Title: Presentation to the BC Saw Filers Association Conference
1Presentation to the BC Saw Filers Association
Conference
- Jim Snetsinger, RPF
- Chief Forester
- British Columbia Forest ServiceApril 22, 2005
2Presentation Outline
- 1. Role of the Chief Forester
- Context
- Responsibilities
- 2. Mountain Pine Beetle
- Background
- Status of the epidemic
- Actions to date
- Where to from here?
- 3. Conclusions
3- Ensure responsible stewardship of the Provinces
nearly 60 million hectares of publicly owned
Crown forest land
4Jurisdiction
- British Columbia 93 million hectares of land
- 60 million hectares forested
- 53 million hectares productive forest
- remainder is alpine/less productive
- BC Government owns 95 percent of the provinces
forested land - 90 percent of BCs timber harvesting occurs on
this Crown land, where provincial laws require
stewardship of diverse values.
5Protecting and ManagingForest Values
- BCs public forest land (12 major distinct
ecosystems) is managed to protect and to maintain
a range of values, both by formal protection and
by management. - protection
- Significant areas are reserved from harvesting to
protect ecological, cultural, or social values. - Over 6 million hectares of forested land are
permanently protected in parks,
ecologicalreserves, etc. - 6 million hectares of nonforested also
protected.
6Protecting and ManagingForest Values
- Management objectives are established for
- wildlife habitat areas
- sensitive soils
- oldgrowth management areas
- riparian areas
- recreation areas
- visually sensitive areas
- areas of archaeological significance
- wildlife tree patches.
7Net Harvestable Forest Area
In consideration of the range of management
objectives, from the 45 million hectares of
productive forest outside parks, just about 23
million hectares of Crown forest land are
currently considered suitable and available for
timber harvesting. Four main statutes govern
forest management including timber harvesting on
this land.
8Statutes governing forest and range activities on
public lands in BC
- 1. Forest and Range Practices Act (2004)
- formerly the Forest Practices Code
of British Columbia Act (1995) - 2. Forest Act
- 3. Ministry of Forests Act
- 4. Range Act
9Statutory Mandate
- 1. Ministry of Forests Act
- Plan and integrate management of natural
resource values in consultation with other
ministries. - 2. Forest and Range Practices Act
- Develop scienceinformed policy and establish
and maintain appropriate practices and standards
for the management of diverse values on public
forest and range land. - 3. Forest Act
- (Section 8) Determine Allowable Annual Cuts.
10Chief Foresters Positionin Government
- Appointed by Provincial OrderinCouncil
- Decisions mandated by statute, otherwise
independent of Legislative Assembly - reports to Deputy Minister of Forests
- advises Minister directly on issues
- responsible for Forest Stewardship Division
11Ministry of Forests
- Minister
- Executive
- Regions
- Districts
- Headquarters
- Forest Stewardship Division
- Operations Division
- BC Timber Sales
- Corporate Policy and Governance Division
- Tenure and Revenue Division
12Forest Stewardship Division
- 25.5m, 197 staff
- Chief Foresters Office 0.7m, 4.5 staff
- Forest Practices Branch 6.7m, 37.5 staff
- Forest Analysis Branch 1.5m, 16 staff
- Research Branch 9.3m, 85.9 staff
- Ministry of Forests Library
- Tree Improvement Branch 7.3m, 53.3 staff
- Each branch has 1 director, 1 to 4 managers,
1-4 clerks, remainder are specialists.
Support services are provided through centralized
agencies.
13Chief Foresters responsibilities
- Forest Stewardship
- leadership role
- set policy for forest and range practices
- establish standards for practices
- Specific responsibilities under Forest and Range
Practices Act and Forest Act
14Current responsibilities under FRPA
- (by delegation from Minister) establish sites and
set objectives for recreation sites, recreation
trails, interpretive forest sites - enter into agreements re growing and disposing
of seeds and re genetic and intellectual
property - order a determination to be not stayed to
maintain good stewardship.
