Marley Moose, 22, is in her third summer of tree planting in northern Manitoba, aiming to restore forests ravaged by wildfires. However, her efforts face setbacks due to the cancellation of the federal 2 Billion Trees Program, originally launched to plant two billion trees by 2030. Moose described the devastation around her, stating, “Everywhere around me is burnt, but it’s where life used to be.” The forest in Manitoba’s Interlake region, previously affected by a pest infestation, was further devastated by a wildfire in 2021. The Canadian Tree Nursery Association warns that Canada is losing trees faster than they can be replanted, with nearly ten percent of forests destroyed by wildfires between 2023 and 2025. The cancellation of the federal program limits funding and threatens ongoing tree-planting initiatives like the one Moose participates in.
Why It Matters
The loss of forests in Canada has significant environmental implications, as wildfires increasingly release more carbon than the country absorbs. The 2 Billion Trees Program, introduced in 2019, was intended to address this crisis by providing funding for tree planting, but its cancellation has left many initiatives in jeopardy. Historical data indicates that wildfires burned approximately 150,000 square kilometers of land in 2023, marking one of the worst seasons on record. The ongoing challenges from invasive species and climate change exacerbate the urgency for effective reforestation efforts, underscoring the need for sustainable management of Canada’s forest resources.
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