Clearcutting British Columbia’s Thousand-Year-Old Trees

Originally published on the ECOreport.

It has been a year since the Wilderness Committee drew our attention to the planned logging of old-growth trees in Vancouver Island’s central Walbran Valley. So far, the controversial heli-block 4424 has remained untouched. Since last November, Teal Jones has been logging 6 or 7 cutblocks in the more easily accessible areas south of the river. They are already clearcutting British Columbia’s thousand-year-old trees.

Wilderness Committee campaigner Torrance Coste in a fresh Teal Jones clearcut in the Walbran Valley, with the intact Central Walbran in the background. (Emily Hoffpauir)

Conflict Over The Woods

The provincial government denies the allegation that it is “doing nothing” to protect the Walbran’s old growth forests.

A Ministry of Forests spokesperson emailed, “The neighbouring 16,000-hectare park also contains some of those same ecosystems. The park was formed to protect those ecosystems.”

He added, “Over 4 million hectares of B.C.’s old growth forests are protected.”

Sierra Club BC disagrees with its figures. Its “Google Earth file reveals that almost half (46%) of the landscape units now have less than 30 % of productive old-growth remaining. (Landscape units are areas of land used for long-term forest planning, usually 50,000 to 100,000 hectares.) 17% of the landscape units have less than 10 per cent productive old-growth rainforest remaining.”

“Experts consider 30% the threshold for ‘high ecological risk’ of loss of species,” says Jens Wieting, Sierra Club BC Forest and Climate campaigner.

According to Torrance Coste, of the Wilderness Committee, “Teal Jones acknowledges that old-growth logging will come to an end within the next few decades. At the same time they say if any of their cutblocks are stopped, the situation would be drastic for their company and they’ll need to lay workers off.”

New Teal Jones clearcut in the Walbran Valley (Torrance Coste)

Communities Support Extending Protections

The Association of Vancouver Island Coastal Communities passed a resolution requesting that the provincial government, and Ministry of Forests, amend the Vancouver Island Land Use Plan “to protect all of Vancouver Island’s remaining old growth forest on provincial Crown land.”

This month, the B.C. Chamber of Commerce passed a motion calling on the province to expand protection of old-growth forests in areas where they have, or likely would have, greater economic value if left standing.

For example, the president of the Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce told the Times-Colonist that tourism is now his community’s #1 source of revenue.

“Thanks to the trees, Port Renfrew is no longer a one-industry tourism town and has been able to successfully brand itself the ‘Tall Tree Capital of Canada,’ ” he said.

Wilderness Committee activists protest old-growth logging in the Walbran Valley. (Emily Hoffpauir)

Negotiations

Representatives from the Ministry of Forests met with the Wilderness Committee, several other environmental groups, and Teal Jones last February.

“Nothing was resolved, but it was agreed that a conflict in the Walbran wasn’t desirable and all parties wanted it to go away,” said Coste.

Up until this point, the Wilderness Committee has focused its energies protecting 486 hectares north of the Walbran River. (This includes the controversial cutblock 4424.)

“We will never support old growth logging anywhere, but it was’t as hard a line south of the river. We knew they need time to phase out old growth logging. If we said no old growth logging period, we knew they wouldn’t listen. So, as a first step, we looked at the area with the least cutblocks historically,” said Coste.

Clearcutting British Columbia’s Thousand-Year-Old Trees

He added that now that Teal Jones has logged the southern cutblocks, the Wilderness Committee has documented the damage.

“These blocks are road blocks. The potential damage at 4424 would be slightly less drastic (they’d leave the hemlock trees) but the cedar stumps would be as big or bigger — 4424 is at lower elevation than these blocks.”

The Wilderness Committee's Emily Hoffpauir in a new old-growth clearcut, logged this winter by Teal Jones. The unprotected Central Walbran Valley is in the background. (Torrance Coste)

NDP Hesitant To Intervene

The Wilderness Committee reached out to the official opposition.

“We’ve kept them well briefed on the issue. We’ve let them know that we expect the opposition to oppose unacceptable things that the government is in support of and this is at the top of that list. They’ve said that they aren’t in a position to oppose logging in the Walbran, or old growth logging, until they have talked to more people. Which, I assume, means industry,” said Coste.

The NDP have still not responded to my calls.

Wilderness Committee staff and volunteers in a new Teal Jones clearcut in the Walbran Valley. (Torrance Coste)

Photo Credits: Wilderness Committee campaigner Torrance Coste in a fresh Teal Jones clearcut in the Walbran Valley, with the intact Central Walbran in the background. (Emily Hoffpauir);New Teal Jones clearcut in the Walbran Valley (Torrance Coste); Wilderness Committee activists protest old-growth logging in the Walbran Valley. (Emily Hoffpauir);The Wilderness Committee’s Emily Hoffpauir in a new old-growth clearcut, logged this winter by Teal Jones. The unprotected Central Walbran Valley is in the background. (Torrance Coste);Wilderness Committee staff and volunteers in a new Teal Jones clearcut in the Walbran Valley. (Torrance Coste)  

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