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The Tyee: BC ‘Going Backwards’ on Ecosystem Protections
Advocates, the BC Greens, and a former cabinet minister take aim at the NDP’s stalled efforts to protect ecosystems, such as old-growth forests.

The Tyee: BC Must Stop Blaming First Nations for Old-Growth Logging
BC is increasing logging while lagging on old-growth protection. Experts say the province should fund First Nations to conserve forests instead.

Western Coralroot
Meet one of the rainforest’s loveliest yet strangest flowers: the western coralroot!
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Old-growth activists commend BC Premier Eby on lofty land conservation goal
/in News CoverageDecember 13, 2022
Victoria Buzz
By Curtis Blandy
Old-growth activists in BC are looking forward to Premier David Eby’s lofty goals of eco-conservation within the province.
With Premier Eby’s new cabinet officially sworn-in, their intentions and goals have been receiving some attention from activists throughout BC.
Specifically, the Ancient Forest Alliance is commending the newly elected premier on his mandate letter to Nathan Cullen, Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship in which he outlines the expectation for the creation of new Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas (IPCAs) and committing to the protection of 30% of lands the in BC by 2030.
Protection of 30% of BC’s land would double the total current protected land.
“The commitment to double legislated protected areas in BC has the potential to be a major step towards protecting endangered old-growth forests, ecosystems, and species across British Columbia,” said Ancient Forest Alliance Campaigner & Photographer, TJ Watt.
“The new premier should be commended for this. To ensure these promises can be made a reality, it’s imperative that major conservation funding is secured through the much anticipated BC-Canada Nature Agreement.”
“We have the framework, now we just need the funding to implement it.”
In addition to committing to this goal of protecting 30% of BC lands, the province has also acknowledged the need for conservation financing in order to protect areas with the most ecological diversity.
To achieve this, Minister Cullen says he will work with Indigenous communities as well as the government to establish stewardship programs and prioritize economic development for the conservation of old-growth.
Read the original article
Conservationists optimistic over David Eby’s commitments to protect BC’s biodiversity
/in News CoverageDecember 11, 2022
CBC News
By Chad Pawson
Land stewardship mandate letter calls for 30 per cent of BC’s land base to be protected by 2030
In mandate letters to his land stewardship and forestry ministers, BC Premier David Eby says he wants to double the amount of protected land in the province, support new Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas, and move faster on recommendations around the logging of old growth trees.
They’re conservation goals advocates have been calling on for years to protect BC’s unique biodiversity, which has thousands of species at risk due to development and climate change.
“This is potentially a major leap toward protecting endangered ecosystems and the most at-risk, productive stands of old-growth forests left in BC,” said Ken Wu in a release from the Endangered Ecosystems Alliance.
Experts say protected areas help mitigate the worst effects of climate change, contribute to diversifying local economies and advance reconciliation with First Nations.
This week, Eby named his first cabinet as premier, with former energy and mines minister Bruce Ralston taking on forestry and Nathan Cullen replacing Josie Osborne as the minister for water, land and resource stewardship. The new ministry was put in place in February.
The tone of the letters appears to usher in the type of science-based, holistic approach to conservation and biodiversity in the province that people like Wu have been asking for from the BC government.
“We have seen the impacts of short-term thinking on the British Columbia land base — exhausted forests, poisoned water, and contaminated sites,” wrote Eby is his mandate letter to Cullen.
“These impacts don’t just cost the public money to clean up and rehabilitate, they threaten the ability of entire communities to thrive and succeed.”
The highlight is finding ways to partner with the federal government, First Nations, industry and communities to protect 30 per cent of BC’s landbase by 2030, including Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas (IPCAs).
IPCAs are lands and waters where Indigenous governments have the primary role in protecting and conserving ecosystems through Indigenous laws, governance and knowledge.
“Research shows that biodiversity thrives on Indigenous-managed lands and waters,” said Tori Ball with the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, British Columbia.
Canada is committed to protecting 25 per cent of lands and 25 per cent of oceans by 2025,and 30 per cent of each by 2030.
Currently protected lands cover around 15 per cent of BC’s land base. Critics say ecological zones with the highest biodiversity are underrepresented.
Old growth
Both letters also ask for the ministers to implement 14 recommendations made more than two years ago in a review of how old growth trees are logged in BC, specifically transitioning to an industry that prioritizes the health of ecosystems.
Critics say the government has so far moved too slowly on action items as old growth trees in ecologically-rich areas continue to be logged.
Cullen’s mandate letter also calls for the development of a “new conservation financing mechanism to support protection of biodiverse areas,” but does not expand on what that might be or how it would work.
BC has yet to announce matching funding from the federal government, which ear-marked $55.1 million over three years to establish a BC “Old Growth Nature Fund” in its budget earlier this year.
The Sierra Club of BC said that reaching the commitments in the letters will depend on immediacy, proper funding, and transparency over timelines and milestones.
“Without immediate change on the ground the window of action to safeguard biodiversity as we know it is rapidly closing,” said Jens Wieting with Sierra Club BC.
Read the original article
Thank you to all who attended our 2022 Year-End Celebration & Fundraiser!
/in Thank YouThank you to all who attended the Ancient Forest Alliance’s amazing 2022 Year-End Celebration & Fundraiser last week at the Victoria Event Centre! Below are a few snapshots of the evening. It was wonderful to connect in person again and we are grateful to have such a passionate, kind, and generous community standing with us!
We’d also like to share a special thank you to those who helped make the night a success: AFA’s hardworking volunteers, the Victoria Event Centre staff, photographer Hélène Cyr, videographer Jim Vanderhorst, and finally, Market on Yates and Wildfire Bakery for their donations towards the delicious selection of appetizers and treats!