Pushing for the paradigm shift in BC's forests until it is achieved. Based in love and reverence for the place we call home.
Over a century of immature government policy has brought us to the age of consequence. The land's most basic functions are buckling under the continued pressure of extractive industry. The choice ahead is whether to let the status quo race us to the bottom, or to stand for the rivers, the forests, the families, and the futures that depend on them.
4 the Love of BC.
Every figure in the video, with the math and the source. All numbers come from the BC government's own published reports. They are here so you can check them.
In the most recent audited year (2024/25), logging on BC's public land paid the province $507 million. Running the forest program cost $418 million. The difference left for the public is $89 million, about $15 per British Columbian.
Two items are set aside so revenue and cost compare like for like: wildfire response ($769M) and BC Timber Sales, the timber-auction branch ($213M, which roughly breaks even after its replanting and road costs). What's left is the general forest program.
Revenue: 2024 Economic State of BC's Forest Sector, Fig. 27 (= BC Budget Table A5). Cost: Ministry of Forests 2024/25 Annual Service Plan Report, p.25 ($1,400M operating − $769M wildfire − $213M BC Timber Sales).
BC will host seven FIFA World Cup matches at BC Place. The province estimates BC's total hosting cost at $685–729 million, or about $98–104 million per match. One match costs more than a full year's net public return from logging.
Province of BC cost update, May 2026: CBC; Business in Vancouver.
Forest revenue to the province fell from $1.9 billion in 2021/22 to $507 million in 2024/25. The government's own forecast holds it near $507 million through 2027/28.
2024 Economic State of BC's Forest Sector, revenue table and Fig. 27 forecast note.
Forestry is not BC's only public resource. In the same year, natural gas royalties brought in about $573 million and mining about $548 million. Forestry's stumpage was a similar size, about $507 million, but almost all of it went back into running the forest program, leaving $89 million. The gas and mineral figures are royalties and taxes the province largely keeps. Forestry is the one big resource where the public spends nearly as much managing the cut as it collects.
Natural gas royalties, after deductions: BC Fall 2024 Economic & Fiscal Update. Mining: BC Budget 2024 estimate. Gas and mineral royalties are collected with far less public administration relative to revenue (the BC Energy Regulator is funded by industry levies, not netted here), which is why forestry's net return stands out.
The Premier's January 2025 mandate letter directs the Forests Minister to enable a harvest of 45 million cubic metres a year. Recent harvests were about 32 million m³ (2025) and 39 million m³ (2024). The target is roughly 15 percent above the 2024 cut, or about 40 percent above the lower 2025 cut.
Forests Minister mandate letter, January 16 2025; recent harvest via Business in Vancouver and the Annual Service Plan Report.
BC's 15-year average harvest is about 180,000 hectares a year. A regulation soccer pitch is 0.71 hectares (105 m × 68 m). That works out to about 252,000 soccer fields of forest cut every year.
Harvest area: BC Environmental Reporting (Ministry of Forests), 15-year average. Pitch size: FIFA Stadium Requirements.
Logging has touched a lot of British Columbians directly. Tell me how it has affected you, and help keep this work going.
There is also a petition for a new Minister of Forests and a public inquiry into BC's timber estimates: savewhatsleft.ca/petition.
Every figure in the documentary, with the math and the source. They are here so you can check them.
BC Timber Sales' Forest Operations Map 2153 covers 77.5 hectares of clearcut across three cutblocks near Rosebud, in BC's Central Kootenay. 64.4 hectares fall inside the Eldorado Creek watershed, about 8 percent of the watershed itself. 5 kilometres of new Forest Service Road is approved.
BCTS Forest Operations Map 2153: fom.nrs.gov.bc.ca/public/projects/2153.
The Eldorado Creek watershed is the drinking-water supply for about 25 households near Nelway, on Highway 6 north of the Canada-US border. The watershed is karst, limestone bedrock with springs that drain quickly to surface streams. Loss of forest cover translates directly to drying of those springs.
