tree farm licence 52 proposed management plan #5 · 1952, big valley psyu since 1953, and bowron...
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Tree Farm Licence 52 Proposed Management Plan #5
Presented To: West Fraser Mills Ltd.
Dated: September 2018
Ecora File No.: KE-11-069
TFL 52 Management Plan # 5 File No: KE-11-069 | September 2018 | Version B
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TFL 52 Management Plan # 5 File No: KE-11-069 | September 2018 | Version B
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Presented To:
West Fraser Mills Ltd.
1250 Brownmiller Road
Quesnel, BC V2J 6PS
Prepared by:
Jerry Miehm, RPF
Senior Resource Analyst
Ecora Engineering and Resource Group Ltd.
Date
Reviewed by:
Mike Sakakibara, RPF
Planning Superintendent
West Fraser
Date
Version Control and Revision History
Version Date Prepared By Reviewed By Notes/Revisions
Draft 20 Aug 2018 Miehm Sakakibara
A 9 Sept 2018 Miehm MFLNRO For content, prior to advertising
B 20 Sept 2018 Miehm Sakakibara For advertising, review and feedback
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction ................................................................................................ 1
2. Description of TFL 52 ................................................................................. 1
3. History of TFL 52 ........................................................................................ 3
3.1 Block A ..............................................................................................................................................3
3.2 Block B ..............................................................................................................................................4
3.3 Consolidations and Subdivisions ......................................................................................................5
3.4 Major Boundary Changes .................................................................................................................6
3.5 AAC History ......................................................................................................................................6
4. Planning Documents .................................................................................. 7
4.1 TFL 52 Licence Documents ..............................................................................................................7
4.2 Higher Level Plans ...........................................................................................................................8
4.2.1 Cariboo-Chilcotin Land Use Plan ...................................................... Error! Bookmark not defined.
4.2.2 Quesnel Sustainable Resource Management Plan ........................................................................... 8
4.3 Management Plans ........................................................................................................................ 10
4.4 Forest Stewardship Plans .............................................................................................................. 11
4.5 Miscellaneous Planning Documents ............................................................................................. 11
4.6 Environmental Certification ............................................................................................................ 12
4.6.1 Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) ................................................................................................ 12
4.6.2 Chain of Custody ............................................................................................................................. 13
5. Timber Supply Analysis ............................................................................ 13
6. Public Review and First Nations Consultation .......................................... 14
6.1 First Nations Consultation ............................................................................................................. 15
6.2 Documentation of Comments Received ........................................................................................ 15
List of Tables in Text
Table 3.1 TFL 52 Agreement History .................................................................................................................................... 4
Table 3.2 TFL 5 Agreement History ...................................................................................................................................... 5
Table 3.3 Forestry Revitalization Act Take-Back Areas ........................................................................................................ 5
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List of Figures in Text
Figure 2.1 Tree Farm Licence 52 Location ............................................................................................................................. 2
Appendices
Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C
Appendix D
Appendix E
Appendix F
Public Review Strategy and Approval
Timber Supply Analysis Information Package
Timber Supply Analysis Technical Report
Summary of First Nations Feedback
Summary of First Public Feedback
AAC Determination
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Acronyms and Abbreviations
AAC Allowable Annual Cut
BCS Biodiversity Conservation Strategy
CCLUP Cariboo-Chilcotin Land Use Plan
CoC Chain of Custody
EMS Environmental Management System
FRA Forestry Revitalization Act
FSP Forest Stewardship Plan
GAR Government Action Regulation
LUO Land Use Order
MP Management Plan
PEFC Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification
SFI Sustainable Forestry Initiative
TFL Tree Farm Licence
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1. Introduction Section 35.2 of the Forest Act enabled the Tree Farm Licence Management Plan Regulation (last updated
November 27, 2009) which describes the approval process, term, timing, content requirements and public review
process for a Tree Farm Licence (TFL) Management Plan (MP). The following sections present the required
content for West Fraser’s TFL 52 MP#5 in accordance with the Regulation.
When approved by the Province’s Chief Forester, the Management Plan, along with other pertinent information
and input, will be used in the Chief Forester’s determination of the allowable annual cut (AAC) from Tree Farm
Licence (TFL) 52. The AAC determination will be appended to this document once it is completed.
Management objectives and strategies that pertain to operations on the TFL are specified in the Forest
Stewardship Plan in accordance with the Forest and Range Practices Act and are taken into account in the timber
supply analysis that is included in this Management Plan.
