Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Some Say The Fate Of British Columbia's Old-Growth Forests Rests In The Balance

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2016 12:03 PM
    SAANICH, B.C. — The Douglas fir Andy MacKinnon leans against is 40 metres tall. It's likely more than 500 years old and its fire-scarred trunk is almost two metres in diameter.
     
    In most other countries, the tree would be the largest in the land, says MacKinnon, a forest ecologist who spent three decades with British Columbia's government researching old-growth forests.
     
    At Francis/King Regional Park, minutes from Victoria, the park's trees are protected from logging, but about 150 kilometres west of Victoria, old-growth forests with 1,000-year-old trees twice the size of those in the park are being cut down every day, said MacKinnon.
     
    The world's largest trees face dangers similar to elephants, whales and bison that have been hunted to the brink of extinction, he said.
     
    Right now, MacKinnon said it's open season on B.C.'s old-growth forests outside of parks or protected areas.
     
    "You hear debates about how much old growth we'd like out on the landscape and some people will say 'X' and some people will say 'Y,' but I think most people will agree that when you are down to less than one per cent, that's too little," he said.
     
    MacKinnon is behind a push by some communities, business groups and politicians to stop logging in old-growth forests. The B.C. Chamber of Commerce recently endorsed a resolution to increase protection of old-growth forests where they have a greater economic benefit if they are left standing.
     
    Port Renfrew, northwest of Victoria, has reported an increase in tourism in Avatar Grove, a 50-hectare section of old-growth forest named after the Hollywood adventure movie.
     
    The Port Renfrew area is also known for Canada's largest living trees, including a 70-metre tall Douglas fir named "Big Lonely Doug" by environmentalists because it was the only tree left standing after a logging clear cut.
     
    The B.C. government is taking steps to protect forests, including the Great Bear Rainforest protection agreement. It will protect 85 per cent of the world's largest intact temperate rainforest from logging in an area on the central and northern coast of the province.
     
    There are 1,000-year-old western red cedars and 90-metre tall Sitka spruce trees in the rainforest, which is also home to the white kermode bear.
     
    Environmentalists, forest companies and First Nations cheered the deal as a model of compromise after two decades of protests and difficult negotiations.
     
    The environmental applause continued with a new provincial park east of Prince George that's the world's only inland temperate rainforest. Cedar and hemlock trees were slated for logging, but local citizens, First Nations and academics built a series of trails into the area known as the Ancient Forest where thousands now marvel at trees with trunks measuring 16 metres in circumference.
     
    Rick Jeffery, president of Coast Forest Products Association, said 55 per cent of B.C.'s coastal forests are under some form of protection from logging.
     
    The days of leaving one tree in a clear cut are gone, said Jeffery, whose organization represents major forest companies that employ 38,000 forest workers in the province.
     
    "This isn't a jobs versus environment thing," he said. "We can have both if we do this smartly."
     
    Steve Thomson, B.C.'s forests, lands and natural resource operations minister, said the Great Bear and Ancient Forest agreements highlight the government's commitment to protecting old-growth forests.
     
    "It's about protecting important values and making sure we have that balance that continues to provide jobs and employment in the forest sector."
     
     
    The Ancient Forest is considered a natural wonder, a temperate rainforest inland, hundreds of kilometres away from similar coastal rainforests. The province said it would work with the federal government to declare the forest a UNESCO world heritage site.
     
    "Scientifically, the trees are pretty amazing," said Darwyn Coxson, a plant ecologist at the University of Northern British Columbia. "They really shouldn't be there."
     
    Coxson said because the trees take 1,000 years to grow, it's prudent to focus on what is in the forests now.
     
    "We have a finite supply and the ones that are out there are realistically all you are ever going to have."
     
    B.C.'S OLD-GROWTH FORESTS BY THE NUMBERS
     
    SAANICH, B.C. — British Columbia's old-growth forests boast huge trees that are more than 1,000 years old, but many fear their days are numbered. Here are some numbers on the trees:
     
    — The government says there are 55 million hectares of forests in B.C.
     
    — Twenty-five million hectares are old-growth forests.
     
    — Four million hectares of old-growth hectares are fully protected from logging.
     
    — The Red Creek fir near Port Renfrew on Vancouver Island is listed as the world's largest Douglas fir tree at 73.8 metres tall and its trunk has a diameter of 4.2 metres.
     
    — The Cheewaht Lake cedar in Pacific Rim National Park on the southwest edge of Vancouver Island has a circumference of 18.34 metres. It is estimated to be between 2,000 and 2,500 years old. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    A Million Over Asking

    A Million Over Asking
    Good news if you’re selling your home but bad news for most home buyers who are struggling to find a house that suits their needs while staying within their budget.

    A Million Over Asking

    No Charges After Naked Woman Prompts Vancouver Police Emergency Response

    No Charges After Naked Woman Prompts Vancouver Police Emergency Response
    Policed cordononed off a downtown block on the Robson Street shopping district last Friday after a witness called 911 to say they looked into a locked store and saw a bare foot sticking out from behind a counter.

    No Charges After Naked Woman Prompts Vancouver Police Emergency Response

    Indo-Canadian Woman Pawandeep Kaur Booked For Arranging Hit On Estranged Husband In India

    Indo-Canadian Woman Pawandeep Kaur Booked For Arranging Hit On Estranged Husband In India
    Mohali NRI’s murder: Canadian woman booked for husband’s murder, paid Rs 2.7 lakh to contract killer

    Indo-Canadian Woman Pawandeep Kaur Booked For Arranging Hit On Estranged Husband In India

    Canadian Relatives Of Missing 5-Year-Old Syrian Girl Seek Help After Photo Appears Online

    Canadian Relatives Of Missing 5-Year-Old Syrian Girl Seek Help After Photo Appears Online
    Mohamed Masalmeh, a cousin of the dark-haired girl, says he's sure the photo shows Mira Akram Al Jawabrah after she was rescued from a boat that overturned off the coast of Italy in August 2014, when the girl was three years old.

    Canadian Relatives Of Missing 5-Year-Old Syrian Girl Seek Help After Photo Appears Online

    $17.6 Million Promised To Upgrade Safety On Coquihalla Highway For Commercial Truckers

    $17.6 Million Promised To Upgrade Safety On Coquihalla Highway For Commercial Truckers
    The expansion will accommodate up to 70 trucks.

    $17.6 Million Promised To Upgrade Safety On Coquihalla Highway For Commercial Truckers

    Join Surrey RCMP's Campaign Against High Risk Driving Behaviour

    Join Surrey RCMP's Campaign Against High Risk Driving Behaviour
    While National Road Safety Week may have just ended, the Surrey RCMP continues to focus on traffic safety with a series of education and enforcement campaigns this week aimed at high risk driving .

    Join Surrey RCMP's Campaign Against High Risk Driving Behaviour