B.C. announces plans to defer old-growth logging across 26,000 square kilometres
VICTORIA — British Columbia will consult First Nations about deferring the logging of big, ancient and rare old-growth trees across 26,000 square kilometres of forests.
The provincial government announced Tuesday that an independent panel of scientific experts has mapped priority areas and it’s asking First Nations to decide within 30 days whether they support the deferrals or require further discussion.
B.C. is following the recommendations of an independent review released last fall, which found inaction could result in permanent loss for the most at-risk old-growth ecosystems, Forests Minister Katrine Conroy told a news conference.
The government will immediately stop selling BC Timber Sales licences in the priority areas identified by the panel, Conroy said, and further deferrals will be determined through agreements with Indigenous nations.


