Quebec making progress to protect caribou after warnings from federal government
MONTREAL — The governments of Canada and Quebec said Monday they reached an agreement in principle to protect endangered caribou in the province, but Indigenous and environmental groups said concrete action is needed.
The two governments said in a joint news release that Quebec is working to ensure that 65 per cent of the caribou’s habitat in two parts of the province is “undisturbed.” That would increase protection from the current level of between 30 per cent and 35 per cent, federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said in an interview.
Guilbeault warned Quebec in April that Ottawa would act unilaterally to protect the at-risk woodland caribou, after the province failed to present what he considered an acceptable conservation plan.
“I am very pleased that we were able to reach an agreement with the Quebec government. From the beginning, I have always said that my preference was to reach an agreement rather than to adopt a federal decree,” he said.


