1 / 35

Two Case Studies: GBR and MPB Simulations

Two Case Studies: GBR and MPB Simulations. Today’s Agenda. The continuing crisis Simulation Overview Great Bear Rainforest Case Mountain Pine Beetle Case. Mean annual precipitation. Simulation. Gbr ECOSYSTEM-BASED MANAGEMENT. Conversion to Area-Based tenure.

coen
Download Presentation

Two Case Studies: GBR and MPB Simulations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Two Case Studies: GBR and MPB Simulations

  2. Today’s Agenda • The continuing crisis • Simulation Overview • Great Bear Rainforest Case • Mountain Pine Beetle Case Mean annual precipitation

  3. Simulation Gbr ECOSYSTEM-BASED MANAGEMENT Conversion to Area-Based tenure The Minister of Forests, Land, and Natural Resource Operations  has proposed, as a way to improve forest management and increase the midterm timber supply in regions affected by the mountain pine beetle epidemic, to convert a number of volume-based licences to area-based ones.  The Minister has directed a multistakeholder body to forge a consensus on a new tenure system by the end of the calendar year. • 1/3 of GBR is protected, 2/3 operate under EBM, one key aspect of which is old growth representation. In March 2009, this amount was set at 50%, with some exemptions, even though a consensus science group recommended the amount be 70%.  We have been delegated the task of establishing the appropriate level of old growth forest protection in the region.

  4. Simulation - Objectives • develop practical skills -- teamwork, research, and communication -- necessary for constructive participation in policy development • develop a deep understanding of one crucial component of forest policy. • Have a lot of fun learning

  5. Simulation – Organization GBR Ecosystem Based Management Conversion to area-based tenure Wilderness Tourism Association of BC ForestEthics Cariboo-Chilcotin Conservation Society Council of Forest Industries Canfor Interior Logging Association United Steelworkers Carrier Sekani Tribal Council First Nations Forestry Council • Greenpeace • Sierra Club of BC • Coast Forest Products Association • Truck Loggers Association • Western Forest Products • United Steelworkers • Central and North Coast Communities • Nanwakolas Council • Coastal First Nations

  6. Simulation –Process • meet in groups • required readings • consult "real world" versions of their groups • select a delegate (and an alternate) to speak and negotiate for them during the consultation. • evening, mock multistakeholderconsultation attendance required for all participants : • EBM GBR Monday November 18 • Area-based tenure Tuesday, November 19

  7. Simulation - Assessment • 10% for the group brief not to exceed 2000 words. This is a group project, which clearly and concisely presents the group’s initial position on how to revise the rules. It should contain references.  The briefs are due November 14. • 10% for each student’s participation in the group. This grade will be based on the recommendations for grades that students provide for each other • 10% for the performance of each group in the consultation.

  8. BC is 2 (or more) forest provinces

  9. Case Study I: the Great Bear Rainforest

  10. Context The Place The Campaign The process The result EBM

  11. GBR: the place • Central and North Coast regions of BC • Globally significant ecosystem: largest areas of remaining intact coastal temperate rainforest in the world • Valuable timber resources • Remote communities • Unresolved aboriginal land claims

  12. GBR: The Campaign • 1995 - Enviros launch campaign to protect “Great Bear Rainforest” • direct action • market-based campaign targeting large purchasers

  13. GBR: Planning • 1996 – Land and Resource Management Plan (LRMP) - Multi-stakeholder planning process • enviros boycott

  14. GBR: enviro-industry cooperation • Enviros’ market campaign forces industry into (secret) negotiations outside of formal process • 1998: Enviros and industry agree to cease-fire: • industry agrees to suspend logging in intact areas • engos agree to suspend market campaign and join LRMP process

  15. GBR: 2001 framework agreement • April 2001 Framework Agreement (BC Gov, FN, engos, companies) • protected areas (20%) • deferrals (11%) • remainder covered by ecosystem-based management • established independent “Coast Information Team” • 2004: Land and Resource Management Plan recommendations • 2004-2005 – Government to Government negotiations • Crown government and First Nations

  16. GBR: 2006 Announcement

  17. land base of 6.4 million ha (16 million acres)

