ForestEthics calls on Minister of Forests to clarify BC’s position on logging protected areas
Environmental organization
ForestEthics is alarmed by published statements made by Council of Forest
Industries (COFI) vice-president Doug Routledge calling for BC’s protected
areas to be opened up for logging. ForestEthics is calling on Forests Minister
Pat Bell to clarify his government’s position on the question.
“While Minister Bell hasn’t specifically supported COFI’s proposal, he hasn’t
opposed it either,” said Candace Batycki of ForestEthics. “Is this the BC we
are preparing to showcase to the world this winter: a province that logs its
parks and protected areas, and responds to climate change by destroying its
forest carbon storehouses?”
Since 2005 the annual allowable cut (AAC) has increased by up to 78% (http://www.for.gov.bc.ca/hfp/mountain_pine_beetle/aac.htm)
as a provincial response to the pine beetle situation. Between 2005 and 2006
the province allocated over $50 million for “Objective 1” of the Mountain
Pine Beetle Action Plan to help communities prepare for the predicted downfall
of timber available after the dramatic cut uplift in the regions (http://www.for.gov.bc.ca/hfp/mountain_pine_beetle/actionplan/2005/obj1.htm).
“The province has spent millions planning for the inevitable downfall in pine
beetle timber. For the industry to now say they need to log our protected areas
shows that they aren’t interested in creating a truly sustainable timber
industry. They have become addicted to increased cutting levels,“ said Batycki.
“When will this industry wake up to 21st century environmental realities?”
Scientists, including the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, agree that forests need to be protected in the face of climate change.
BC’s old growth forests and soils store vast amounts of carbon; when these
forests are logged carbon is released in the form of carbon dioxide, a
greenhouse gas. Since about half of BC’s greenhouse gas emissions are due to
logging, increasiong logging in order to prop up inflated cutting levels is
completely unsupportable. Forests also provide critical ecosystem services like
clean air, clean water, climate regulation and wildlife habitat.
“We are calling on Minister Bell to show leadership and assure the world that
BC’s protected areas are truly protected. What COFI is proposing might have
flown back in the 1950s, before we knew about climate change and how ecosystems
work,” said Batycki.












