Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Audit finds B.C.'s forest management hurt by flawed data without clear methodology

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2025 01:16 PM
  • Audit finds B.C.'s forest management hurt by flawed data without clear methodology

An audit has found that British Columbia's government did not have a clear method for calculating the carbon being stored or released in provincial forests, which undermined the credibility in reporting from the Forests Ministry.

The Office of the Auditor General of B.C. says in the report that defined methodologies to calculate forest carbon projections were not used for decisions such as the determining annual allowable timber cutting. 

The audit found that staff did develop a model to calculate carbon benefits from certain investment programs in forestry, but the system was not approved for use by B.C.'s chief forester, and overall calculations were not "sufficiently documented to ensure consistency."

It says the Forest Ministry used those carbon benefit projections in briefing notes and press releases, to set targets for future forest investments and to compare with goals set by the ministry in its annual reports.

Acting Auditor General Sheila Dodds says in a statement that a clear, defined method for calculating carbon benefits "is essential to the quality of the measurements and builds confidence in the projections."

Dodds says the B.C. Forests Ministry has accepted the audit recommendations, and guidance for calculating consistent carbon projections for its forest planning was finalized at the end of 2024.

"Because the projected carbon benefit of the Forest Investment Program is not calculated using a defined methodology, the ministry’s assertions of its performance can’t be reviewed or replicated to assess their quality," the audit says. "This lack of transparency negatively affects the credibility of the ministry’s reporting.

"While the ministry produced guidance to support carbon analysis for timber supply reviews, key elements needed to ensure consistency and transparency were missing."

Dodds says the information on carbon storage and release from the forests is crucial for making forest-management decisions.

"A defined methodology for carbon modelling that outlines what's measured — and how those measurements are done — is critical to ensuring forest carbon projections can be reviewed and replicated," Dodds says.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

A massive cyberattack hits X, tracing those behind it: Elon Musk

A massive cyberattack hits X, tracing those behind it: Elon Musk
Elon Musk on Monday said a massive cyber attack has hit his X social media platform, that disabled millions of users across the globe, including in India, from accessing the popular platform. The X platform went down in a massive global outage as users were unable to access the micro-blogging platform.

A massive cyberattack hits X, tracing those behind it: Elon Musk

Eby: B.C. will remove consumer carbon tax as promised once federal barrier is down

Eby: B.C. will remove consumer carbon tax as promised once federal barrier is down
British Columbia Premier David Eby says his government will move as quickly as it can to remove the consumer-based carbon tax once the federal law upholding it is removed. Eby's response comes after Mark Carney won the federal Liberal leadership race and reiterated during his speech Sunday that he will reverse the consumer carbon price. 

Eby: B.C. will remove consumer carbon tax as promised once federal barrier is down

Mark Carney is the new Liberal leader. What happens now?

Mark Carney is the new Liberal leader. What happens now?
Mark Carney was elected to lead the Liberal party on Sunday and will soon become Canada's next prime minister. Carney captured 85.9 per cent of the Liberal vote - far ahead of opponents Chrystia Freeland (who got eight per cent), Karina Gould (3.2 per cent) and Frank Baylis, who came in last with three per cent.  Carney has promised a speedy transition of power and an early election call is widely expected in the coming days or weeks.

Mark Carney is the new Liberal leader. What happens now?

B.C. pulling all U.S. booze from government stores, widening red-state liquor ban

B.C. pulling all U.S. booze from government stores, widening red-state liquor ban
American beer, wine and all other alcohol is being removed from government stores in British Columbia in retaliation for U.S. tariffs, expanding a ban on liquor from so-called red states that voted for U.S. President Donald Trump. Premier David Eby said the widening of the ban to cover all alcohol, regardless of its state of origin, comes in response the latest news from the United States, including threats of additional tariffs on the dairy industry. 

B.C. pulling all U.S. booze from government stores, widening red-state liquor ban

Trudeau says that 'Canada is not a given' in farewell speech amid Trump threats

Trudeau says that 'Canada is not a given' in farewell speech amid Trump threats
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that freedom, democracy and Canada "are not a given" in his farewell speech to Liberals just before former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney was announced as the new Liberal leader.  This comes as U.S. President Donald Trump threatens Canada with economic annexation and places tariffs on Canadian imports coming into the United States.

Trudeau says that 'Canada is not a given' in farewell speech amid Trump threats

Ironworkers Local 97 calls for 'immediate end' to Temporary Foreign Worker program

Ironworkers Local 97 calls for 'immediate end' to Temporary Foreign Worker program
Ironworkers Local 97 business manager Doug Parton said the union has been lobbying the federal government for years about shoring up the domestic skilled trades workforce. 

Ironworkers Local 97 calls for 'immediate end' to Temporary Foreign Worker program