Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Great Bear Rainforest Project Earns Environmental Group $100,000 U.S. Award

06 Oct, 2016 11:40 AM
  • Great Bear Rainforest Project Earns Environmental Group $100,000 U.S. Award
VANCOUVER — Three groups that were once labelled enemies of the province by a British Columbia premier have been given an international award for their work in helping to protect the Great Bear Rainforest.
 
The Rainforest Solutions project, a collective effort of Greenpeace, the Sierra Club and Stand.earth, has received the $100,000 Buckminster Fuller Design Award for a decades-long effort to safeguard the forest.
 
In 1996, during the peak of the so-called War in the Woods to save B.C.'s old-growth forest, then-premier Glen Clark called the environmental groups enemies of British Columbia.
 
Valerie Langer of Stand.earth said they're pleased to be recognized by the foundation for helping solve divisive conflicts involving environmentalists, logging firms, First Nations and the provincial government.
 
The Buckminster Fuller Institute said in a statement that the groups played a critical role in developing one of the most extraordinary approaches to conservation, social justice and indigenous rights in recent memory, resulting in an unprecedented agreement.
 
The area stretches for about 400 kilometres along the B.C. central coast and has one of the largest intact temperate rainforests on the planet. It's also home to an array of wildlife, including the Kermode bear, a white sub-species of the black bear.
 
 
 
Earlier this year the government announced that it would protect 85 per cent of the region's old-growth forests, would recognize aboriginal rights and share decision-making with the 26 First Nations in the region.
 
Prince William officially declared the rainforest part of the Queens Conservation Canopy, a Commonwealth program, when he was in Bella Bella last week.
 
Langer said it took a long time to get to this point.
 
"In order to make something this big, this complex happen, you have to have a crazy imagination of all the big things, the good things that could happen and hold that vision."
 
She said there were many times when they thought everything was falling apart.
 
"Change of this scale doesn't come easily."
 
Langer said the true turning point came in 2001 when the German Publishing Association did a tour over the forest and then met with forest industry representatives, environmentalists and government officials.
 
At the time, the German group purchased more than $1 billion in paper from B.C. One of its executives told the industry and environmentalists to work together or their business would go elsewhere.
 
Langer said the groups will use some of the money from the award to track the management of the rainforest and the rest to examine how they reached their goal to see if it's transferable to people, groups and governments who are in similar conflicts around the world.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada Joins Mission That Aims To Uncover Mysteries Of The Deep Ocean

Canada Joins Mission That Aims To Uncover Mysteries Of The Deep Ocean
HALIFAX — Canada is joining a new mission to research Earth's most unexplored frontier: the deep ocean.

Canada Joins Mission That Aims To Uncover Mysteries Of The Deep Ocean

Justin Trudeau Defends Military Spending Record By Pointing To Eastern Europe Mission

Justin Trudeau Defends Military Spending Record By Pointing To Eastern Europe Mission
NATO reported this week that Canadian defence spending hit record lows last year, falling to 0.98 per cent of gross domestic product.

Justin Trudeau Defends Military Spending Record By Pointing To Eastern Europe Mission

'It Was A Big, Big, Big Fish': Man Fishing For Cod Hooks Two-metre Shark

'It Was A Big, Big, Big Fish': Man Fishing For Cod Hooks Two-metre Shark
  Jim Mansfield was fishing off New Melbourne in Trinity Bay early Saturday when he snagged what he thought was the bottom.

'It Was A Big, Big, Big Fish': Man Fishing For Cod Hooks Two-metre Shark

Slowing Market Isn't Dragging Down Metro Vancouver Home Prices

Slowing Market Isn't Dragging Down Metro Vancouver Home Prices
Residential property sales in Metro Vancouver totalled 4,400 in June, an increase of about 0.5 per cent compared to one year earlier, but a drop of nearly eight per cent since May.

Slowing Market Isn't Dragging Down Metro Vancouver Home Prices

B.C.'s Burns Bog Fire 50 Per Cent Contained, Industrial Park Evacuation Ends

B.C.'s Burns Bog Fire 50 Per Cent Contained, Industrial Park Evacuation Ends
The 78-hectare fire in Burns Bog, south of Vancouver, is estimated to be about half contained, and Delta fire Chief Dan Copeland hopes roughly eighty firefighters will have it fully contained sometime today.

B.C.'s Burns Bog Fire 50 Per Cent Contained, Industrial Park Evacuation Ends

Dry Conditions Prompt Voluntary Water Restrictions On Haida Gwaii

Dry Conditions Prompt Voluntary Water Restrictions On Haida Gwaii
The province says stream and groundwater levels have dropped on the remote islands coast and the effects of recent precipitation were short-lived.

Dry Conditions Prompt Voluntary Water Restrictions On Haida Gwaii