Skip to main content

Prince George Citizen August 8, 2024

Page 1

P EO R GREG CEI TCI IZTEIN PRRIINNCCEEGG EO ZEN

12,000 Jackpot

, A 24 4 T HTUHRUSRDSADYA,Y A UU GGUUSSTT 88,, 22 00 2

1 1

$

SUPER BINGO

($7,500 cash plus $4,500 Slot Free Play)

0

58307

00200

5

SATURDAY, AUGUST 31ST Saturday Evening Bingo at 6pm

Take a tour of a vintage warplane ... Pages 24 & 25

Selective logging called key to reviving forest industry It involves using specialized equipment to cut down some, not all, trees in one area TED CLARKE Citizen staff

Liam Parfitt thinks he has a forestry management solution that will keep northern B.C. mills operating, reduce the risk of wildfires and create habitats that will give plants and animals a better chance to thrive. Parfitt is convinced that a switch away from clearcutting to selective logging practices that have been used for decades in European countries is what is needed to make Canada’s forest economy thrive again. Selective logging involves the use of specialized equipment to cut some, not all, trees from a specific area. The co-owner of Freya Logging says the thinning of forest cut blocks, ones that were clearcut and replanted as recently as 30 years ago, will create more than enough fibre to rejuvenate a forest industry decimated by beetle kills

CITIZEN PHOTO BY CHUCK NISBETT

Nico Kilgast operates a Ponsse Scorpion harvester, selectively logging and thinning a woodlot near the McBride Timber Road west of Prince George.

and wildfires. He said the industry is also challenged by a government bureaucracy that has delayed permitting and contributed to a shortage of economically available timber, which has forced companies to curtail mill operations at the cost of hundreds of jobs.

“We have to look at other ways of keeping the industry going,” said Parfitt. “All we’ve been doing is salvaging dead things, whether it’s beetle-killed or firekilled, we’re like a bunch of morticians. Forestry is all about live trees, habitat, ecosystems.”

Selective logging proponents think they have an alternative the province should be encouraging to inject life into what is seen by some as a dying industry. PLEASE SEE ‘LOGGER’ ON PAGE 12


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Prince George Citizen August 8, 2024 by Prince George Citizen - Issuu