Sierra Club of BC

You are here: Home Campaign Spotlights Coastal Rainforest at Risk
Document Actions

Coastal Rainforest at Risk

Half of all forest ecosystems on Vancouver Island and the South Coast are at high risk for species extinction and loss of carbon storage. Check out a new report and maps by Sierra Club BC.

Decades of old growth logging have left an alarming 50 percent of all forest ecosystems on Vancouver Island and the South Coast at a high risk for species extinction and loss of carbon storage, according to a new Sierra Club BC report.

The report, entitled “State of British Columbia’s Coastal Rainforest: Mapping the Gaps for Ecological Health and Carbon Storage”, found that more than two million hectares of rainforest ecosystems on BC's coast have less than 30 percent old-growth coverage per ecosystemthe critical limit to avert species extinction. With continued clear-cut logging planned for coastal old-growth forests, BC will also lose a vital asset in the fight against climate change.

Read our press release.

“BC’s coastal forests are among the best carbon storehouses on the planet and one of world’s most powerful tools in the fight against climate change,” said Jens Wieting, coastal forest campaigner for Sierra Club BC. “For the first time, this report shows coast-wide trends for species loss and carbon storage, as well as the most urgent conservation priorities.”

Read the story in the Times Colonist.

The report's findings highlight the urgent need for BC to enact stand-alone legislation to protect the province's 2,000 at-risk species and their habitats. BC is one of only two provinces that does not have endangered species legislation.

View Map 1: BC Coast - Old growth and Second growth/logged areas 

View Map 2: BC Coast - Forest Ecosystems at Risk of Species Loss

View Map 3: BC Coast - Good and Medium Productivity Forest Ecosystems at Risk of Species Loss

View Map 4: Good and Medium Productivity Forest Ecosystems at Risk of Species Loss (Vancouver Island and South Coast)

The report also points to the potential of BC’s coastal forests to become a vitally important part of a low-carbon economy, providing jobs, carbon sinks and species habitat. It also calls for urgent policy reform modelled after the successful land use plan in the Great Bear Rainforest.

“We must quickly change the way we manage B.C.’s coastal forests to ensure on-going employment in a stable industry--based on sustainable forest management, increased manufacturing here at home and an end to raw log exports,” said Sierra Club BC Executive Director George Heyman.

Download a high-resolution version of the report.

Donate Image
Donor Profile
Dorothy Cutting

Dorothy Cutting is a grandma with a difference. At an age when most people are sitting back in the rocking chairs and baking cookies, she has devoted her seventies to raising awareness about global warming.

Dorothy's life changed after reading Robert Hunter's book, "2030: Confronting Thermageddon in Our Lifetime". More...

 

 

powered by Plone | site by Groundwire | Accessibility