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“We congratulate AbitibiBowater for announcing an end to logging in this area. It is a bold move that shows the global importance of protecting the Boreal Forest and strong recognition of the inspired struggle by the Grassy Narrows First Nation to protect their traditional way of life,” said Richard Brooks, forest campaign coordinator with Greenpeace. “We are hopeful that AbitibiBowater's decision signals a start to further improvements in its environmental and social sustainability and relations with other aboriginal communities.”
Besides ending logging, the company will no longer purchase or use any wood products from the Whiskey Jack Forest for its paper mill in Fort Frances. The decision supports ongoing negotiations between the Ontario government and the First Nation over land rights.
The struggle by First Nations for land rights and sovereignty continues across Canada, and the struggle to protect intact forests and the habitat of endangered species remains.
The Grassy Narrows First Nation has campaigned years for an end to logging it their traditional territory. The First Nation has filed lawsuits, conducted a five-year long peaceful blockade of a logging road and asked for an end to industrial use of its area without its free, prior and informed consent. Greenpeace and other environmental and human rights organizations have campaigned on behalf of the community to help build international public and marketplace pressure for a resolution.
Montreal-based Abitibi-Consolidated recently merged with US-based Bowater to form AbitibiBowater, the largest newsprint manufacturer in North America.
“The formation of a new company presents an opportunity for positive change. The decision to end logging shows that AbitibiBowater has recognized this opportunity,” said Brooks. “The company has many other forest operations in Quebec and Ontario where logging in intact forest areas continues and sustainability has not been achieved. We hope that AbitibiBowater looks to these places next.”