2. Description of TFL 52 TFL 52 is composed of two blocks. Block A is located to the east of Quesnel. Once a contiguous parcel, it has
been split into two separate parcels as a result of Instrument 6 deleting 31,752 hectares from TFL 52 for the
Cascadia TSA. TFL 52 Block B is northwest of the city. Figure 2.1 shows the location of the TFL and its
surroundings.
West Fraser was granted Block A of the TFL 52 licence in January 1991. The land base is typified by rolling
plateaus in the west and the Cariboo Mountains in the east. Many lakes and rivers are found within the Licence
area. Block A contains the headwaters of the Cottonwood, Bowron and Willow Rivers, which all flow directly into
the Fraser River. Highway 26 between Quesnel and Bowron Lake Provincial Park provides primary access to
Block A. This highway bisects the License into north and south components. Most forest roads into Block A
originate from Highway 26 which provides excellent year-round access for both forest management and
recreational activities.
Block B of TFL 52 is located northwest of Quesnel along the Fraser River. Similar to Block A the land base is
typified by rolling plateaus but includes steep banks leading down to the Fraser River. Western Plywood Ltd.
(which later became Weldwood of Canada) was granted the former TFL 5 licence in May 1950. Primary access
to Block B is provided by Highway 97 between Quesnel and Hixon for the eastern component. The western side
of Block B can be accessed by either Blackwater Road or Tako Road. Due to the long history of forestry activities
on Block B (more than 60 years), there is excellent year-round access for both forest management and
recreational activities.
The forests of TFL 52 are dominated by interior spruce, lodgepole pine, and Douglas-fir. Other species include
subalpine fir, trembling aspen, and cottonwood. Birch, western hemlock, and western redcedar are found in
localized areas. Two biogeoclimatic ecological classification (BEC) zones dominate the land base of TFL 52:
▪ Sub-boreal spruce (SBS), generally below 1200 metres with cool, snowy winters and warm
summers; and
▪ Engelmann spruce-subalpine fir (ESSF), generally above 1200 metres with long, cold winters
and short, cool summers.
The interior cedar-hemlock (ICH) BEC zone is found in a very small area near the eastern boundary of the TFL.
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A number of communities are associated with TFL 52. These include Quesnel, Wells, Barkerville, Bowron Lake
and Cottonwood. Both Wells and Barkerville are located within the License area. Two popular recreational
areas, Bowron Lake Provincial Park and Troll Mountain Ski Resort, share a common boundary with TFL 52.
Figure 2.1 Tree Farm Licence 52 Location
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3. History of TFL 52
3.1 Block A
West Fraser originated in 1955 when three brothers, Henry H. Ketcham Jr., William P. Ketcham and Samuel K.
Ketcham, acquired a small lumber planing mill in Quesnel. From 1955 to 1979 the business expanded through
the acquisition of a number of sawmills and related timber quotas throughout the interior of BC. The Company has
continually grown since that time to become one of the largest integrated forest products companies in Canada,
producing lumber, medium density fibreboard, plywood, pulp, linerboard, kraft paper, and newsprint.
Much of the area east of Quesnel has a long history of natural resource development. Mining boomed in the late
1800’s and again in the 1930’s. Today, mining is common throughout the TFL but on a smaller scale than earlier
years. The level of activity fluctuates greatly with the market value of gold.
Logging and accompanying milling operations which provided for local consumption began in the late 1800’s. By
the 1930’s and 1950’s, larger milling facilities were providing forest products for consumers outside the Cariboo.
As a consequence of these past activities, the licence area has been extensively modified by human activity and
has a well-developed transportation network.
West Fraser and its predecessor companies have a history of forestry activities in the forests east of Quesnel
dating back to the early 1950’s. During the period from 1954- 1957, quotas were established for operators in the
Cottonwood, Big Valley, Bowron and Naver Public Sustained Yield Units (PSYU’s). These quotas, originally held
as Timber Sales, have been continually maintained in various forms of tenure to the present. In the early 1970’s,
West Fraser embarked on a major program of purchasing small forest companies and consolidating forest
tenures. This was combined with the construction of an efficient sawmill in Quesnel designed to optimize recovery
from the wood profile in the PSYU’s where West Fraser’s cutting rights were located. West Fraser and its
predecessors have maintained continuous operations in the Cottonwood PSYU since 1950, Naver PSYU since
1952, Big Valley PSYU since 1953, and Bowron and Narcosli PSYU’s and Prince George Special Sale Area since
1954.
