Friday, May 24, 2013
B.C. forest board says future timber supply at risk, raises alarm about restocking forests
Wednesday, 27 June 2012 - 8:16am
“At a minimum, if nature is left to take its course, the eventual crop of timber in those areas will be delayed,” said the statement.
Gorley could not be immediately reached for comment.
The Forest Practices Board report draws conclusions similar to those of Auditor General John Doyle in an audit of government management of forestry services last winter.
Doyle concluded the ministry has not clearly defined its timber objectives and, as a result, cannot ensure that its management practices are effective.
A leaked government report last winter said thousands of forest industry jobs in B.C. Interior communities are at stake due to timber supply issues connected to the pine beetle epidemic that destroyed an estimated 18.1 million hectares of forests — an area more than five times the size of Vancouver Island.
Gorley’s report said of the two million hectares that may end up designated insufficiently replanted, industry is tabbed to restock a quarter of that, while the government will restock up to 250,000 hectares, leaving more than one million hectares unplanted.
Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations Minister Steve Thomson could not be immediately reached for comment.
Last month he announced the formation of an all-party special committee with a mandate to look for new ways to expand timber supplies, including possible changes to harvest rates, forest tenures and land use policies that include harvesting timber in protected areas.
The committee, which has been holding public meetings in Interior communities, was the government’s response to the leaked forestry report that warned about thousands of job losses across the Interior and in the north due to a declining amount of wood caused by the pine beetle epidemic.
The committee has until Aug. 15 to report back to government.
Opposition New Democrat forests critic Norm Macdonald, who serves as deputy chairman of the special timber supply committee, said the report by the Forest Practices Board is further confirmation that the Liberals have mismanaged the forests.
“Regardless of the definition, roughly two million hectares of land that was once part of the working forest is no longer productive forest land,” said Macdonald in a statement.
He said the government spent nearly $35 million in 1996 on forest inventory work, but for the 2012-13 fiscal year, that amount dropped to $6 million.
By Dirk Meissner THE CANADIAN PRESS
VICTORIA — British Columbia’s independent forest practices watchdog says future timber supplies in the province are at stake and the Liberal government needs to get moving on management plans for pine beetle and fire damaged forests.
A Forest Practices Board report released Tuesday concludes up to two million hectares of Interior forests could be left insufficiently restocked for future use while the government considers replanting the forests.
“At a minimum, if nature is left to take its course, the eventual crop of timber in those areas will be delayed,” said the statement.
Gorley could not be immediately reached for comment.
The Forest Practices Board report draws conclusions similar to those of Auditor General John Doyle in an audit of government management of forestry services last winter.
Doyle concluded the ministry has not clearly defined its timber objectives and, as a result, cannot ensure that its management practices are effective.
A leaked government report last winter said thousands of forest industry jobs in B.C. Interior communities are at stake due to timber supply issues connected to the pine beetle epidemic that destroyed an estimated 18.1 million hectares of forests — an area more than five times the size of Vancouver Island.
Gorley’s report said of the two million hectares that may end up designated insufficiently replanted, industry is tabbed to restock a quarter of that, while the government will restock up to 250,000 hectares, leaving more than one million hectares unplanted.
Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations Minister Steve Thomson could not be immediately reached for comment.
Last month he announced the formation of an all-party special committee with a mandate to look for new ways to expand timber supplies, including possible changes to harvest rates, forest tenures and land use policies that include harvesting timber in protected areas.
The committee, which has been holding public meetings in Interior communities, was the government’s response to the leaked forestry report that warned about thousands of job losses across the Interior and in the north due to a declining amount of wood caused by the pine beetle epidemic.
The committee has until Aug. 15 to report back to government.
Opposition New Democrat forests critic Norm Macdonald, who serves as deputy chairman of the special timber supply committee, said the report by the Forest Practices Board is further confirmation that the Liberals have mismanaged the forests.
“Regardless of the definition, roughly two million hectares of land that was once part of the working forest is no longer productive forest land,” said Macdonald in a statement.
He said the government spent nearly $35 million in 1996 on forest inventory work, but for the 2012-13 fiscal year, that amount dropped to $6 million.






