Rainforest Solutions Project

Promoting conservation and economic alternatives in British Columbia's Great Bear Rainforest

News

Environmentalists look to insert Great Bear Rainforest into B.C. election agenda

February 7, 2013

An environmental coalition will Thursday attempt to push protection of the Great Bear Rainforest onto the already crowded election agenda, issuing open letters to B.C.’s main political leaders, calling for more immediate action.

“The people of British Columbia want the Great Bear Rainforest agreements completed,” said letters sent by the coalition to Premier Christy Clark and New Democratic Party leader Adrian Dix.

“We are asking your party to include the completion of the Great Bear Rainforest Agreements in your platform and priorities for the first 100 days after the election.”

The letters were written by the Rainforest Solutions Project, who have been working for years with the forest industry to implement an agreement to protect a massive temperate rainforest on B.C.’s coast. The letters come on the seven-year anniversary of that agreement, signed in 2006 by then-premier Gordon Campbell.

Negotiations have been unfolding since, with land use orders signed by government in 2009 to go from 50 per cent protection of old growth in the area to 70 per cent by March 31, 2014.

Last month, the environmental coalition behind today’s letters — comprising Forest-Ethics Canada, Greenpeace and the Sierra Club — expressed significant frustration, saying the forest industry has not been moving quickly enough.

“We have worked with logging companies on finding solutions how to increase conservation but it’s incredibly difficult,” Jens Wieting, a campaigner for Sierra Club BC, said in an interview Wednesday.

“What we would like to see is the government do what government’s are there for, which is to solve problems,” he added, calling on government to push for a solution.

A major block in negotiations is balancing the target of preserving 70 per cent of the rainforest’s old growth with an agreement to allow an annual timber harvest of 2.7 million cubic metres of logs.

On Wednesday, Minister of Forests Steve Thomson said he believes the parties are on track to meet the 2014 deadline, and said he saw no reason to commit to an earlier timeline.

“I think setting a specific timeline beyond what we’ve agreed to currently will set some expectations we may not be able to achieve.”

The call for more immediate action comes as several other special interest groups are also hoping to get their issues on the agenda for the election in May.

Within just the last week, the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives has called on government to raise and reform taxes, the Climate Justice Project has sought to draw attention to the issue of climate change, and the Canadian Bar Association has called for a major overhaul to improve the province’s justice system.

Wieting acknowledged his organization is entering a crowded field, but said a poll commissioned by the coalition proves the Great Bear Rainforest is an issue that resonates across the province.

Conducted by Justason Market Intelligence between January 25 to February 1, that poll found 68 per cent of people fell it important that “the BC government fulfil all elements of (the Great Bear Rainforest Agreement) before the upcoming provincial election in May.”

“We know that whoever is in the next government will be faced with very difficult questions,” he said. “This one should be a clear ‘yes’ because British Columbians care about this; people around the world care about it.”

The poll has a four percentage point margin of error, 95 per cent of the time.

Rick Jeffrey, president of the Coastal Forest Products Association and chief industry negotiator, said a deal is “doable”, and that he does not think the issue should be pushed onto the campaign trail.

“We’re working very hard and diligently with the coast forest initiative companies and Rainforest Solutions Project on a solution set,” he said.

“We think there’s a high degree of likelihood we’re going to achieve success, and once we achieve that success we’ll present the plan to government and we’ll encourage government to implement the plan.”