In 1980, West Fraser applied for a Tree Farm Licence as the Company believed it to be the most effective form of
tenure for providing a secure log supply. During the subsequent ten years, West Fraser and the Ministry of
Forests, with considerable public involvement, negotiated the licence agreement. TFL 52 was issued in January
1991 with West Fraser having to give up its licence holdings in the Prince George Forest Region and a portion of
its forest licence in the Quesnel Forest District. The original allowable annual cut was established at 518,952 m3 in
Management Plan 1. This was subsequently raised to 549,000 m3 in 1996 and to 579,000 m3 in 2001, primarily
because of a new forest inventory and updated growth and yield predictions.
Between 1991 and 2005, 35,239 m3 to 43,739 m3 of the AAC was allocated to the Small Business Forest
Enterprise Program (now the BC Timber Sales Program (BCTS)). During 2005-2006 West Fraser arrived at an
agreement with the government on areas within TFL 52 that would be subject to the ‘take-back’ provisions of
legislation designed to reallocate timber volume held by major licencees to First Nations, Community Forests,
Woodlots, and BC Timber Sales.
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Table 3.1 TFL 52 Agreement History
Event Date Description
TFL Agreement 1991 January 1 West Fraser Mills Limited. Term: 25 years.
Replacement 2001 January 1 West Fraser Mills Limited. Term: 25 years.
Instrument 2 2002 April 25 Deletes 3.35 ha of Schedule B Lands for commercial, light industrial and residential use
Instrument 3 2004 March 19 Deletes 5.347 ha of Schedule B Lands for commercial, light industrial and residential use
FRA Order 3(2)25-1 2004 December 21 In accordance with the Forestry Revitalization Act, 36,485 m3/year of AAC was reserved in TFL 5 amending Section 2.01 of the TFL 5 Agreement. (Instrument 4 consolidated TFL 5 and 52 in 2006)
FRA Order 3(2)26-1 2004 December 21 In accordance with the Forestry Revitalization Act, 40,000 m3/year of AAC was reserved in TFL 52 amending Section 2.01 of the TFL 52 Agreement
Change of Control 2005 January 1 West Fraser acquired Weldwood of Canada Ltd. Weldwood will be amalgamated with West Frasers’ principal operating subsidiary – West Fraser Mills Ltd. The amalgamated co. will continue as West Fraser Mills Ltd.
Instrument 4 2006 December 28 TFL 5 was consolidated into TFL 52. (refer to TFL 5 Instrument 12)
Instrument 5 2009 March 18 Amends paragraph 1.09 of the January 1, 2001 TFL Agreement.
Instrument 6 2011 September 14 Deletes 31,732 ha from Schedule B Lands and reduces the FRA AAC Reservation of 41,293 m3/year as defined in FRA 3(2) 26-1 and FRA 3(2) 25-1 and the BCTS AAC Reservation of 40,693 m3/year both to 0
3.2 Block B
Forest Management Licence 5 was originally granted to Western Plywood Ltd. in 1950 to provide a supply of logs
for the first venture into plywood manufacturing in the BC interior. Production from a new mill started in 1951. In
1964, the licence was redesignated as Tree Farm Licence 5 (Mackenzie-Cariboo Tree Farm Licence) and was
transferred to Weldwood of Canada Ltd.
The original Allowable Annual Cut (AAC) was 42,475 m3; in 1956 the AAC was increased to 70,792 m3 as a result
of an improved inventory and a reduction in rotation age from 150 to 130 years. In 1970 the AAC was increased
again to 124,594 m3 to reflect the improved utilization due to smaller tops, lower stumps and smaller trees. In
1980, the AAC peaked at 134,788 m3. The AAC subsequently decreased in three periods to 110,000 m3 in 1987.
In 1998, the AAC was increased to 122,800 m3, with an allocation of 5,454 m3 (increased to 6,747 in 2006) to the
Small Business Forest Enterprise Program. In 2003, the AAC was dramatically increased to 300,000 m3 to
address an epidemic of mountain pine beetle. In the early years of TFL 5, forest development was concentrated
on road building in the southern portion of the block east of the Fraser. Logs were hauled to the Fraser River,
skylined across the river at Cottonwood Canyon, and then hauled by truck to Quesnel; here they were then
skylined back across the Fraser to the plywood plant. By 1956, this log delivery process was replaced with a log
drive down the Fraser River to the mill, first in log booms, then by free-floating logs. The last log drive ended in
1988 with all timber being hauled by truck to the mill sites in subsequent years.
A sawmill was established adjacent to the plywood mill in 1962 to utilize logs that were not suitable for the
plywood plant. This mill ran with a number of major upgrades until 1997 when it was dismantled. A new sawmill,
specializing in cutting Douglas-fir, was constructed in a new location adjacent to the Cariboo Pulp and Paper Co.
mill. In 2006 the new mill was converted to cutting pine and spruce as part of West Fraser’s effort to increase
utilization of beetle-attacked wood.
