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WORLDWIDE FOREST/BIODIVERSITY CAMPAIGN NEWS

Loggers Find Canada Rain Forest Flush With Foes

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Forest Networking a Project of forests.org

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      http://forests.org/web/ -- Discuss Forest Conservation

 

10/25/99

OVERVIEW & COMMENTARY

Canada's temperate rainforests, "the Brazil of the north", are of

global biological significance -- "a vast, barely disturbed sea of

trees, one-quarter of the world's remaining temperate rain forest."

Unfortunately, the increasingly desperate Canadian timber industry is

poised to destroy this ecological treasure -- in the next 25 years,

logging 50 of the coastal forest's largest valleys.  However, there

is increasing local and global opposition.  It is problematic to

expect developing countries to forgo development of their forests

based on ecological appeals, when the World's richest countries can't

stop gorging themselves on the trough of once over, liquidation of

forests, for illusory economic benefits at the cost of permanent

ecological simplification.

g.b.

 

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Title:   Loggers Find Canada Rain Forest Flush With Foes

Source:  New York Times

Status:  Copyright 1999, contact source for permission to reprint

Date:    October 22, 1999

Byline:  JAMES BROOKE

 

BELLA BELLA, British Columbia -- Disembarking from an inflatable boat

at James Bay, a party of eco-tourists hiked one recent morning into a

primeval cathedral of the world's largest temperate rain forest.

 

Wreaths of mist lifted from moss-draped cedar trees, revealing stream

banks strewn with salmon carcasses, their copper-colored skins

freshly punctured by black bears. Sailing low overhead, bald eagles

patrolled, beating the humid air with their wings. Once, the

stillness of a forest glade echoed with the distant howling of a wolf

pack.

 

The only discordant note was a string of construction flags marking

roads and a log dump for the day next spring when James Bay is to be

logged, when its ancient western red cedars are to be converted to

window sills and decks for American houses.         

 

After cutting 70 percent of the old-growth forest from Vancouver

Island -- forest that has never been logged -- Canadian logging

companies are now moving into what environmentalists call "the Brazil

of the north" -- a vast, barely disturbed sea of trees, one-quarter

of the world's remaining temperate rain forest. Over the next 25

years, 50 of the coastal forest's largest valleys are to be logged.

 

Now, a collision of powerful forces is taking shape on this remote

coast, an archipelago where 4,500 people live, largely in Indian

villages, sprinkled over a land area larger than Massachusetts and

New Hampshire combined.

 

On one side is the logging industry of Canada, the world's largest

exporter of timber, pulp and newsprint. Half of the nation's timber

cut, or harvest, comes from British Columbia. Here, Canada's largest

trees grow in forests where 15 feet of rain can fall in a year. But

after suffering the nation's worst economic performance last year,

British Columbia has slashed logging royalties to jump-start the cut.

 

Although King Timber still rules Canada's Far West, logging companies

now face a trio of new players determined to defend what many call

the Great Bear Rain Forest: tour operators, Indian tribes and a

cross-border alliance of environmentalists.

 

With three tourists visiting British Columbia for each of its four

million residents, tourism now employs more people -- albeit at lower

wages -- than the forest products industry. With half a million

tourists, largely Americans, taking cruises every summer up the

inland passage from Vancouver to Anchorage, logging companies have

been forced to leave "beauty fringes," or waterfront skirts of trees

that create illusions of deep forest.

 

"This is one of the last great intact ecosystems of the world, and

more and more people want to see it," said Eric Boyum, the captain of

Ocean Light I, as he piloted his 67-foot cutter from James Bay, where

sea otters slipped off rocks, to open waters where porpoises arced

playfully. "Our bookings are up 20 percent over last year."

 

Opposition to wholesale logging also is emerging from many of British

Columbia's 47 Indian tribes, which have long seemed to be spectators

to economic development. By one survey, 90 percent of logging company

workers are flown in from the southern part of the province. In Bella

Bella, the rundown waterfront capital of the Heilstuk Nation, only 20

local men have been hired for logging jobs. Here, as elsewhere,

natives have little legal access to trees they consider their own.

