After 20 years of global campaigning, the Great Bear Rainforest Agreement will protect an area of forest larger than the state of Massachusetts.

A version of this was originally posted by Greenpeace Canada.

At long last, today we celebrate the protection of the Great Bear Rainforest — one of the largest remaining coastal temperate rainforests on earth.

Greenpeace Canada and Greenpeace USA began protesting against the destruction of the Great Bear Rainforest in the mid-1990s — exposing the story to the world through blockades, protests and banners. Along with other environmental organisations and Indigenous leaders, Greenpeace shined a light on the impacts of forest destruction on First Nations communities who have lived there for thousands of years and on wildlife like the rare white spirit bear. We used this spotlight to pressure logging companies and the local government to change their approach. And it worked!

After customers around the world — including Home Depot — threatened to cancel contracts that would cost millions and attract media attention, the major logging and pulp and paper companies agreed to sit down with us and work towards creative solutions.

A True Team Effort

Protecting the Great Bear Rainforest was far from a solo act. It took the work of many groups to take on this big challenge. Along with Sierra Club of BC and ForestEthics, we set up the Rainforest Solutions Project to take on finding solutions. And working closely with two major First Nations umbrella organisations – Nanwakolas Council and Coastal First Nations–Great Bear Initiative – we agreed with the companies on ways to best to protect the forest, advance community well-being and also ensure economic opportunities.

Together, we developed solutions to protect the integrity of the Great Bear Rainforest and support the community well-being for over twenty First Nations. Now these solutions are fully in place and will stand the test of time.

How Is the Great Bear Rainforest Being Protected?

85% of the forests within the Great Bear Rainforest (much of it old-growth), totaling an incredible 3.1 million hectares, will now be off limits to industrial logging. This is equal to an area the size of Vancouver Island! When we started our campaign in the early 1990s less than 5% of the rainforest was protected.

A bear climbs over a fallen tree in the Great Bear Rainforest in British Columbia, Canada

A bear climbs over a fallen tree in the Great Bear Rainforest in British Columbia, Canada.

Equally important is that community well-being measures designed to help First Nation’s leaders to uplift their communities have been put in place:

What we now have in the Great Bear Rainforest is one of the most comprehensive conservation and forest management plans of this scale on Earth.

Celebrate!

Today is a day to celebrate and be grateful for what has been accomplished in the Great Bear Rainforest. Our gratitude especially goes to the twenty plus First Nations who have shown leadership in planning for greater conservation for their traditional territories, taking a leap of faith that stewardship, ecology and good economic development can work hand in hand.

And a big thank you to the Greenpeace supporters and activists who have done so much over the past twenty years — from being on blockades and scaling freighters loaded with old growth logs, to stuffing envelopes and raising funds in order to allow our campaign to succeed. This is your celebration.

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To hear and view from those who fought for the Great Bear Rainforest, click here.

By Eduardo Sousa, Senior Forest Campaigner for Greenpeace Canada.