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Table 3.2 TFL 5 Agreement History
Event Date Description
FML Agreement 1950 May15 Forest Management Licence was issued to Western Plywood Ltd.
Assignment 1964 March 31 Western Plywood Ltd. assigned TFL 5 to Weldwood of Canada Ltd.
Replacement 1980 January 1 Weldwood of Canada Ltd. was granted a replaceable TFL.
Replacement 1995 March 1 Weldwood of Canada Ltd. was granted a replaceable TFL.
Replacement 2000 March 1 Weldwood of Canada Ltd. was granted a replaceable TFL.
Change of Control 2000 June 15 From Champion International Corporation to International Paper Company. Licensee name unchanged.
Change of Control 2005 January 1 Weldwood of Canada Ltd. was acquired from International Paper Company by West Fraser. Weldwood is amalgamated with West Frasers’ principal operating subsidiary – West Fraser Mills Ltd. The amalgamated company continues as West Fraser Mills Ltd.
Consolidation 2006 December 28 Was consolidated into TFL 52. TFL5 ceased existence as a separate entity after Dec 28/06.
3.3 Consolidations and Subdivisions
TFL 5 was added to TFL 52 in December 2006, becoming Block B of the TFL. The original portion of TFL 52 is
designated as Block A.
The area of TFL 52 reported in the previous Management Plan (2009) was 293,495 hectares. The current area of
the TFL according to the spatial version of the boundary provided for this analysis is 261,468 hectares – a
reduction of 32,027 hectares. Most of this difference is can be accounted for by the Forestry Revitalization Act
(FRA) take-back. Four blocks, summarized in Table 3.3 below, were removed by Instrument #6 in September
2011.
Table 3.3 Forestry Revitalization Act Take-Back Areas
Deletion Block Area (ha)
Ahbau 4,208
Little Swift 3,662
Marvin Creek 2,015
Big Valley 21,847
Total 31,732
The location of the areas removed from the TFL is shown in Figure 3.1.
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Figure 3.1 Forestry Revitalization Agreement Take-Back Areas
3.4 Major Boundary Changes
A correction was made to the northeast boundary of the TFL in 2013. This accounts for the remaining difference
in the TFL area between MP#4 and the current boundary.
3.5 AAC History
The Chief Forester of B.C. is responsible for determining an annual allowable cut (AAC) for each TFL in the
Province. This is typically done soon after each new Management Plan is submitted, or if the area of the TFL
changes for any reason. The chart in Figure 3.2 shows how the AAC for TFL 52 (and the former TFL 5) have
varied over time. The AAC for TFL 5 varied between 42,475 m3/year when the license was issued to 122,800
m3/year just prior to the uplift for MPB salvage. In 2003, the AAC was increased to 300,000 m3/year to allow for
the salvage of dead and deteriorating lodgepole pine.
The AAC for TFL 52 was set at 518,952 m3/year when the licence was issued in 1991. There were only small
changes in the AAC over the next 15 years, but it increased significantly to 870,000 m3/year when TFL 5 was
absorbed in 2006, and further increased to 1,000,000 m3/year with an MPB salvage uplift that was granted in
2009.
BOWRONLAKE
PARK
LittleSwift
Big Valley
Ahbau
MarvinCreek
TFL 52
Block B
TFL 52
Block A
Current TFL 52 Boundary
Deletions Since MP#4
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Figure 3.2 Allowable Annual Cut History for TFL 52 and TFL 5
4. Planning Documents TFL 52 is located within the Cariboo-Chilcotin Land Use Plan (CCLUP) and is managed in accordance with the
associated Land Use Order (LUO). This analysis will be consistent with the May 2011 LUO for the CCLUP area
for Old Growth Management Areas (OGMAs) and wildlife tree retention targets as holders of an FSP must amend
their plans within two years of declaration of the land use order. TFL 52 is also covered by a Government Action
Regulation (GAR) Order for Mountain Caribou – Quesnel Highlands Planning Unit that has changed the area to
be managed for caribou from the last analysis (new coverage dated December 12, 2009).
