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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE NEW STUDY SHOWS GREAT BEAR RAINFOREST BEING CLEARCUT, NOT PROTECTED VANCOUVER, BC, Canada, April 30, 2005 --/WORLD-WIRE/-- Industrial clear-cut logging is rapidly denuding the most prized areas of Canada's Great Bear Rainforest, posing a dire threat to coastal communities, Kermode and grizzly bears, wolves, salmon and other threatened species, according to an extensive analysis to be released today by the David Suzuki Foundation. The Suzuki Foundation's findings on Canada's disappearing coastal temperate rainforest will be presented at the University of Victoria tonight, at the Canadian premiere of the National Geographic film "The Great Bear Rainforest." Dr. David Suzuki will open the event. "Most people don't realize that the forests on the central and north coasts and on Haida Gwaii are rapidly disappearing, despite assurances that they have been 'saved'," says Jim Fulton, Executive Director of the David Suzuki Foundation. "Logging corporations still have a green light to haul out the best old-growth cedar, clear-cut log in salmon watersheds and destroy the habitat of the Kermode bear." The Suzuki Foundation's third annual Coastal Status Report analyzed logging plans in the region over the past four years and found that destructive forest practices are still the norm in Canada's rainforest. Research findings include:
The proposed land-use agreement for the area would leave:
Fulton points to an urgent need for an agreement that improves land-use standards in a measurable way, suggesting an immediate end to logging in the most vulnerable areas as a crucial first step. "Until we have strong and legally-binding protection measurements in place, forest companies will just keep clearcutting this globally unique forest - for fire sale prices." The David Suzuki Foundation's Coastal Status Report is available at www.canadianrainforests.org Media are invited to attend the Canadian premiere of the National Geographic film "The Great Bear Rainforest" at UVic's Farquhar Auditorium, Saturday, April 30 at 7:00pm. The David Suzuki Foundation is online at: www.davidsuzuki.org
For more information, or to arrange an interview, please contact: Cheri Burda, David Suzuki Foundation, 604-721-9332 Jim Fulton, David Suzuki Foundation, 604-317-5022
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