Washington’s Department of Natural Resources is setting aside more than 77,000 acres of forest lands in Western Washington for conservation, the largest such effort in a generation, according to Commissioner of Public Lands Dave Upthegrove.
Upthegrove signed an order on Tuesday to protect these “structurally complex” forests, or older forests that are naturally diverse but not yet considered old-growth.
“Conserving these acres will allow us to nurture and steward them in new ways so we can do more for our climate, more for our habitat, and more for the communities we serve,” he said.
Conserving these older forests was a campaign promise for Upthegrove, who paused logging on all of these types of lands once he took office in January.
An analysis from the Department found 106,000 acres of structurally complex and older forests in Western Washington. The 29,000 acres not included in the conservation efforts will still be available for harvest.
Under the plan released Tuesday, the Department intends to focus on improving habitat and forest health, which could mean a loss in funding for the schools and communities that rely on revenue from timber sales.
To make up for that loss, Upthegrove said the Department will look for ways to maximize the value of other lands and find new opportunities to generate revenue on the conserved lands, like selling carbon credits, which would require legislative approval.
Tuesday’s announcement was welcomed by conservation groups.
“We must recognize the economic value of timber, but also the clean air, clean water, wildlife habitat, carbon storage and cultural value of the forest lands for which our state is famous,” said Alyssa Macy, chief executive officer of Washington Conservation Action.
But the timber industry argued that older trees are needed for certain wood products and stopping timber sales would hurt communities that receive that revenue.
“Removing these acres from sustainable harvest will mean less revenue for schools, fire districts, hospitals, and libraries that depend on trust land funds, and fewer family-wage jobs in Washington’s forest sector,” said Travis Joseph, American Forest Resource Council president, in a statement Tuesday.
Joseph urged the Board of Natural Resources and the Legislature to “closely scrutinize” the proposal and provide “oversight, clarity and stability so beneficiaries, communities, and Washington’s forest sector can plan for the future.”