Annual Parks Report Outlines Roadmap for Meeting Land and Freshwater Protection Targets in Alberta and Across Canada

July 17, 2018
By: admin

Annual Parks Report Outlines Roadmap for Meeting Land and Freshwater Protection Targets in Alberta and Across Canada

  — Press Release July 17, 2018

EDMONTON – Today the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (CPAWS) released its annual Parks Report, What’s Next: Parks and Protected Areas to 2020 and Beyond, which recommends how governments in Canada – federal, provincial, territorial, and Indigenous – can work together to achieve our international commitment to protect at least 17% of our landscape by 2020. This would almost double our current protected areas and would be a step towards the longer-term work needed to reverse the catastrophic and ongoing decline in biodiversity. Canada has the biggest opportunity in a generation to protect nature – and this report provides a roadmap for action.

The commitment to work together to achieve the 2020 protected area target, along with the $1.3 billion investment in conservation in the 2018 federal budget, creates an unprecedented opportunity for Canada to safeguard nature in the spirit of reconciliation between Indigenous governments and Crown governments, and between all peoples in Canada and nature.

Alberta has demonstrated leadership by stepping forward to co-lead the Pathway to Canada Target 1 initiative with the Government of Canada. The provincial government also recently designated five new boreal Wildland Provincial Parks.

“These new parkspermanently protect 13,600 km2 of boreal forest around Wood Buffalo National Park, creating the largest contiguous boreal forest protected area in the world. Protecting this habitat protects water resources, traditional uses of these areas and wildlife, including threatened species such as caribou,” says Dr. Kecia Kerr, Executive Director of CPAWS Northern Alberta Chapter. “The government has also committed to working with Indigenous peoples to develop co-management processes and Indigenous Guardians programs for these areas.”

Alberta now sits at 14.6 percent of our lands protected. However, protection of previously announced, or proposed, areas are steps that can be taken by the province immediately to achieve and surpass the goal of 17% protection.

“Designating the Bighorn Backcountry as a Wildland Provincial Park is an important next step in protecting our headwaters for downstream communities, including Edmonton, and ensuring our protected areas network is connected so wildlife can move through theRocky Mountains and foothills,” explains Tara Russell, Program Director at CPAWS Northern Alberta. “The foothills of Alberta are sorely under-protected, and establishing the Bighorn as a protected area will help ensure that this region continues to support adiversity of species here in Alberta.”

“If Alberta wants to reach 17% protection by 2020 the province will also have to deliver on its previous 2016 commitment to protect of boreal caribou habitat in Alberta’snorthwest,” says Russell. “Permanent protection of caribou habitat in the northwestregion of Alberta should include management of the protected areas by local indigenouscommunities.”

Areas in southern Alberta, like the Pekisko Heritage Rangeland, that have been proposed under the South Saskatchewan Regional Plan land-use planning process but never officially designated for protection are also logical next steps for Alberta.

“The collaborative effort between Alberta’s ranching community, First Nations, regionalmunicipalities, provincial government and conservation organizations on the ongoingconservation of the Pekisko Heritage Rangeland is a model for cooperation,” says Katie Morrison, Conservation Director of the Southern Alberta Chapter of CPAWS. “The Pekiskois a key grasslands landscape of rolling foothills, is home to grizzly bears and bull trout,and is at the heart of Alberta’s First Nations and ranching heritage. Legal designation ofthis area as a Heritage Rangeland would ensure the protection of these values forgenerations to come.”

Diverse voices across the country are now calling for action on protected areas, andmomentum is growing. With 2020 right around the corner, people are asking, “can Canada do this?” “Can our country almost double the protection of our lands and freshwaters in 2 years?” The answer is YES. In the report, CPAWS identifies places in each jurisdiction where a considerable amount of collaborative work has already been done on proposed protected areas.

CPAWS is ready to work with federal, provincial, territorial and Indigenous governments on protecting our most iconic landscapes and the wildlife that call them home.

CPAWS’ Parks Report Recommendations at a Glance

The report includes recommendations specific to Alberta, including:

  1. Designation of the 6,700 km2 Bighorn Backcountry area as a Wildland Provincial Park.
  2. Protect critical boreal caribou habitat by:
    • Delivering on the Alberta government’s commitment in Alberta’s Caribou Action Plan to permanently protect 18,000 km2 of boreal caribou habitat in northwest Alberta; and
    • Support the on-going Alberta-Saskatchewan transboundary protected areas gap analysis project.
  3. Designation of the remaining protected areas announced as part of the South Saskatchewan Regional Plan.
  4. Seek funds from the new federal Nature Fund to help support new protected areas and conservation planning.
  5. Complete an industry-free buffer zone around Wood Buffalo National Park, as requested by the UNESCO World Heritage Committee, in partnership with local Indigenous communities.
  6. Work with civil society, academic partners, and others to complete a science and Indigenous knowledge-based plan for an interconnected and representativenetwork of protected areas that will safeguard Alberta’s wildlife, wildlands, andcommunities in the face of climate change.
  7. Work with Indigenous communities and other partners to support development of Indigenous protected and conserved areas.

With the 2020 target fast approaching, CPAWS makes the following recommendations to federal, provincial, and territorial governments across Canada:

  1. Demonstrate their commitment to almost double Canada’s protected areas bypublicly announcing the areas they intend to protect by 2020 to contribute to meeting the target;
  2. Develop a western science and Indigenous knowledge-based plan by 2020 for completing an effective network of interconnected protected areas that will act as a foundation for conserving nature in the face of climate change;
  3. Make a clear commitment to adhere to recognized standards for the protection of nature, including those developed by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and the Canadian Council on Ecological Areas;
  4. Ensure conservation funding from federal Budget 2018 is allocated primarily to support the creation of new protected areas by federal, provincial, territorial and Indigenous governments and other partners; and
  5. Support Indigenous governments’ work to create Indigenous protected areas.

Additional Information

Read the full CPAWS Parks Report – What’s Next: Parks and Protected Areas to 2020 and Beyond. Click Here

For more information or interviews:

Tara Russell, Program Director, CPAWS Northern Alberta Chapter
Phone: 780-328-3780 ext. 3 | Email: [email protected]

Katie Morrison, Conservation Director, CPAWS Southern Alberta Chapter
Phone: 403-463-6337 | Email: [email protected]

BACKGROUNDER

The Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society

Canada was the first industrialized country to sign onto the UN’s Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), an international agreement signed by over 195 countries worldwide. In 2010, as a party to the CBD, Canada pledged to take certain actions to safeguardbiodiversity, including protecting at least 17% of the country’s lands and inland waters by2020. Protecting nature is one of the best proven solutions to slowing the biodiversity crisis.
 
For over 55 years, CPAWS has been working with all levels of government, and otherpartners across the country to protect more of Canada’s public lands. As the onlynationwide charity dedicated solely to the protection of our public 
lands and water, and with chapters in almost every province and territory across Canada, we are uniquely positioned to help governments protect what nature really needs.
 
Protected areas are important to conserve wildlife and wilderness, as well as provide clean air and water for all Canadians, store carbon, and play a major role in improving our health and well-being. They also make economic sense. Protected areas around the world generate US$600 billion per year in direct spending, while costing less than US$10 billion per year to manage.
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