4.1 TFL 52 Licence Documents
The TFL 52 Licence document (Bowron Cottonwood Tree Farm Licence – January 1, 2011) sets out rules for
timber disposition, merchantability and waste assessment, cutting authority, access, contracting and reporting. In
addition, it lists in detail the requirements for the preparation of a management plan and supporting timber supply
analysis, and the sets that must be taken to solicit public feedback during the planning process. The previous
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management plan documents (for MP#4) were prepared in accordance with the TFL licence document that was in
force at the time that they were compiled. These documents are:
▪ Tree Farm License 52 – Management Plan No. 4 (November 2007)
▪ Timber Supply Analysis – Appendix I of MP No. 4 (September 2007)
The timber supply Analysis report was reviewed by the Chief Forester and was considered, along with other
sources of information when he established the AAC for the TFL. His findings and the AAC determination are
documented in:
▪ Tree Farm License 52 – Rationale for Allowable Annual Cut (AAC) Determination (April 2009)
These documents will guide planning on the TFL until MP#5 is approved and a new AAC determination is made.
4.2 Higher Level Plans
A hierarchy of plans exists with each level influencing the development of operational plans. The Cariboo-
Chilcotin Land Use Plan has been undergoing implementation in stages since its inception in 1994 with significant
success in the management of caribou and mule deer habitat, old growth, biodiversity, and visual landscapes.
4.2.1 Cariboo-Chilcotin Land Use Plan
TFL 52 is located within the Cariboo-Chilcotin Land Use Plan (CCLUP) area. On January 23, 1996, the CCLUP
was designated by the Government as a ‘higher level plan’ under the previous Forest Practices Code Act of BC1.
A “Ninety-Day Implementation Process – Final Report,” produced in February 1995, identifies resource targets for
each resource development zone that overall meet the intent of balancing social, economic and environmental
goals across the region. The components of the declared CCLUP are:
▪ Cariboo-Chilcotin Land-Use Plan, October 1994
▪ Cariboo-Chilcotin Land-Use Plan 90 Day Implementation Process Final Report, February 1995
▪ Addendum to the Cariboo-Chilcotin Land-Use Plan 90 Day Implementation Process Final
Report, April 20, 1995
▪ Memorandum Outlining Governments Intent Regarding the Implementation of the Cariboo-
Chilcotin Land-Use Plan, January 23, 1996
▪ 1:250,000 map of the plan area dated January 1996
.
4.2.2 Quesnel Sustainable Resource Management Plan
A key part of implementing the CCLUP was the completion of seven sustainable resource management plans
(SRMPs) covering the entire Cariboo-Chilcotin region. These plans were completed in 2007 and addressed
specific CCLUP strategies and targets on an area-specific basis through detailed objectives and strategies.
1 https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/farming-natural-resources-and-industry/natural-resource-use/land-water-use/crown-land/land-use-plans-and-objectives/cariboo-region/cariboochilcotin-rlup/cclup_higher_level_plan_order.pdf
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These detailed objectives and strategies provide for the management of key natural resources and the
maintenance of environmental values2.
The Quesnel Sustainable Resource Management Plan (SRMP) was endorsed by government and resource
stakeholders in 2007, approved in 2008, and remains as non-legal guidance. This SRMP covers the area of TFL
52.
4.2.3 Land Use Order
Using the SRMPs as a foundation, a Land Use Order (LUO)3 was declared under the Land Use Objectives
Regulation under the Land Act in 2010, which sets legal direction for forestry activities under FRPA concerning
key resource values. The order contains specific objectives and maps for biodiversity, wildlife trees, old growth
forest, critical habitat for fish, community areas of special concern, lakes, riparian areas, mature birch retention,
grasslands, scenic areas, recreation trails, high value wetlands for moose, and grizzly bear. The LUO was
amended on May 24, 2011.
4.2.4 Regional Biodiversity Conservation Strategy
The Biodiversity Conservation Strategy 4(BCS) was completed in July 1996 as part of the CCLUP Implementation
process which identified the need for a regional conservation strategy to maintain ecosystem function and species
diversity. The BCS established landscape units, biodiversity emphasis categories, and forest seral targets across
the region. Updates to the strategy explain key aspects of biodiversity as well as address how to maintain
biodiversity objectives when faced with epidemic beetle populations and fire.
The basic concepts of the CCLUP Biodiversity Conservation Strategy are built upon the foundation of the earlier
Forest Practices Code.
The establishment of landscape units, biodiversity emphasis categories, patch size distribution targets, and forest
seral targets can have a large influence on a timber supply review AAC and were given a heavy weighting in this
TSR.
