Conservation deal aims to protect 30 per cent of B.C. land by 2030
Canada’s greatest ally in the fight against climate change is nature itself, federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said Friday, after signing a $1.1 billion deal with British Columbia and Indigenous leaders to protect 30 per cent of B.C’s land by 2030.
The target of the Tripartite Framework Agreement on Nature Conservation means another 100,000 square kilometres of land must be designated adding to the 20 per cent of B.C. that’s already protected, the most of any province or territory.
Guilbeault said the march of climate change couldn’t be more evident, after a summer when wildfires devastated millions of hectares of B.C. forests and forced thousands from their homes, and the need to protect lands, ecosystems and species couldn’t be more desperate.
“This is what climate change looks like,” he told a news conference. “In the climate fight our greatest ally is nature. When we care for nature we care for ourselves because nature and climate are linked.”