Nelson Star, April 23 2026; My Nelson Now.
On April 16, 2026, the Regional District of Central Kootenay board voted unanimously to write the province asking for ecological-reserve designation for the Rosebud and Lomond Creek watersheds. BCTS is proceeding with road construction anyway.
BC Timber Sales itself reports a small annual surplus on paper. In FY 2024/25, gross revenue was about $240 million against rising expenses, leaving a net surplus of $27.6 million. The agency also carries $166.7 million in deferred reforestation liabilities, the replanting work owed but not yet funded. That is roughly six years of surpluses owed.
The bigger ministry-wide cost is fire. With the Fire Management bar removed, forest revenue and forest spending land within $55–115 million of each other in recent audited years.
The shortfall the headlines describe is the wildfire line, not the logging line.
BCTS financials: BCTS Annual Public Performance Report 2024/25. Ministry totals: Ministry of Forests 2024/25 Annual Service Plan Report; revenue forecast: 2024 Economic State of BC's Forest Sector.
March 30, 2026: legislative amendments expand BCTS allowable harvest by 800,000 cubic metres a year, roughly 17,700 truck loads. 2024 Southern Interior BCTS volume, which includes the Selkirk District where FOM 2153 sits, was up 55.5 percent year-to-date.
BC government release on BCTS amendments: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2026FOR0009-000335.
Every figure in the reel, with the math and the source. They are here so you can check them.
The Sooke Lake watershed is the primary drinking-water supply for about 350,000 people in Greater Victoria. The Capital Regional District owns the surrounding land outright. There has been no commercial logging in the catchment area since the early 1900s, after documented sediment damage.
CRD Sooke Water Supply Area; Timeline of the Greater Victoria Water System.
In September 2025, the Capital Regional District spent $33.3 million to purchase 1,973 hectares from Kapoor Lumber Company, retiring the last logging tenure inside the watershed. The bill is paid by water-rate payers across Greater Victoria, about $14 per household per year, not by provincial taxpayers.
CRD news release; CRD loan-authorization bylaw; Times Colonist.
The Eldorado Creek watershed near Rosebud is the drinking-water supply for about 25 households near Nelway, BC, on Highway 6 north of the Canada-US border. The watershed is karst, limestone bedrock with springs that drain quickly. On April 16, 2026, the Regional District of Central Kootenay voted unanimously to ask the province for ecological-reserve designation for the Rosebud and Lomond watersheds.
Nelson Star, April 23 2026; Castanet.
BC Timber Sales' Forest Operations Map 2153 covers 77.5 hectares of clearcut across three cutblocks. 64.4 hectares falls inside the Eldorado Creek watershed, about 8 percent of the watershed itself. 5 kilometres of new Forest Service Road is approved. BCTS is moving forward with construction.
BCTS Forest Operations Map 2153; BC Government release.
BC Timber Sales itself reports a small annual surplus on paper. In FY 2024/25, gross revenue was about $240 million against rising expenses, leaving a net surplus of $27.6 million. The agency also carries $166.7 million in deferred reforestation liabilities, the replanting work owed but not yet funded. That is roughly six years of surpluses owed.
The bigger ministry-wide cost is fire. With the Fire Management bar removed, forest revenue and forest spending land within $55–115 million of each other in recent audited years. The shortfall the headlines describe is the wildfire line, not the logging line.
BCTS financials: BCTS Annual Public Performance Report 2024/25. Ministry totals: Ministry of Forests 2024/25 Annual Service Plan Report; 2024 Economic State of BC's Forest Sector.
Funding this work means you're keeping the cameras rolling and the pressure on decision makers to do the right thing. Your contribution gets me to the cutblocks before they're cut, keeps the drone in the air so we can see what's at stake, and files the freedom-of-information requests so we know what decisions are being made behind closed doors. Let's work together so that our children never have to fight for a liveable future.