Over 400,000 hectares of Caribou habitat destroyed for toilet paper and lumber each year.1
The boreal forest makes up a quarter of the world's intact forests.1 It's home to some of the largest populations of iconic creatures like the Canada Lynx, Black Bears, Moose and billions of migratory songbirds.
But with only 10% protected, these magnificent creatures may soon become but a memory.2
This includes our beloved boreal Woodland Caribou, who are suffering alarming rates of population decline across Canada.
The number one threat to this cherished species is industrial logging, pushing some herds to become critically endangered.1.3
The Canadian logging industry insists that tearing the boreal to shreds in sustainable, shrugging off the direct effects on the at-risk species and climate change.
But logging in the boreal is having detrimental consequences for our environment globally. As the world's largest terrestrial carbon storehouse, the Canadian boreal forest along stores an equivalent of 27 years of global CO2 emissions from fossil fuels.2
The boreal forest can't keep up with the ferocious pace of industrial logging today.
Urgent protection for the boreal
Disappointingly, Canada doesn't classify logging in the boreal as "deforestation" because it's not being converted to farmland or city development. This loophole downplays the decimation occurring in the boreal1
The federal government is failing to regulate the logging industry's impact. This undermines our admirable commitment to protect 25% of Canada's land and ocean by 2025 and 30% by 2030.
Nature Canada is among several conservation groups who endorsed the Boreal Conservation Framework, an alliance of conservation groups, Indigenous communities and leading Canada companies.
The Framework calls for:
- protecting at least 50% of the region in a network of large interconnected protected areas, and
- supporting sustainable communities, world-leading ecosystem-based resource management practices, and state-of-the-art stewardship practices for the remaining landscape.
More recently, Nature Canada and partners are pressing the federal government to invest more funds for Indigenous-led conservation and stewardship in these important lands.
Nature Canada is committed to taking action to protect the boreal. This is urgent and there's simply too much to lose.