The BCS comes in two parts - the Strategy itself and Update Notes:
Strategy
▪ Biodiversity Conservation Strategy Report (PDF, 1.4MB)
▪ Biodiversity Strategy Report Appendices (PDF)
▪ Biodiversity Conservation Strategy Table 2 Landscape Unit Sizes (PDF)
Update Notes
▪ Update Note #1: Key Assumptions & Recommendations For Use of the Inventory Adjustment
Factor
▪ Update Note #2: Amalgamation of Small NDT-BEC Units in Relation to Assessment of Seral
Objectives and Old Growth Management Area Planning
2 https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/industry/natural-resource-use/land-use/land-use-plans-objectives/cariboochilcotin-rlup/quesnel-srmp 3 https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/farming-natural-resources-and-industry/natural-resource-use/land-water-use/crown-land/land-use-plans-and-objectives/cariboo-region/cariboochilcotin-rlup/cariboo_chilcotin_order_amending_riparian_obj_lupa.pdf 4 https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/industry/natural-resource-use/land-use/land-use-plans-objectives/cariboochilcotin-rlup
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▪ Update Note #3: Definition of the Fir Group and Pine Group for Purposes of Seral Stage
Assessments within NDT4
▪ Update Note #4: An Approach for Patch Size Assessments
▪ Update Note #5: An Integrated Mountain Pine-Biodiversity Conservation Management Strategy
▪ Update Note #6: Procedures for Implementation of the Mountain Pine Beetle-Biodiversity
Strategy to Address Current Attack During the Outbreak Phase
▪ Update Note #7b: An Integrated Strategy for Management of Biodiversity and Bark Beetles in
Douglas-fir and Spruce Stands
▪ Update Note #8: Strategy for Management of Mature Seral Forest and Salvage of Mountain
Pine Beetle-Killed Timber (PDF)
▪ Update Note #9: Strategy for Management of Mature Seral Forest and Salvage of Mountain
Pine Beetle-Killed Timber Within TFLs (PDF)
▪ Update Note #10: Salvage Harvesting of Transition Old Growth Management Areas Heavily
Attacked by Mountain Pine Beetle or Spruce Beetle (PDF)
▪ Update Note #11: New Options for Old Growth Management Pine Beetle or Spruce Beetle
(PDF)
▪ Update Note #12: Stand-Level Retention for Biodiversity (PDF)
▪ Update Note #14: The Function and Management of Old Growth Management Areas in the
Cariboo-Chilcotin (PDF)
▪ Update Note #15: M+O Seral Management in Wildfire Areas (PDF)
4.3 Management Plans
The lands currently within the boundaries of TFL 52 have been managed by West Fraser and its predecessor
companies for many years. When land is held under an area-based licence, the licencee is responsible for
periodically preparing a Management Plan for the tenure. The term of these plans has varied between five and
ten years. For Block B the first of these MP’s was written in 1950; the first Block A plan was first prepared in
1990. The table below shows the time period covered by these and all subsequent MP’s for all tenures now
included in TFL 52.
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Figure 4.1 Management Planning History for TFL 52 and TFL 5
4.4 Forest Stewardship Plans
A Forest Stewardship Plan (FSP) is a plan of potential forest development activities that are intended to take
place on the area described in the plan, over a period of up to five or, if extended, up to 10 years. An FSP must
be approved before cutting authority can be approved.
Based on commitments made in the FSP, the government can hold agreement-holders accountable for their
forest management practices. It also provides a vehicle for agreement-holders to solicit and consider the
expectations of the public and other stakeholders (e.g., First Nations) for their use of Crown land and resources.
West Fraser has an approved Forest Stewardship Plan for TFL 52 which is expected to be replaced with a new
FSP in early 2019.
4.5 Miscellaneous Planning Documents
In addition to the documents described above, the following general documents inform forest management
decisions on the TFL:
▪ Tree Farm Licence Management Plan Regulation (January 2013)
▪ Forest and Range Practices Act and the Forest Planning and Practices Regulation (January
2010)
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▪ CCLUP Land Use Order5 (June 2011)
▪ GAR Order ‘AMENDED – ORDER #U-5-001, U-5-002, U-5-003 _ Ungulate Winter Ranges
Cariboo Chilcotin Land Use Plan, Shallow and Moderate Snowpack‘6 (December 2004)
▪ GAR Order ‘Wildlife Habitat Areas #5-088 to 5-117 – Mountain Caribou – Quesnel Highlands
Planning Unit’7 (December 2009)
▪ Pellet Transects and Deer Management on TFL 52 (Keystone Wildlife, 2008)
▪ CCLUP Regional Conservation Biodiversity Strategy - Update Note #4 - An Approach for Patch
Size Assessments in the Cariboo Forest Region8 (July 2001)
▪ CCLUP Regional Conservation Biodiversity Strategy - Update Note #12 - Stand-Level Retention
for Biodiversity9 (December 2005))
▪ Integrated Land Management Plan For TFL 5 (Keystone Wildlife, 1995)
4.6 Environmental Certification
West Fraser is fully committed to responsible stewardship of the environment and has always operated on the
principles of sustainability. Certification of Environmental Management Systems (EMS) is an important foundation
of West Fraser’s woodlands stewardship. Being certified within one of the recognized Environmental Management
Systems verifies that those aspects of operations that have the potential to have a negative effect on the
environment have been assessed, that procedures to address them are in place and being followed, and that
continual improvement is being pursued. EMS Certification provides assurance that West Fraser is living up to its
environmental commitments
West Fraser has achieved and continues to maintain environmental certification under Sustainable Forestry
Initiative (SFI) and has continued to maintain a ‘chain of custody’ program that was introduced in 2006.
