Federal review of forestry sector emissions falling short, environmental groups warn
A federal review of Canada’s forestry sector emissions needs to go much further than currently proposed or it could jeopardize its credibility, nearly a dozen environmental groups said as they ramped up pressure over what they claim is the sector’s underreported carbon footprint.
In an open letter shared Tuesday, the groups say the federal government must broaden the review’s scope to consider how forestry emissions are estimated in the first place.
“The review’s failure to address Canada’s approach to estimating and reporting emissions calls into question its ability to deliver on its goals of ensuring ‘comparable, transparent and credible GHG accounting,'” reads the letter, signed by representatives from 11 groups, including Nature Canada and the David Suzuki Foundation.
The letter adds to recent scrutiny over Canada’s oversight of the forestry sector. A peer-reviewed study published in January suggested Canada underestimates the sector’s emissions, crediting it as a small carbon sink when by the authors’ counts its emissions are broadly comparable with the electricity and agricultural sectors.

