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Forest Service urged to strengthen protections for mature and old-growth forests in draft national old growth plan


A stream flows through a stand of mature trees with thick trunks in a temperate rainforest.

A stream found within the proposed Grasshopper logging sale in Mt. Hood National Forest, Oregon. Photo credit: Daniel Howland


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Friday, June 21, 2024


WASHINGTON – A coalition of environmental groups called on the U.S. Forest Service Friday to strengthen protections for the nation's mature and old-growth forests and trees. The move came in response to the agency's release of a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) with proposals that could conserve old-growth across all national forests. This is the most recent step following President Biden’s Executive Order, issued in 2022, to develop policies to protect mature and old-growth forests on Federal lands and follows an initial scoping period, which closed on Feb. 2


A 90-day public comment period will begin following publication of the DEIS in the Federal Register.


Mature and old-growth forests store huge amounts of carbon and keep it out of the atmosphere. They also contain essential habitats, provide clean drinking water for communities and feature highly fire-resilient trees. As the world experiences record-shattering heat and widespread climate disasters, protecting these forests is critical to preventing the worst consequences of climate change. 


The vast majority of old-growth forests have already been logged. Federally managed public lands have a critical share of our remaining old growth – and the mature forests that could become old-growth. Groups have identified dozens of logging projects that target mature and old-growth trees on federal lands. 


The Climate Forests Campaign is a coalition of more than 120 organizations working to protect mature and old-growth trees and forests on federal land. 


Members of the coalition, including Center for Biological Diversity, Environment America, Environmental Law & Policy Center, Earthjustice, NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council), Oregon Wild, Sierra Club, Standing Trees and WildEarth Guardians, issued the following statement:


“This summer, the Climate Forests Campaign will work with our partners across the country to engage hundreds of thousands of Americans to ensure a strong final plan. The U.S. Forest Service must fulfill the direction of President Biden’s Executive Order to protect mature and old-growth forests for the climate, clean water and imperiled species. 


This draft is a step, but the final policy must be significantly improved, including ending the practice of sending old-growth trees to timber mills. Logging old-growth trees to save the forest is a false solution — they are worth more standing


The agency must also take concrete action to recover the old-growth that has been lost over the past centuries. In many parts of the country there is little to no old-growth left, and by protecting mature forests, we can help ensure they become the old-growth of future generations. We need meaningful protections for both mature and old-growth forests to ensure our national forests meet the most pressing environmental challenges of our time.”


Contact:

Randi Spivak, Center for Biological Diversity, (310) 779-4894, rspivak@biologicaldiversity.org 

Jackson Chiappinelli, Earthjustice, (585) 402-2005, jchiappinelli@earthjustice.org

Ellen Montgomery, Environment America, (720) 583-4024, emontgomery@environmentamerica.org 

Judith Nemes, Environmental Law & Policy Center, (773) 892-7494, Jnemes@elpc.org 

Andrew Scibetta, NRDC, ascibetta@nrdc.org

Steve Pedery, Oregon Wild, (503) 998-8411, sp@oregonwild.org

Ian Brickey, Sierra Club, ian.brickey@sierraclub.org 

Zack Porter, Standing Trees, (802) 552-0160, zporter@standingtrees.org

Adam Rissien, WildEarth Guardians, (406) 370-3147, arissien@wildearthguardians.org 




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The Worth More Standing report spotlights federal forest-management practices that are liquidating mature and old-growth forests and trees every day. It includes 10 examples that are part of a pervasive pattern of federal forest mismanagement that routinely sidesteps science to turn carbon-storing giants into lumber. Learn what actions you can take to protect Climate Forests across the country.

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