Western Silvicultural Contractors' Association

Forest Practice / Enivronment

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

B.C.'s reforestation crisis shows province an environmental laggard


May 4, 2010
By Arnold Bercov, George Heyman and Ben Parfitt - April 28, 2010 (The Vancouver Sun)

In less than a decade, British Columbia has gone from environmental leader to environmental laggard in stewarding one of our most important natural resources. And it could not come at a worse time, as we grapple with climate change and its horrendous impact on our forests.

In what was once one of the greener jurisdictions on earth, a major reforestation crisis is underway. A backlog of lands in desperate need of replanting has doubled in a decade, while public investments in tree planting have plummeted.

But before plumbing the depths, let's celebrate past achievements -- achievements that crossed political lines under provincial Social Credit and New Democratic Party administrations and federal Liberal and Progressive Conservative regimes.

In the mid 1980s, B.C. had a substantial problem on its hands. Years of neglect following logging, forest fires and pest outbreaks had left vast swaths of land with too few trees -- a condition known in industry and government parlance as Not Satisfactorily Restocked or "NSR."

Back then, the province paid for virtually all tree-planting, a practice that the Social Credit government of the day wisely abolished in 1986, requiring the companies that profited from logging public forests to put something back.

But the transfer of responsibilities did nothing to address the by then sizable NSR backlog. So between 1986 and 1998, the provincial and federal governments invested an average of $165 million per year to renew public forests. The number of trees planted and the area reforested more than doubled; the area of land cleared of brush so that trees could grow more freely increased fivefold; and there was a sevenfold increase in the number of trees thinned, so that the remaining trees could grow faster. Back then NSR shrunk faster than the melting pre-Olympics snow, and the provincial and federal governments owned the reforestation podium.

No more.

In 2001, public reforestation investments stood at $45 million. A year later, those same investments had been slashed to $7 million. By 2004, they had reached an anemic $3 million.

Incredibly, over the same time frame the area of B.C. forest attacked by the mountain pine beetle went from 785,497 hectares to more than seven million hectares. In other words, while the area of land filled with hundreds of millions of beetle-killed trees increased by a factor of nine, the amount of public dollars spent on replanting decreased by 93 per cent -- all this from a government that professed to care about stewarding our publicly owned natural resources.

In more recent years, government spending has increased somewhat. In 2008-09, provincial funding of reforestation efforts through the "Forests for Tomorrow" program stood just shy of $26 million and 6.79 million trees were planted (unpublished data for the 2009-10 fiscal year peg planting at 13.5 million trees, with dollars spent not yet available).

All to the good, until one considers the context. Twenty years ago we spent six times as much in public dollars and for that money planted 31 times more seedlings on average. By any measure, from a government that professes to value "results" such a performance can only be called an embarrassment.

And now, comes the wake-up call. The Ministry of Forests says that the true extent of the reforestation crisis is far worse than previously stated. An estimated 700,000 hectares have suddenly appeared as new tracts of public land in need of reforestation. These previously "missing" lands, reported for the first time as such by ministry personnel last fall, increase the total area of NSR by 1,750 Stanley Parks in size.

Such disparities inspire little confidence that we know the true extent of today's reforestation challenge. Again, for a government that says it is committed to "no net deforestation," and that claims to be concerned about climate change, this is inexcusable.

Arnold Bercov is the forest resource officer of the Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of Canada; George Heyman is executive director of the Sierra Club of BC; and Ben Parfitt is a resource policy analyst with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives' B.C. office.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Date:May 4, 2010
Author:By Arnold Bercov, George Heyman and Ben Parfitt - April 28, 2010
Source:The Vancouver Sun
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