Forestnet Media Podcast

Stanley Park’s Looper Moth Crisis: The Other Side of the Story

47 min · 26. jan. 2026
episode Stanley Park’s Looper Moth Crisis: The Other Side of the Story cover

Beskrivelse

This episode explains how wildfire risk in British Columbia is shaped by both climate trends and a century of fire suppression, and what that means for urban forests, hazard abatement and provincial policy. In conversation with Bruce Blackwell, M.Sc [http://M.Sc]., R.P.F., R.P.Bio [http://R.P.Bio]., Principal of Blackwell Consulting Ltd., we cover frontline experience from the Stanley Park hemlock looper response to municipal wildfire mitigation and watershed risk work. You’ll hear practical, sector‑relevant analysis on tools and constraints: when thinning or prescribed burning is appropriate, the economics and technology gaps for recovering small‑diameter biomass, how conservation reserves can still require active mitigation, and why provincial policy (stumpage, AAC assumptions and regulatory design) matters for competitiveness and long‑term resilience.

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episode Stanley Park’s Looper Moth Crisis: The Other Side of the Story cover

Stanley Park’s Looper Moth Crisis: The Other Side of the Story

This episode explains how wildfire risk in British Columbia is shaped by both climate trends and a century of fire suppression, and what that means for urban forests, hazard abatement and provincial policy. In conversation with Bruce Blackwell, M.Sc [http://M.Sc]., R.P.F., R.P.Bio [http://R.P.Bio]., Principal of Blackwell Consulting Ltd., we cover frontline experience from the Stanley Park hemlock looper response to municipal wildfire mitigation and watershed risk work. You’ll hear practical, sector‑relevant analysis on tools and constraints: when thinning or prescribed burning is appropriate, the economics and technology gaps for recovering small‑diameter biomass, how conservation reserves can still require active mitigation, and why provincial policy (stumpage, AAC assumptions and regulatory design) matters for competitiveness and long‑term resilience.

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