4.6.1 Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI)
The SFI Standard is based on principles and measures that promote sustainable forest management and
consider all forest values in order to promote responsible management on all forest lands in North America. The
SFI program is a rigorous system of environmental and conservation practices for wildlife and water quality
protection, biodiversity conservation, sustainable harvesting practices and other forest management goals. It is
based on the following five guiding principles:
1. Protection of wildlife
2. Protection of plants
3. Protection of soil
4. Protection of air quality
5. Protection of water quality
5 https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/farming-natural-resources-and-industry/natural-resource-use/land-water-use/crown-land/land-use-plans-and-objectives/cariboo-region/cariboochilcotin-rlup/cclup_land_use_order_implementation_direction_companion.pdf 6 http://www.env.gov.bc.ca/wld/documents/uwr/uwr_u5_001.pdf 7 http://www.env.gov.bc.ca/cgi-bin/apps/faw/wharesult.cgi?search=number&select=5&number=088&submit2=Search 8 https://www.for.gov.bc.ca/hfd/library/Reg_Bio_Con_Str/UpdateNote4.pdf 9 https://www.for.gov.bc.ca/hfd/library/Reg_Bio_Con_Str/UpdateNote12.pdf
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SFI was selected as the sustainable forest management certification scheme for Quesnel because of its flexibility
for use on different forest tenures and because of its recognition in the North American marketplace. Annual
performance audits are conducted to ensure that companies are complying with commitments that they have
made in management plans and their EMS. The results of the SFI audit are available to the public.
4.6.2 Chain of Custody
Some forest products buyers groups have asked West Fraser to provide verification that those products that they
are purchasing originate from sustainably managed forests. As West Fraser sources wood from companies with
various certifications and from uncertified sources such as private land or timber sales, verifying a chain of
custody (CoC) is difficult. In 2006, West Fraser implemented a chain of custody process through the Programme
for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC) which is verified by third-party auditors. The PEFC Council is
an independent non-profit, non-governmental organization founded in 1999 to promote sustainable forest
management.
West Fraser uses scale data and timber marks which are unique to each source of timber as the basis for the
CoC tracking system. Conversion factors are used to convert the weight of raw logs to ‘certified credits’ for
products sold as originating from an EMS-certified source. As wood from certified sources is scaled, certified
credits are produced; when a mill product (lumber, pulp, plywood) is sold as 100% certified, certified credits are
depleted. If there are not enough certified credits available to fill an order, the product cannot be sold as certified.
5. Timber Supply Analysis As stated in the Tree Farm Licence Management Plan Regulation, the Management Plan must contain a timber
supply analysis that analyzes the short term and long term availability of timber for harvesting in the tree farm
licence area, including the impact of management practices on the availability of timber. The TFL 52 Timber
Supply Analysis Report is attached in Appendix A. The Regulation also requires supporting documentation for
the timber supply analysis including resource inventories, a description of the model and analytical methods used
to formulate the timber supply and any other information relevant to timber supply on the TFL. The supporting
documentation for the timber supply analysis is summarized in the TFL 52 Timber Supply Analysis Information
Package attached in Appendix B. The Information Package was accepted as a foundation for the timber supply
analysis by the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations on March 15, 2018.
The following is a brief summary of the results from the base case analysis as documented in the attached timber
supply analysis report.
The base case presented shows that a harvest level of 570,000 m3/year is possible for the next twenty years. This
is a net harvest level after the allowance for non-recoverable losses has been taken into account. A review of the
THLB growing stock trend and future age class distribution of the THLB shows that the initial harvest level is
justified. The growing stock at the end of planning horizon (32 million cubic metres total, with 22 million cubic
metres above minimum harvest age) is sufficient to support continued operations at the sustainable long-term
harvest level of 784,550 m3/year.
