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"Today's
decision is welcome news for the Great Bear Rainforest which was being
destroyed at an alarming rate to feed a growing international appetite for
wood, paper and toilet roll," said Gavin Edwards, Global Forest Campaign
Coordinator, Greenpeace International. "The world's last ancient forests
need a global network of protected areas to survive - and the Great Bear
Rainforest is a good start."
The
protected forest will be a haven for threatened or endangered species including
grizzly, black and rare white "Spirit" bears, wild salmon, eagles and
wolves as well as one-thousand year old cedar trees and ancient spruce. In
recent years, its rapid destruction has raised international concern and protest.
Companies
such as BBC Worldwide Publishing put pressure on the logging companies to
protect the forest and over 80 others, including Mitsubishi Corporation and the
Belgian Timber Trade Federation, even stopped buying products made from Great
Bear Rainforest wood.
In
response, the British Columbian Government has committed to:
* Fully
protecting 33% of the Great Bear Rainforest from logging;
*
Making sure the logging industry implements a strict ecosystem-based management
system in the rest of the forest, which covers 6.4 million hectares, by 2009.
This means any logging that will be sustainable in nature, and that many
additional areas will be protected.
"Today's
announcement plants the seeds to safeguard this global treasure but the true
measure of success will be signs of change on the ground and in the
forest," said Amanda Carr, forest campaigner for Greenpeace Canada.
"Greenpeace will be watching to see if the British Columbian Government
follows through on these commitments and takes this opportunity to make the
Great Bear Rainforest a global model of forest sustainability."
Greenpeace
is supporting an initiative to raise $120 million to help develop a new and
diverse economy in the Great Bear Rainforest, based on conservation. To date,
$90million has been raised, including $30million from the British Columbian
Government. A further $30 million is needed from the Canadian Federal
Government.
Greenpeace
is an independent campaigning organization, which uses non-violent, creative
communication tools to put the spotlight on global environmental problems and
to drive towards solutions essential for a green and peaceful future. It is
committed to protecting the world's last ancient forests and the plants,
animals and people who depend on them.
(1) Greenpeace, ForestEthics, Rainforest Action Network and Sierra Club of Canada, BC Chapter.
(2) This total includes new and previously protected areas and special no logging zones.
Images of the Great Bear Rainforest are available on request.