Ending old-growth logging on Vancouver Island would shut down four sawmills, a pulp mill and lead to thousands of jobs lost -- it would also eliminate much of the value-add wood product manufacturing
Last Thursday (June 6thj) the Sierra Club
B.C. staged demonstrations at 17 MLA offices, repeating their call for an end
to logging of old-growth forests. MLA offices were located in Victoria,
Langford, Campbell River, Comox, Nanaimo, Sidney, Duncan, Parksville,
Vancouver, North Vancouver, Surrey, Oliver, Prince George, Langley, Sechelt and
Nelson.
Here is the response from David Elstone RPF,
executive director of the Truck Loggers Association:
IMAGE: Forest Products Association of Canada |
For decades, and even more so over the past
year, there have been many catastrophic headlines trumpeting rhetoric from
environmentalists who state BC’s old-growth forests are endangered and warning
that if we’re not careful, we’ll soon run out.
Nothing could be further from the truth: 55
per cent of remaining old-growth forests, 500,000 hectares, are protected on
Vancouver Island alone and will never be harvested ... EVER! There are also millions of hectares of old
growth tress protected on the B.C. Coast.
These crucial facts are often ignored in the
articles and arguments intended to pressure the government to end old-growth
logging.
Industry
harvests only 0.3% (27,000 hectares) of the Coast’s operational forest’s 8.5
million hectares per year.
There have been ongoing suggestions the
forestry industry needs to transition from old-growth to second-growth
harvesting. This is a completely unrealistic demand. A moratorium on harvesting
old-growth would deal a deadly blow to Vancouver Island’s forestry economy.
From 2012-2017, about 47.7 per cent of the harvest was from old-growth trees.
Ending old-growth logging on Vancouver Island would shut down four sawmills, a
pulp mill and lead to thousands of jobs lost.
It would also eliminate much of the value-add
wood product manufacturing that relies on access to high quality timber that
only comes from old-growth forests. Old growth wood is used to manufacture
doors, moldings, flooring, and decking found in most people’s homes in BC. It
is valued for its knot-free, tight grain which is stronger and more visually
appealing than wood harvested from second-growth trees.
Let me be clear; BC is the most sustainably
managed forest region in the world. The province has more forested land under
third party environmental certification than any other country in the world.
B.C. takes old growth conservation seriously.
The Great Bear Rainforest Act, Old-Growth Management Areas and other safeguards
were created to make sure we will never, ever run out of old-growth forests.
The vast majority of old-growth forests are
part of the provincial forest resource, and are owned by all British
Columbians. Crown forests are managed with myriad values in mind, including
recreation, soils, sustainable timber supply, wildlife, water, fish,
biodiversity, visual landscapes and cultural resources.
Industry harvests only 0.3% (27,000 hectares)
of the Coast’s operational forest’s 8.5 million hectares per year.
Much of the negative attention focuses on clear cutting; it is often described as an unsustainable, unethical, and ugly
harvesting practice. In fact, clear-cutting is the most cost-effective and
silviculture-friendly way to regrow trees. Reforestation, which is legally
mandated in BC, ensures our forests will be sustainable for generations to
come, and the newly planted trees help our fight against climate change by
fixing carbon as they grow.
Often
forgotten too, are the relationships between the forest sector and backcountry
tourism for skiers, mountain bikers and hikers who gain access to the forest on
forest-industry service roads.
More than 200 million trees are planted every
year in BC. Carbon stored in wood products made from B.C. forests can remain
sequestered for 100 years and beyond.
It is also not widely known that not all
trees are harvested within a clear-cut. BC’s legacy tree policy requires the
qualifying old growth trees to be left standing and there are successful
examples of previously harvested clear-cuts where legacy trees still stand
tall.
As the voice of timber harvesting contractors
– who harvest the trees – we need to ensure governments at all levels
understand the catastrophic economic consequences that would befall B.C.’s
rural communities if pleas to ban old-growth logging are heeded.
Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs)
need to consider the disaster an old-growth logging ban would spell for the
livelihoods of rural families in forestry-based community. The coastal forest
industry provides well-paying jobs for nearly 24,000 workers and that’s not
counting the reliant indirect jobs and businesses: grocery stores, restaurants,
hotels, teachers, nurses and doctors.
Often forgotten too, are the relationships
between the forest sector and back-country tourism for skiers, mountain bikers
and hikers who gain access to the forest on forest-industry service roads. None
of this would exist if not for a forest resource sector that includes
harvesting some old-growth timber.
Most importantly, the public needs to know
that all timber harvesting contractors in BC believe in conservation and are
respectfully committed to sustainable old-growth forest management. It’s time
we start celebrating the current conservation investment in millions of
protected hectares, which too often is forgotten and ignored.
It is outrageous to demand an end to old
growth logging without acknowledging the impact to people and communities. Our
working forest needs protection from the misguided efforts of a few environmentalists
who don’t have the province’s best interests in mind.
They should not headline the news by making
false claims against harvesting practices of BC’s most valued resource.
And ... MLAs should know better to than to
forsake the livelihoods of their own constituents.
ABOUT
David Elstone:
David Elstone, RPF, brought a wealth of forestry experience with him to the TLA. For ten years, he worked as a senior analyst for ERA Forest Products Research focusing on global and local forest products markets. In that role, he was a frequent public speaker at industry conferences, a sought-out source by the media and a regular contributor to forestry publications such as Truck LoggerBC. His insights into the BC forest industry and its markets will be invaluable to the membership.
Before joining ERA Forest Products
Research, David owned and operated his own forestry consulting company,
Delstone Resources, on the Sunshine Coast. As a consultant, he developed
business plans for forest product companies and advised on strategic and operational
issues related to forest management. He also represented clients in discussions
with First Nations, forest tenure licensees and contractors as well as local
and provincial governments.
Comments
Post a Comment