Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

Facts About British Columbia's Great Bear Rainforest

The Canadian Press, 02 Feb, 2016 11:39 AM
  • Facts About British Columbia's Great Bear Rainforest
VANCOUVER — First Nations, environmentalists, logging firms and the British Columbia government signed an agreement Monday to protect a large part of the province's central coast.
 
Here are some key things you need to know about the Great Bear Rainforest and the deal to protect it:
 
— It estimated at 6.4 million hectares with 3.6 million hectares of forest containing trees up to 1,000 years old.
 
— The agreement puts an area the size of Nova Scotia under a new legal and scientific standard for maintaining forest and wildlife health.
 
— Eight five per cent of the forested land base will be protected from logging, while the remaining 15 per cent will be subject to the most stringent commercial logging standards in North America.
 
— The forest is home to the B.C.'s largest concentration of kermode, or spirit bears. It is the official mammal of the province and the black bear gets its white fur due to a rare genetic trait. It is not albino.
 
— It is the territory of 26 First Nations
 
— The agreement will protect habitat for grizzly bears, the marbled murrelet, northern goshawk, mountain goat and the tailed frog.
 
— Since the process began 20 years ago, First Nations leader Dallas Smith said there have been 94 chiefs, about 180 different councillors, three premiers and numerous CEOs from various forest companies.

MORE National ARTICLES

Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman Invites Donald Trump To City To Learn 'Compassion And Tolerance'

Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman Invites Donald Trump To City To Learn 'Compassion And Tolerance'
Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman released a letter to Trump on Thursday — International Human Rights Day —  that urges him to visit the Manitoba capital and specifically its Canadian Museum for Human Rights

Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman Invites Donald Trump To City To Learn 'Compassion And Tolerance'

Saskatoon Police Chief Sees No Racism In The Work His Officers Do

Saskatoon Police Chief Sees No Racism In The Work His Officers Do
SASKATOON — RCMP Commission Bob Paulson has admitted there are racist officers on the force, but Saskatoon's police chief says he doesn't believe racist views are being translated through the work his officers do.

Saskatoon Police Chief Sees No Racism In The Work His Officers Do

Public Safety Minister Speaks On Terrorism Threat, Student International Travel

Public Safety Minister Speaks On Terrorism Threat, Student International Travel
EDMONTON — Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says he knows of no reason why school boards should cancel international student trips over terrorism fears, but he says the decision is ultimately up to educators.

Public Safety Minister Speaks On Terrorism Threat, Student International Travel

New Daily Aeromexico Flights To Vancouver Seen As Boon For Tourism And Business

New Daily Aeromexico Flights To Vancouver Seen As Boon For Tourism And Business
Richmond said the non-stop service "opens up" the Latin American market with the airline's "great onward network connections."

New Daily Aeromexico Flights To Vancouver Seen As Boon For Tourism And Business

B.C. Judge Sides With Trinity Western University Saying Law Society Erred

 An evangelical Christian university under fire across the country for forbidding sexual intimacy outside of heterosexual marriage has secured a decisive legal victory in its effort to open a law school in British Columbia.

B.C. Judge Sides With Trinity Western University Saying Law Society Erred

Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison

Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison
Ensaf Haidar tells Amnesty International her husband began it on Tuesday to protest the move.

Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison