British Columbia

B.C. acquires land to expand 5 provincial parks

The province has acquired 109 hectares of land to be added to five provincial parks, enhancing protection of the province’s biodiversity.  

Province says move will enhance recreation opportunities, protect ecosystems

A canoe overlooking the lake and the mountains and hills in the horizon
Bowron Lake Park, near the border with Alberta, is known for its 116-kilometre canoe circuit. The park is one of five B.C. provincial parks set to increase in size after recent land acquisitions. (Raymond Desjardins )

The B.C. government is set to increase the size of five provincial parks in what it says is an effort to enhance recreational opportunities and improve ecosystem health across the province.  

In a media statement released Tuesday, the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy said the province has purchased a total of 109 hectares of land to expand the parks.

"Our government continually looks for opportunities to acquire more ecologically and culturally significant land for conservation purposes, and for people to enjoy," Environment Minister George Heyman said in the statement.

"Acquiring these lands enhances protection of important ecosystems and wildlife habitat and improves access to outdoor recreation experiences."

The acquisitions, worth about $1.9 million, were made with assistance from the B.C. Parks Foundation, according to the ministry.

The largest acquisition is a 64-hectare parcel of land that includes old-growth forest on Haida Gwaii, to be added to Naikoon Park. 

In B.C.'s Interior, more than 33 hectares of wetland and second-growth forest will be added to Wells Gray Park, and over eight hectares, including the popular potholes swimming area, will be added to Gladstone Park.

The remaining additions include three hectares of forested hillside in Bowron Lake Park, known for its famous canoe circuit, and 0.15 hectares added to Mount Pope Park near Fort St. James to connect a climbing area to a planned parking lot.

The province said it is consulting with First Nations governments before making decisions about legally establishing the lands as parks and protected areas.

B.C. has 1,039 provincial parks, recreation areas, conservancies, ecological reserves and protected areas covering more than 14 million hectares, or approximately 14.4 per cent of the land base.