 

"It is hard for our people to see so many of our resources sailing

by, when our treaty has not been settled, while there are so many

unemployed," Phil Hogan, a tribal treaty negotiator, said of barges

that pass, stacked with logs.

 

Peace treaties were never signed with American Indian tribes west of

the Continental Divide because the tribes were never considered

conquered.

 

[On Thursday Parliament started debate on approval of a treaty with

the Nisga'a tribe, the first land-rights treaty reached with a

British Columbia tribe in this century.]

 

In a move strengthening Indian forest claims, the Supreme Court ruled

two years ago that in areas where no treaties had been signed, tribes

retained proprietary interest in the land and resources. Impatient

with the slow pace of treaty negotiations, one interior tribe, the

Westbank Nation, started logging Sept. 7 on Government land without

provincial consent.

 

Half a dozen other tribes have since started logging Government land,

and several called for "an international consumer boycott of

companies who are destroying forest resources with destructive

logging of aboriginal title lands."

 

But for logging companies on the coast, the most threatening boycott

campaign is being waged by environmentalists who have made successful

appeals to companies in the United States, the largest consumer of

Canadian forest products.

 

Traditionally, Canadian environmentalists tried to slow rain forest

destruction by focusing on Government officials. In 1993, in the

largest demonstration of civil disobedience in modern Canadian

history, 856 people were arrested for blocking a logging road on

Vancouver Island.

 

But in a province where forest products account for 1 in 17 jobs,

politicians have long been swayed by the industry, either by powerful

companies or by powerful unions. Glen Clark, the provincial premier

who resigned in August, once called environmentalists "enemies of

British Columbia." His successor, Dan Miller, a former millworker

from the north coast, used the term "Soviet-style" to describe

Government lumber policies and called for privatizing provincial

lands.

 

Environmentalists have long suspected that the public was more

sympathetic to their cause than the politicians. Last fall a poll of

provincial residents found that 70 percent opposed clear-cutting on

the central coast and that 74 percent said they would pay more for

paper or wood if they knew that the trees had been harvested in a

"sustainable" way -- without lasting harm to the forest.

 

In a poll of Americans this year by Yankelovich Partners pollsters,

62.5 percent of respondents said companies should not use or sell

products made from old-growth wood, 58.5 percent said they supported

legislation to end old-growth logging, and 43.5 percent said they

would be less likely to do business with a company using old-growth

wood.

 

"The Government is irrelevant; it is the marketplace," said Merran

Smith, a forest campaigner for the Sierra Club of British Columbia.

"We give Home Depot 25,000 postcards. Home Depot responds."

 

In a major victory for the boycott campaign, Home Depot, the vast

home improvement retailer, announced on Aug. 26 that it would phase

out sales of wood from endangered forests by 2002.

 

With 856 stores worldwide, the Atlanta-based chain says it is the

largest wood retailer in the world, selling about 10 percent of the

world's marketed supply.

 

The chain's turnaround came after environmentalists, led by the

Sierra Club and Greenpeace, deluged the company with postcards, sent

a Great Bear Rain Forest exhibit bus to a shareholder meeting and

erected a Home Depot protest billboard over a clear-cut patch near

Vancouver.

 

"The Government didn't listen, so we realized that the only way to

turn the situation around was to go directly to consumers," said

Tamara Stark, a forest campaigner for Greenpeace in Vancouver. After

making inroads in Europe, Greenpeace has won pledges in the last year

to phase out use of old-growth wood from 20 Japanese companies and

from 27 United States-based Fortune 500 companies.

 

In a new phase this fall, the Sierra Club is campaigning for city

ordinances in New York and Los Angeles that would phase out purchases

of wood from old-growth forests that is not harvested in a

sustainable way.

 

"Government purchasing accounts for 20 percent of wood consumption in

the U.S.," said Susan Holmes, the New York City-based director of the

club's Buy Good Wood campaign. "In Riverside Park, they are creating

a bikeway-walkway that is using hemlock from the coast of British

Columbia."

