Government continuously refines forest stewardship through ongoing improvement of policies, legislation and practices for forest inventory, timber supply planning, allowable annual cut determinations, silviculture, forest health, land-based research, climate change, and forest genetic resource management. Government's goal is to achieve sustainable management of British Columbia's forests.
Chief Forester
The chief forester is an assistant deputy minister responsible for determining timber harvest levels for each timber supply area and tree farm licence in the province. Reporting to the deputy minister, the chief forester also provides key strategic guidance and direction on forest stewardship to forestry practitioners in government and industry. The following ministry programs and branches report through to the chief forester:
Chief forester’s legal authority
The chief forester is an independent statutory decision maker who must make the allowable annual cut determinations for Crown forest land in British Columbia based on a wide range of environmental, social and economic factors as specified in Section 8 of the Forest Act including:
Under section 169 of the Forest and Range Practices Act, the chief forester also sets seed, seedling and stocking standards for reforestation of B.C.’s forests.
Guidance Documents