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EI PRESS/SOCIAL MEDIA RELEASE
Greenpeace Partners with Industry Logging Canadian Boreal Forests

Along with ForestEthics and other foundation-dependent primary forest logging 
apologists, Greenpeace negotiates weak agreement that legitimizes continued old 
growth forest logging in exchange for vague promises of possible future 
protections.  Old forest greenwashing must end.

May 21, 2010
Contact: Dr. Glen Barry, [email protected]

(Canada) - In what they gratuitously herald as the 'world's largest 
conservation agreement', twenty Canadian forestry companies and nine 
environmental organizations including Greenpeace has announced an agreement 
that will temporarily suspend for three years any new logging in 29 million 
hectares of forest – about the size of Montana – to plan for possible 
protections of woodland caribou.  In return the nine environmental groups have 
vowed to stop protesting the companies involved (listed below), including 
ending their 'Do Not Buy' campaigns. 

More troubling, the agreement provides much needed legitimacy to timber and 
pulp industry efforts to log much, if not all, of the remaining 43 million 
hectares of Canada’s old growth Boreal forests, and ultimately much of the 
caribou habitat after the moratorium lapses. The agreement uses fancy, 
meaningless worlds like “ecosystem-based” and “sustainable forest management” 
to describe first time industrial logging of primary forests for toilet paper 
and other throw-away consumer items.

Ecological Internet (EI) President, Dr. Glen Barry, labeled the agreement 
"disgraceful", saying it "traded temporary, vague protections for business as 
usual industrial forestry across huge expanses of primary and old growth 
forests." Ecological Internet advocates a global permanent ban on 
industrial-scale logging in primary forests both in temperate and tropical 
forests, and will continue the campaign to end these practices in Canada’s 
ecologically priceless Boreal forests.

"Greenpeace's commitment to 'sustainable' and 'ecosystem based' forest 
management—for consumer items including toilet paper and lawn furniture from 
old forests—is an ecological crime, as we know we have already lost more 
primary forests than necessary to maintain global ecosystems and the biosphere. 
The agreement accepts not only FSC, but industry’s own certification of 
antiquated logging practices. This will not stand, and local communities, 
provincial governments and First Nations are encouraged to reject this forest 
greenwash." 

### MORE ###

The Canadian Boreal Forest is North America’s largest primary forest, holding 
massive amounts of water, threatened wildlife and migratory birds, and 
containing 25% of the world's remaining intact ancient forests. It is also the 
largest terrestrial storehouse of carbon on the planet, storing the equivalent 
of 27 years worth of global greenhouse gas emissions. Globally 60% of boreal 
forests have been diminished and fragmented, largely from logging resulting in 
more fires.

Ecological Internet and allies vigorously condemn Greenpeace Canada's greenwash 
endorsement of continued ancient boreal forest logging, largely to make throw 
away paper items. They completely fail to understand that all primary and old 
growth forests are endangered and of high conservation value. Instead they 
perpetuate the ecologically criminal myth that old forests can and should be 
industrially logged for the first time in an environmentally acceptable manner. 

Old forests must be protected and restored for global ecological 
sustainability. Forests logged industrially for the first time are permanently 
ecologically damaged in terms of composition, structure, function and dynamics. 
Real solutions to the Boreal forest/paper crisis require shrinking demand, 
increasing recyclables, and only accessing new fiber from regenerating 
secondary forests and mixed species, non-toxic, locally supported plantations.

EI calls upon Greenpeace to immediately cease and desist globally from 
negotiating agreements with industry that continue the production of throw away 
consumer items from Earth's dwindling old forests. Ecological Internet calls 
upon Greenpeace to work for full protection of primary forests, restoration of 
old growth forests, and dramatic reduction in paper and timber use globally. 
Ecological Internet’s message remains end primary forest logging. Expect 
further protest urging Greenpeace to realize the forest protection movement has 
moved past claims of sustainable forest management in primary and old growth 
forests.  

### ENDS ###

Environmental organization that signed to the agreement include: Canadian 
Boreal Initiative, Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, Canopy (formerly 
Markets Initiative), the David Suzuki Foundation, ForestEthics, Greenpeace, 
Ivey Foundation, The Nature Conservancy, and the Pew Environment Group’s 
International Boreal Conservation Campaign.

The companies that signed the agreement include: AbitibiBowater, Alberta 
Pacific Forest Industries, AV Group, Canfor, Cariboo Pulp & Paper Company, 
Cascades Inc., DMI, F.F. Soucy, Inc., Howe Sound Pulp and Paper, Kruger Inc., 
LP Canada, Mercer International, Mill & Timber Products Ltd, NewPage Port 
Hawkesbury Ltd, Paper Masson Ltee, SFK Pulp, Tembec Inc., Tolko Industries, 
West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd, Weyerhauser Compnay Limited−all represented 
by the Forest Products Association of Canada.

DISCUSS THIS ALERT: http://forests.org/blog/ and 
http://www.facebook.com/ecointernet

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