 

A. Gifford Miller, a Democratic City Councilman in New York and

sponsor of the "selective purchasing" legislation, said by telephone:

"If Home Depot can do it, we can, too. New Yorkers would be horrified

to learn that the park benches they sit on, the boardwalks they walk

on, are constructed at the expense of beautiful old-growth forest

that can never be replaced."

 

The message is rattling Vancouver's largest lumber companies. Over

the last decade, the provincial tree harvest has dropped by one-

quarter, depressed by Asia's economic contraction and by growing

consumer resistance.

 

"It used to be, you harvest a tree, you cut it into lumber, and you

put it on a boat; the customer was pretty abstract," said Tom

Stephens, president of MacMillan Bloedel, long a leading timber

company here. But, he added, "if customer attitudes change, we have

to change too."

 

Last year, MacMillan Bloedel broke ranks with other companies in the

province and promised to phase out clear-cutting by 2002. This year,

about half the company's harvest is by "variable retention," a new

sustainable system that relies on thinning or cutting small patches.

 

To minimize the destruction caused by logging roads, the company

increasingly uses helicopters to pull high-value trees from the

forest. Stephens has consulted extensively with environmentalists.

"The company that is not sensitive to those issues simply will not be

in business very long," he said.

 

The Weyerhaeuser Company, which is considering a proposal to buy

McMillan Bloedel, has said it will honor the promise to phase out

clear-cutting.

 

MacMillan Bloedel and two other major companies want to defuse the

boycott by winning certification from the Forest Stewardship Council,

a Mexico-based group founded six years ago by environmental and

social groups. But the council is not expected to develop harvesting

standards for the rain forest here until the end of next year.

 

With profits low in the timber industry here, most companies refuse

to abandon clear-cutting. Bill Dumont, the chief forester for Western

Forest Products, which wants to log James Bay next year, said, "We

have tried to come to an agreement with the greens, but we are not

going to put ourselves out of business."

 

On Sept. 15, in the provincial interior, dozens of angry loggers

burned a protesters' camp, smashed video equipment, and beat up

several environmentalists. Most of the loggers worked for

International Forest Products, which has cut its timber harvest --

and its payroll -- by one-quarter in the 1990's.

 

Understanding came from Ted Plosz, a logger here who said he is

counting on working next year at James Bay. "Most of us were working

only three or four months last year," he added.

 

On the coast, green groups want companies to adopt less destructive

logging practices, methods that usually cost more money. They want to

place 41 watersheds permanently off-limits to logging.

 

Officials of British Columbia, which owns 95 percent of the

province's land, note that about 300 parks have been added here in

the 1990's, preserving 15,400 square miles.

 

"There are a lot of valley bottoms that will not be logged," David

Zirnhelt, the provincial Minister of Forests, said in an interview.

Noting that the allowable cut from the midcoast forest has been

reduced by one-third, he added, "Two-thirds of the old growth that is

on the landscape today will be there 200 years from now."

 

But Canadian environmentalists demand more forest protection,

dismissing many of the new parks here as protection for "rocks and

ice."

 

Protecting trees costs money, however. In early September, the

provincial government agreed to pay MacMillan Bloedel $70 million for

the loss of cutting rights on 162 square miles of land set aside for

parks on Vancouver Island. The government had resisted paying cash

because it faces a $600 million budget deficit this year.

 

But defenders of the forest say there is economic value to standing

trees, and the wildlife they support.

 

On a recent afternoon, the Queen of the North, a province-run ferry,

steamed up the inland passage, gliding by forest-cloaked fjords and

waterfalls. Passing Princess Royal Island, the ship seemed to list to

port as tourists with binoculars clogged upper and lower decks.

There, in the shade of an old-growth cedar, stood a rare white

Kermode, or "spirit bear," crunching on a freshly caught salmon, its

cream-colored jowls streaked red with blood.

 

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