100 Mile House, (TSA) Public Discussion Paper

Previous Page TOC Next Page


Background to the Timber Supply Review


For at least 20 years, governments have known that British Columbia’s timber supply would decline in the future — we could not keep cutting at the rate we’ve been going. Now there is a need for up-to-date information to review the timber supply and allowable annual cuts throughout the province.

A study completed by the Forest Service in 1991, A Review of the Timber Supply Analysis Process for British Columbia, examined the procedures which led to the determination of allowable annual cuts, and confirmed the need for change.

The study found that:

• existing allowable annual cuts were based on outdated information and management practices

• procedures failed to fully account for integrated resource management practices and protection of non-timber values

• procedures were far too time-consuming

• analytical techniques had to be strengthened

As a result of these procedural weaknesses, very few timber supply analyses had been completed since the early 1980s, with few allowable annual cut adjustments.

The Forest Service acted quickly on the study’s recommendations. The Timber Supply Review was initiated to assess short- and long-term timber supplies in light of current forest practices and integrated resource management goals.

Towards a sustainable future

British Columbians agree there is a need for sustainable resource management to ensure a strong forest economy, viable communities and a healthy environment—today and always. The Timber Supply Review is one of several government initiatives designed to help achieve sustainability:

      • The Forest Renewal Plan is a partnership of all the forest interests, working together to invest in increasing the value of the forests and strengthening the forest sector economy.

      • The Forest Practices Code creates a single enforceable law to require better forest practices, with heavy penalties for violators.

      • The Timber Supply Review is providing up-to-date information to adjust allowable annual cuts to ensure the sustainability of British Columbia’s forests.

      • The Commission on Resources and Environment, the Protected Areas Strategy, and Land and Resource Management Plans are moving to integrate all values into land-use planning in an effort to end confrontation and valley-by-valley battles.

      • The B.C. Treaty Commission is moving us toward fair and equitable settlements of treaties which can create long-term social and economic stability for aboriginal and non-aboriginal British Columbians.

Previous Page Page Top TOC Next Page