| Ontario Sets Plan to Protect Northern Boreal Forest
CANADA: July 15, 2008
TORONTO - The government of the Canadian province of Ontario said on Monday
it will conserve a huge swath of the province's northern boreal forest to
protect polar bears and other wildlife and to help fight climate change.
The plan to protect permanently at least 225,000 square kilometers of the
forest -- an area nearly the size of the United Kingdom -- won praise from
environmental groups, which said it should serve as an example for other
governments.
"We are overjoyed with the announcement," said ForestEthics senior
campaigner Gillian McEachern. "This is the largest conservation commitment
in Canadian history."
Ontario's northern boreal region takes up 43 percent of Ontario's landmass
and soaks up about 12.5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere
each year. The protection of a big swath of it is a key part of the
provincial government's plan to fight climate change.
Boreal forests are northern forests that are affected by long winters. They
are made up mainly of evergreen conifers. The conservation plan aims to
protect polar bears, caribou, wolverines and other wildlife that live in the
Ontario region from climate change and to ensure that forestry and mining
development doesn't destroy the forest's pristine ecosystems.
"(Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty) is providing some direction and some
objectives to the process," said Monte Hummel, president emeritus, World
Wildlife Fund Canada. "It's an invitation for everybody to come to the table
and in my view that's how things should be solved."
Ontario's Liberal government said that scientists and native communities
will work together to map and protect a network of conservation lands. As
well, the government will work with northern communities and resource
industries to create a sustainable development plan.
"Although the northern boreal region has remained virtually undisturbed
since the retreat of the glaciers, change is inevitably coming to these
lands," McGuinty said in a statement.
"We need to prepare for development and plan for it. It's our responsibility
as global citizens to get this right, and to act now." (Reporting by Wojtek
Dabrowski; editing by Peter Galloway)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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