use old wood.

The “race against time” theme comes up several times in the conversation with Watt. He expresses deep frustration with the B.C. government’s failure to protect these forests. “All the latest science is saying we don’t have time to spare. We need to enact immediate deferrals in most at-risk areas so that we don’t lose most of these precious places.” Delays should be avoided because the logging industry “sees the writing on the wall” and is racing to cut down the best logs as fast as it can. 

Ancient old-growth tree cut down
TJ Watt stands next to another ancient tree, tragically logged. TJ Watt/Ancient Forest Alliance

Watt laments how the government portrays logging, lumping productivity classes together. “What’s rare today and highly endangered are the productive old-growth forests with big trees.” These are different from low-productivity old-growth forests, where the trees “look like little broccolis on the coast,” stunted by exposure to wind or growing in inaccessible boggy or rocky places, and therefore not commercially valuable. Watt made a curious analogy:

“Combining the two is like mixing Monopoly money with regular money and claiming you’re a millionaire. The government often uses this to say there’s still more than enough old-growth forest to go around, or they talk about the percentage of what remains, but they’re neglecting to address [the differences between productive and non-productive old-growth forests].”

A recent report called “BC’s Old Growth Forests: A Last Stand for Biodiversity” found that only 3% of the province is suitable for growing big trees.1 Of that tiny sliver, 97.3% has been logged; only 2.7% remains untouched.1

Watt isn’t opposed to logging. He realizes we need wood for all sorts of products, but it shouldn’t come from endangered old-growth forests anymore. “We need to move to a more value-based industry, not volume-based. We can do more with what we cut and gain forestry jobs. Right now we’re loading raw unprocessed logs onto barges and shipping them to China, Japan, and the US for processing, then buying them back. There could be more training and jobs programs created to mill that wood here. Mills here can be retooled to process second-growth wood.” He wants to see the government supporting First Nations communities in the shift away from old-growth logging: 

“To achieve large-scale old-growth forest protection across BC, the provincial government must commit significant funding for sustainable economic development in First Nations communities as an alternative to old-growth logging, while formally supporting Indigenous land-use plans and protected areas such as Tribal Parks.”

He hopes his photography will inspire other citizens to take action, too. “Humans are visual creatures and I find photography to be the most effective way to communicate what the science and facts are telling us, but in an instantaneous and often more emotionally compelling way.” Many people have reached out to Watt to say they’ve become environmental activists for the first time after seeing the before-and-after shots.

“It is gut-wrenching to go back to these places I love,” Watt said, “but photography allows me to convert that anger and frustration into something constructive.” He urges viewers to take five minutes to get in touch with politicians and let them know what’s on their mind. “We hear from people in politics that the more noise we make, the more support it gives them on the inside to move this along. The B.C. Green Party gets ten times more emails on the issue of old-growth than any other topic in the province. It gives them ammunition when going up against the forestry minister.” 

If you’re unsure of what to say, the Ancient Forest Alliance has plenty of resources on its website, including talking points for calling politicians’ offices. There’s a petition asking the government to implement an Old-Growth Strategy that would address many of the issues Watt discusses.

He ends the conversation with a reminder of people’s ability to make a difference. “All of our success comes from people’s belief that they can effect change.” Just because we’re up against a multi-billion dollar industry with tons of lobbyists that want to keep the status quo in place doesn’t mean we can’t be successful. Really, when you think about it, we have no choice but to keep going. We must be the forest’s voice.

View Article Sources

  1. Price, Karen, et al. “BC’s Old Growth Forest: A Last Stand For Biodiversity.” 2020.

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CALL the BC government and demand action for BC’s most at-risk ancient forests

 

10 Day Countdown for At-Risk Ancient Forests

Thursday, March 11th marks the six-month deadline for the BC government to halt logging in all at-risk old-growth forests in BC, according to its own Old Growth Panel recommendations.

So far, the province has only deferred logging in a mere 3,800 hectares of unprotected, big tree forests, leaving the other 99% on the chopping block.Every day on the countdown to March 11th, we’ll highlight a different endangered ancient forest that deserves an immediate deferral (followed by long-term protection), starting with the spectacular Fairy Creek. For six months, independent blockaders have kept logging company Teal-Jones from clearcutting the Fairy Creek headwaters, but Teal-Jones are now seeking an injunction that could remove the blockaders and leave the valley open to logging again. Filled with ancient yellow cedars up to 1,000 years old or more, Fairy Creek is the last remaining, unprotected, intact valley on Southern Vancouver Island and must remain that way.

NOW is the time to SPEAK UP & pressure the BC NDP stick to their promise!

CALL Premier Horgan & Forests Minister Katrine Conroy and demand they halt logging in at-risk ancient forests across BC by March 11th.