This is is just from the lodgepole pine in BC, Canada's single most important forestry tree. If it does spread east, the economic damage to the country could be as much as 30% to 40% higher.
The impact is going to be felt over a long time and not in one year. We are looking at a loss of close to half of BC's annual allowable cut within the next ten years. That is 1/4 of the Canadian forestry industry.
The loss to the federal and provincial governments will be about $4 billion a year in revenues. The economy will have come up with an extra $12 billion in annual economic activity to make up for the lose of forestry.
Forestry is least goverment subsidised industry in this country and not surprisingly the most productive sector in our economy. Our dollar is dependent on the export earnings of forestry and engery. Knock out one large part of this, the least subsidised part, and there will be a long term negative impact on the value of the Canadian dollar. Without the roughly $40 billion in forestry exports Canada would have a trade deficit and more importantly a current account deficit - we would have more money flowing out of Canada than in.
The following communities will be dramatically reduced in size
- Quesnel
- Williams Lake
- 100 Mile House
- Vanderhoof
- Smithers
- Burns Lake
- Mackenzie
- Fort St James
- Clearwater
- Blue River
- McBride
- Valemount
- Fraser Lake
- Houston
- Merritt
- Princeton
Prince George and Kamloops will both stagnate.
This is the biggest demographic economic re-location in Canada since the depression.
This is a bigger problem than all the fishery problems we have seen. This is a national economic disaster and no one is making it the number one issue in Ottawa.
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