  18. GBR: Coast Information Team Definition of EBM • general definition • “… an adaptive approach to managing human activities that seeks to ensure the coexistence of healthy, fully functioning ecosystems and human communities. Coast Information Team, EBM Framework

  19. Implementation issue: deciding specific EBM Rules • Definition of EBM uncertain • Parties commit to full implementation of EBM by March 2009 • Example of outstanding issue – old growth representation: • Coast Information Team, enviros say 70% • LRMPs, industry, government – and 2006 policy says 30% • March2009: 50% with exemptions, new commitment to “full implementation” by 2014

  20. Insights from GBR we’ll address • One of most important land use decisions • Extraordinary instance of collaborative decisionmaking • Power shift created by enviros’ use of international market pressures • Landmark co-jurisdictional arrangements with First Nations • Challenging issues in policy design • Revealing implementation challenges

  21. Environmental Change:Mountain Pine Beetle Epidemic 22

  22. MPB epidemic: 2 causes • fire suppression increase volume of vulnerable host organisms • area covered by mature pine increased by a factor of 3 from 1910-2000 • climate change – decline in cold weather • In mid-winter, temperatures must consistently be below -35-40 C for several straight days to have any effect • In the early fall or late spring, sustained temperatures of -25 C can kill

  23. MPB epidemic – current and projected impact • Proportion of lodgepole pine of the interior timber harvesting land base: 50% • 51% of the total provincial mature merchantable pine volume killed by 2010 • 59% of pine will be killed by 2016 • 61% by 2021

  24. Policy Response • AAC Uplifts (about 14 million m3 – 28% across interior) • Support for Beetle Action Coalitions • Silviculture Investments • Surveys, Reforestation, fertilization • Capitalizing on new opportunities (e.g. Bioenergy, carbon trading) • Research – Silviculture, wildfire, hydrology. • Inventory Investments

  25. MPB Timber Supply Impact Summary (2011) • 2010 provincial AAC: 78.6 million m3 * • Coast 17.1 million m3 • Interior AAC: 61.5 million m3 • 50.6 million m3 pre-uplift • 2030 provincial AAC: 57.5 million m3 • 40.4 million m3 interior • “fall-down” below pre-uplift: 10.1 million m3 • 20% in interior (higher in some areas) • 14% provincially

  26. Area-based tenure – recent origins • Explosion at mill in Burns Lake, BC – Babine Forest Products owned by Hampton Affiliates • Justifying rebuilding of mill thought to require greater assurance of access to timber • Memo leaked with a number of controversial proposals • Response: Special Committee on Timber Supply

  27. Special Committee on Timber Supply • Bipartisan committee of Member of Legislative Assembly • Hearings throughout province

  28. SCTS – government response

  29. Spring 2013 controversy • Clark government introduces Bill 8 that would amend Forest Act to allow the minister to accept application to convert FLs to TFLs • NDP, environmentalists express opposition • Proposal dropped, with promise to bring it back in when legislature is next in session (LOL)

  30. Next week – First Nations • Tuesday: Jason Forsyth, George Hoberg, and Laura Bird, “In Search of Certainty: A Decade of Shifting Strategies for Accommodating First Nations in Forest Policy, 2001-11,” pp. 299-312 in Aboriginal Peoples and Forest Lands in Canada, edited by D.B. Tindall, Ronald L. Trosper and Pamela Perreault., UBC Press 2013 – on sale separately in the department • Wednesday: TRC (next slide) • Thursday: Supreme Court of Canada, Haida Nation v. British Columbia (Minister of Forests), Supreme Court of Canada November 2004

  31. September 18 • “F” (for Forestry) section of the Coliseum – come proudly wearing your UBC Forestry t-shirts. • Highlights of the program that include powerful presentations crucial for gaining understanding of the issues include: • 9am The Welcome and Opening Ceremonies • 11am Be the Change: Young People Healing the Past and Building the Future • 1pm Commissioners Sharing Panel • 3pm Expressions of Reconciliation, including UBC President, Professor Toope • Throughout the day, you may view exhibits and participate in other ways as well. • The full program is available at http://irsi.aboriginal.ubc.ca/files/2013/09/TRCprogram.pdf

More Related