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British Columbia

B.C.'s Howe Sound designated a UNESCO biosphere region after years of lobbying

After nearly five years of campaigning, B.C.s Howe Sound has finally been designated a UNESCO biosphere, allowing stakeholders in the region to collaborate more effectively on sustainable development.

Designation will allow local authorities to collaborate more effectively on conservation and development

People climb up a rock face towards the first peak on the Stawamus Chief mountain above the waters of Howe Sound. After five years of campaigning, the region was designated a UNESCO biosphere region on Wednesday. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

After nearly five years of campaigning, B.C.'s Howe Sound has finally been designated a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization(UNESCO) biosphere, allowing stakeholders in the region to collaborate more effectively on sustainable development.

A UNESCO committee announced on Wednesday that the region would become Canada's 19th biosphere region and B.C.'s third, after Clayoquot Sound and Mount Arrowsmith on Vancouver Island.

Howe Sound, known as Atl'ka7tsem in the Squamish language, covers an area of 2,187 square kilometres northwest of Vancouver, surrounding the community of Squamish and extending west to the Sunshine Coast.

The area has seen significant industrial activity over the past two decades and is a biodiversity hotspot, featuring rare glass sponges throughout the watershed.

"We've seen a shift more towardtourism and recreation and many more people visiting the region," said Ruth Simons, who led the Howe Sound Biosphere Region Initiative Society.

"What will continue to happen going forward is an emphasis on ensuring that we are conserving and protecting our sensitive ecological areas and habitat so we don't suffer any more biodiversity loss."

The new designation does not impose any new rules on the region or its residents, but incentivizes collaboration to ensure further conservation, according to Simons.

Howe Sound has has seen significant industrial activity over the past two decades but is experiencing a shift toward more tourism and recreation. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

'Icing on the cake'

Howe Sound has seen industrial activities throughout its watershed, including logging activities that continue to this day.

Despite tourists flocking to the region in recent years, it is set to be the site of a major natural gas project, the Woodfibre LNG export facility. A statement on the project's website says it "supported" the biosphere initiative and would aim to be sustainable.

Industrial pollution in the region was once a major concern, but a report last year showed it had significantly decreased.

Simons says the reason it now qualifies as a UNESCO biosphere is because of the sustainable development work done by authorities around the region, including the Swxw7mesh nation and the District of Squamish.

"I think what this does is it sends a message to the authorities that people are behind us. [...] The existing aspirational goals we have are supported," she said.

One of the biggest aspects of that work, Simons says, was the discovery of the glass sponge reefs that are found throughout the region and were once thought to be extinct.

Diver Rebecca Barrett explores a glass sponge reef east of Gambier Island in Howe Sound. The glass sponge reefs in the Sound were once thought extinct. (Moonless Oasis/Perpetuum Films)

She hopes that the new designation will ensure the long-term support of federal bodiesand says that work must continue to ensure the region will remain a biosphere.

"We were told at the very beginning that this [designation] is like the icing on the cake. [...] We will really look forward to having a very, very cautious get-together very soon with a number of our supporters."

With files from Megan Stewart