MEDIA
RELEASE—For Immediate Release—March
28, 2008
Tembec's Devastating Logging Plans
Revealed to the Public
Sneak peek at plan of supposed 'green' corporation includes logging areas 10-times the legal size limit, as well as logging ALL the winter habitat of a woodland caribou herd
On March 20, Tembec showed off their
logging plans for the next several decades in a
University of Manitoba classroom. After being alerted
by a concerned citizen, Eric Reder, Campaign Director
for the Wilderness Committee, attended the lecture
and recorded it. Both the Manitoba government and
Tembec have told the Wilderness Committee in recent
weeks that Tembec's logging plan could not be legally
released to the public yet.
Tembec's plans for the coming years
include logging areas that are over 1,000 hectares
in size, ten-times larger than the government currently
permits. Tembec also unveiled a plan to log the
entire winter habitat of the Owl Lake woodland caribou
herd.
"What's going on in our public
forests?" questioned Reder. "This company is certified
as a good steward of the land, yet they put forth
these unbelievable plans to increase their impact
on our forests. How much more destruction are Manitobans
supposed to take?"
Logging is taking place in primary
forests, untouched areas that have not been logged
before. Primary forests are pieces of wilderness
that few countries in the world have left. When
a primary forest is logged, the interdependent web
of living organisms-plants, animals, bugs, and fungus-does
not automatically regenerate. It can take more than
a century for the forest to recover. If the clearcuts
are replanted with a single species of trees and
then treated with herbicides, a tree plantation
is created, instead of a forest. Increasing the
size of clearcuts will increase the amount of primary
forest lost. A 1,000-hectare logging area is about
one-third the size of Birds Hill Provincial Park.
"Contrary to what the logging lobby
will tell you, logging primary forests has a massive
impact," said Reder. "In many cases it has a permanent
impact."
Tembec also showed plans to log
the entire winter range of the Owl Lake woodland
caribou herd-considered at high risk by the Manitoba
government-as a grand experiment. Woodland caribou
are listed under Manitoba's Endangered Species Act.
Recent studies clearly demonstrate that woodland
caribou have a strong adverse reaction to clearcuts,
moving at least 13 kilometers away from disturbances
for decades afterward. Woodland caribou prefer to
stay in primary forest areas, and current census
data shows the Owl Lake woodland caribou herd is
in decline. Logging their entire winter habitat
could result in extirpation. Tembec's plan to log
the entire caribou habitat may stem from this statement
by Vince Keenan, Tembec's Divisional Forester in
Manitoba, made at the university lecture:
"We've proven harvesting does not affect wildlife
populations."
"I was outraged during the presentation.
I'm even angrier after reviewing the tape and hearing
that statement," said Reder. "The presentations
were misleading and in some cases outright wrong.
How can this supposedly 'green' corporation be allowed
to present this to university classes?"
Tembec is a large multinational
logging corporation that controls 9,000 square kilometers
of public land in eastern Manitoba, and currently
logs provincial parks. Recently they announced they
would stop using recycled content in their paper
plant, which means more trees will need to be cut
down.
Over 10,000 Manitobans have written
to the current government and asked them to stop
allowing provincial parks to be logged. Right now
the provincial government and Tembec are negotiating
a long-term logging license. The Wilderness Committee
wants the government to remove both provincial parks
and woodland caribou habitat from Tembec's license
area when they renew the license on December 31,
2008.
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