In 2014-15 Nova Scotia Power upgraded their early 20th century Indian River hydro-electric system and among many other improvements installed a $4m fish ladder on their Sandy Lake dam. Archaeologists jumped at the chance - a golden low water opportunity. There they found 6,000 year old aboriginal camp sites. Clearly, connecting the province's interior with St. Margaret's Bay and the ocean, the Indian River system has been a vital transportation corridor for millennia.
Not far from where this magical picture was taken, midst three small protected areas, is the historic Old Annapolis Trail built by Queen Victoria's own father to connect the new British garrison of Halifax with the old French capital, Port Royal near Annapolis. A couple of miles from the burgeoning Tantallon Crossroads where a half-million tourists pass annually on their way to Peggy's Cove, in the middle of a vibrant recreational node for hikers, kayakers, four-wheelers, hunters, fishers, nature lovers of all stripes, the lower Indian River with its mystical lakes and old forests - a magnet for the people of St. Margaret's Bay for generations and now for the thousands of newer residents in the growing communities along the Hammonds Plains Road. Here is where the Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resources in their wisdom, thumbing their noses at public opinion, have announced massive clearcuts. Clearly the Department is much better equipped to determine highest and best use than those who actually live here. Heavy logging they say, buzz 'er off, and this on the very doorsteps of those who might see a markedly different future unfold for these lands. Attached, a letter from the people of the Bay announcing their intent:
0 Comments
Working with a group of new video makers, veteran Antigonish filmmaker Peter Murphy, with noted NS naturalist Bob Bancroft, and Guysborough Country, NS forester Danny George, opens up the issue of clearcutting NS forests to generate electricity. Forest biomass must be de-listed as a renewable resource.
The HFC is grateful to Peter Murphy for letting us post his video. Making movies can be expensive. Peter is planning more videos on NS forestry. Any help you could give to these efforts would be gratefully received via his website, http://www.seabrightproductions.ca/.
In 2001, Genuine Progress Index (GPI-Atlantic), funded by The Nova Forest Alliance, the National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy, the Nova Scotia Voluntary Planning Agency, the Samuel and Saidye Bronfman Foundation, CUSO, the Nova Scotia Public Interest Research Group, and an anonymous donor undertook an in-depth full cost accounting of the province’s forest resource. GPI found a fundamental flaw in our forest management. We rate our success by looking only at the value of the timber we harvest, not, as should be standard practice, by looking also at our principal, the value of what remains. Look what happened to the cod fishery when they barrelled ahead blind to all indicators.
One dramatic indicator, GPI points out, is forest age. In 1958, for example, 25% of the province’s forests were over 80 years old. By 2001, that figure had plummeted to less than 1%. Same for species diversity, devastating declines while timber volumes and clearcuts ballooned. These numbers are invisible when all you look at is half the equation, say, the GDP. Fifteen years ago GPI told us our forests store 107 million tonnes of carbon, saving $2.2 billion in climate change damage. Harvest practices had reduced our forests’ carbon sequestration capacity by 38%, a cost of $1.3 billion. Fifteen years later, those kinds of numbers still don’t show up on our balance sheets. In Volume I of GPI’s massive 2001 two-volume report, they make recommendations which are just as pertinent today as they were fifteen years ago. Small woodlot owners know, we have to rejig silviculture funding to incentivize uneven-aged management and species diversity. Clearcuts and even-aged monoculture is a dead end. We need a gradual shift from a volume-based industry to a value-added one, to increase the number of jobs per unit harvested. We have to protect old-growth forest. We need to count and track annually “the full range of forest values and services, and the full cost and benefits of associated harvest methods.” And, we must plan long term accordingly. Volume II, highly recommended reading, was funded again by the National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy, and by the Nova Scotia Voluntary Planning Agency. It looks at six fascinating case studies which could provide us with some extremely useful alternative models:
Volume II ends with a frustrated effort to fairly assess the job loss/gain from forestry. Negotiating the stats maze ends up inconclusively, but there is an illuminating profile of the bigger is better trap forest contractors continue to find themselves in fifteen years later. Mills pay as close to the harvesters’ breakeven point as they can. To pay for their machines contractors have to work day and night 7 days a week to carve out a modest, high risk, mortgaged-to-the-hilt existence. “The current market structure,” GPI reports, “is geared to the needs of industrial forestry and its dependence on heavy machinery, rather than to selection harvest techniques on smaller woodlots.” Sound familiar? Has anything changed? No. It’s just gotten worse. In its 2008 update, funded by the Province of Nova Scotia, the Alerce Trust, Bill and Susan van Iterson, and members of GPIAtlantic, again the recommendations read like marching orders for the HFC. For our forests to perform their natural functions, like protecting soils, watersheds, biodiversity, carbon sequestration, habitat, and providing high quality timber, we must work to restore age diversity. We need more selection harvesting, more value added production, more value per unit of biomass harvested, and more jobs for rural Nova Scotian communities. All Crown land should be Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified, not just a small percentage as was the case. The current government actually just removed all Crown land from FSC certification, deemed by many to be a profound step backwards. We wish we could say same old same old, but in fact things are getting worse, fast. Below are the three GPI reports. In addition to serving an industrial agenda, they apply full cost accounting to their analysis of the province's forests. The reports represent what could have been. They represent good science and good economics and are what the people of Nova Scotia called for repeatedly in the public consultations which followed in the years leading up to the province's Natural Resource Strategy. They make good reading:
The Voluntary Planning document, Our Common Ground, was divided up into five subject areas; Sustainability, Diversity, Collaboration, Transparency, and Informed Decision Making.
In Sustainability a phrase often repeated since then was coined: "The status quo is not an option." It said then current practices were not sustainable. "Our resources and the communities that rely on them are in decline." Sound familiar? The people recognized the overwhelming importance of biodiversity. They said the short term was eclipsing the long term. They emphasized the connection between healthy forests and clean soil, water, and air. They called for green forest practices and the promotion of more value-added forest products. |
Blog Archives
October 2020
Blog Index
All
|
Photo from DaveW99999