15Chief Forester responsibilities Forest Act
- Section 8 requires the Chief Forester to
determine Allowable Annual Cuts (AACs)
periodicallyusually every 5 yearsfor each of
the provinces - 37 Timber Supply Areas(TSA, multiple licensees)
and - 34 Tree Farm Licence areas(TFL, single licensee)
Delegated to Deputy Chief
16Timber Supply Review Process
Timber supply analysis
Socio
-
economic analysis
Public review process
Social and economic
Chief Forester
Legislation
objectives of Crown
AAC determination
rationale statement
17Timber supply forecast
AAC (5 years)
Mid-term (30-100 years)
Long-term (100-250 years)
Short-term (0-30 years)
18Chief Foresters AAC determination principles
- AAC is an independent decision, not a
calculation - AACs do not drive management objectives
- AAC determinations consider public and First
Nations concerns - AAC determination cannot account for
- speculation on landuse decisions or treaties
- licence allocation
- Minister apportions AAC, not Chief Forester
19BC Forest Service website http//www.for.gov.bc.c
a
20Presentation to BC Saw Filers Association
Conference April 22, 2005
An Update of the Mountain Pine Beetle Epidemic in
British Columbia
21Mountain Pine Beetle in BC
Facts
- Endemic in BCs pine forest
- Trees die once infested
- Kills trees by destroying the cambium layer
- Introduces blue stain fungus
- No effective chemical or biological control
available
22Annual red-attack
23Mountain Pine Beetle in BC
Factors Contributing to Expansion
- Number of hectares with mature pine in BC has
increased by about three times since 1910. - In BC, over the last century, the avg. min.
winter temp. increased by 0.9ºC on the coast,
2.2 - 2.6ºC in the interior.
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27Magnitude of the Epidemic 2004
28So What Does it Mean
- Potentially gt 200 million m3 of unsalvaged beetle
wood in 10-15 years. - Harvest levels will decline by over 50 in some
areas once the beetle wood is either harvested or
no longer of economic value. - We need to act now to maximize the forests value
and prepare for future adjustments.
29Potential Impacts
- Potential Timber Supply Impacts
- 80 of Pli volume attacked by 2013.
- 20-40 AAC reductions in Pli dominated mgmt
units. - 700,000 ha will become uneconomic and experience
30 reduction in future stand volume without
treatment.
30What Weve Done
- Appointed Pine Beetle Task Force, Advisory
Committee, Beetle Boss and increased focus on
economic sustainability. - Established Emergency Management Zones.
- Increased the AAC in beetle affected areas.
- Premier hosted Beetle Symposium in Quesnel.
- Signed agreements with First Nations for
harvesting of beetle damaged wood. - Increased the harvest of beetle wood from 16 in
2001 to 85 in 2004 .
31Actions to Date Managing Beetle Populations
- So how are we doing?
- Volume directed at the beetle
- 2000/2001 8.1 million m3
- 2003/2004 25.7 million m3
- 2004/2005 prelim est 28-29 million m3
- Percentage directed at greenattack stands
- 2000/2001 65 of available harvest capacity
- 2003/2004 80 of available harvest capacity
- 2004/2005 86 of available harvest capacity
32Looking Forward
- Two types of issues
- Getting the most out of the dead trees before
they burn or decay. - Cognisant of other resource values in doing so.
- What do we do in 10 to 15 years when the beetle
wood is gone or has no economic value.
33Getting the Most Value
- Expressions of interest
- Developing new tenure
- AAC uplifts
- Reviewing LRMPs
- Promoting uses for beetle wood in overseas
markets, such as China, Japan and Korea - Exploring value added opportunities
- Consulting with Local governments, First Nations
and Industry.
34Intensive Silviculture
- 86 million has been approved for the forest for
tomorrow program. - The province has received federal support program
funding (100 million) to respond to the
catastrophic emergency of the MPB epidemic. - Additionally, BC and Alberta have signed MOA for
suppression activities in the Peace. - Alberta interest specifically in direct control
program along the BC/Alberta border.
35Summary Points
- Province to continue refining estimates of beetle
expansion and timber supply implications. - Licensees are encouraged to
- Focus as much harvesting horse power on
beetle infested stands. - Minimize the harvest of other tree species.
- These actions will help mitigate mid-term timber
supply impacts.