Summary statistics of the harvest profile were compiled and presented in the body of this report. Briefly:
▪ Average harvest age falls sharply over the next thirty years and stabilizes in the long-term at an average
of 69 years;
▪ Even in the long-term stands older than 100 years make up 10% of the harvest volume;
▪ Harvest volume per hectare averages 315 m3 over the next fifty years. In the long-term this rises to 372
m3; and
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▪ Pine volume is in short supply now but will recover; by the end of the planning horizon, 57% of the
harvest comes from spruce-leading stands, and 24% comes from pine-leading stands.
The harvest pattern found in this analysis is not surprising. The timber supply analysis for the previous
management plan (MP#4) predicted that harvest levels would have to decline once the MPB salvage program
ended. TFL 52 is now in the timber supply trough predicted by MP#4. The trough is only slightly deeper than
expected, due in large part to the land base reduction related to the creation of the Cascadia TSA
The sensitivity analysis runs that tested minimum harvest age assumptions emphasize the precarious nature of
the current timber supply situation. Lowering MHA by 10% provides only a modest increase in short-term timber
supply – but increase MHA by 10% cuts short-term (i.e., the next 20 years) by almost 25%. The immediate
harvest level is very closely tied to assumptions about when the oldest existing managed stands will first become
merchantable.
The current harvest level is also sensitive to disturbance constraints that protect visual quality and watersheds. If
these are relaxed, short-term harvest levels can rise slightly – by between 3% and 5%. More restrictive
disturbance constraints reduce short-term timber supply by 1.5 to 3%. While these are not trivial harvest volumes,
they clearly play a smaller role in the timber supply dynamics of the TFL than do assumptions about minimum
harvest age.
Only two of the factors examined in sensitivity analysis runs had a significant impact on long-term harvest levels:
managed stand yield assumptions and early seral patch size management. West Fraser has a comprehensive
Change monitoring inventory in place to deal with the former issue, and periodically reviews patch size distribution
as part of their operational planning to address the latter issue. It should be noted that both of these matters also
impact short term harvest levels.
In light of the issues addressed in the sensitivity analyses mentioned above – and recognizing the uncertainties
associated with managed stand yields and patch size distribution modeling in particular – the base case
presented in this document is a good foundation upon which to base and AAC decision. A harvest level of
570,000 m3/year is the recommended AAC for TFL 52 for the term of MP#5.
6. Public Review and First Nations Consultation Adequate opportunity for public review – and due consideration of the feedback received – is central to effective
management planning for public forest land. The Tree Farm Licence Management Plan Regulation requires
(among other things) that:
The tree farm licence holder must make the management plan available for public review and
comment in accordance with the strategy approved by the minister […].
The steps taken to meet this public review requirement are summarized in this section.
A public review strategy was submitted to the Acting Regional Executive Director (RED) on February 14, 2017.
The strategy was subsequently approved by the RED February 20, 2017. That document described the
measures that West Fraser will take to ensure adequate opportunity for public review and feedback. These
include:
▪ Listing the documents that will be circulated
▪ Identifying advertising channels
▪ Designating primary agency contact persons
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▪ Identifying First Nations groups for information sharing and consultation
▪ Identifying other stakeholder groups
▪ Designating locations at which advertised documents will be made available to the public
The document also includes a template for the proposed newspaper advertisement, and a commitment to
consider feedback that the review process generates.
A complete version of the review strategy document can be found in Appendix A, along with a copy of the
approval letter from the Ministry.
6.1 First Nations Consultation
The Ministry of Forest, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development is leading the information
sharing and consultation efforts with local First Nations. These are:
▪ Nazko First Nation
▪ Lhtako Dene First Nation
▪ Tsilhqot’in – Engagement Zone A
▪ Williams Lake Indian Band
▪ Xats’ull First Nation
▪ Lheidli – Tenneh Band
The goal will be to identify First Nations interests and concerns prior to submission of the plan to the MLNRORD.
6.2 Documentation of Comments Received
A summary of all correspondence sent or received by West Fraser regarding the review of TFL 52 MP #5 is
provided in Appendix D (First Nations) and Appendix E (General Public).
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Appendix A Public Review Strategy and Approval
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Appendix B Timber Supply Analysis Information Package
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Appendix C Timber Supply Analysis Technical Report
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Appendix D Summary of First Nations Feedback [TO BE INCLUDED IN FINAL MANAGEMENT PLAN DOUCMENT]
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Appendix E Summary of Public Feedback [TO BE INCLUDED IN FINAL MANAGEMENT PLAN DOUCMENT]
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Appendix F AAC Determination [TO BE INCLUDED IN FINAL MANAGEMENT PLAN DOUCMENT]
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