Big River And Salmon Creek Forests
Our Role
In 2006, The Conservation Fund purchased 16,000 acres surrounding Big River and Salmon Creek and implemented sustainable forest management practices that include decreasing the intensity of harvests, increasing the time between harvests and widening riverfront buffers to improve water quality in streams impaired by erosion from a century of timber harvesting. These practices have improved water quality and habitat for coho salmon, steelhead trout and spotted owl.To make the acquisition happen, we developed an innovative funding partnership, attracting a $25 million loan from California’s State Revolving Fund (SRF), the largest loan of its kind in U.S. history. In addition, the Coastal Conservancy and Wildlife Conservation Board each gave grants of $7.25 million. The ACE Group and Centex—through the ACE Land Legacy Fund and the Centex Land Legacy Fund—provided private support; both are being used to support our top conservation priorities.
Big River and Salmon Creek forests are also generating income by trapping carbon dioxide (CO2), a greenhouse gas linked to climate change. Redwood forests store more carbon per acre than any other forest type. Sustainable forest management here can store up to 500,000 tons of CO2 annually. We were an early participant in the development of forest carbon projects verified and registered under the Climate Action Reserve and now transitioned to the California Air Resources Board Compliance Offset Protocol, U.S. Forest Projects. Our forests were among the first, and remain among the largest, producers of forest-based carbon offsets verified and registered under California’s pathbreaking fight against climate change. Carbon sales have provided significant additional support for the forests, enabling us to repay the loans we took out to protect the properties, defer harvests when log prices are low and accelerate restoration activities for fish and wildlife.
Why This Project Matters
We believe that working forests can be financially self-sustaining and environmentally healthy. We’re demonstrating a new way to sustainably manage these famed forests, as a nonprofit owner that uses both sound environmental strategy and sound economics. We work with our partners to skillfully manage both forest growth and harvest to ensure that these forests remain viable ecosystems for generations to come.Carbon Specifications
- Project Protocol can be found at https://www.arb.ca.gov/cc/capandtrade/offsets/offsets.htm
- Specific project details are available at https://www.climateactionreserve.org
SUSTAINABLE FORESTRY: HOW DOES IT WORK? WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS?
LEARN MORE
- Face Of This Place: Botanists At Our North Coast Forests
- North Coast Forest Conservation Initiative
- North Coast Forest Conservation Initiative Reference Documents
- Big River and Salmon Creek Integrative Resource Management Plan
Sustainable Forestry? How Does It Work?
Protecting and maintaining working forests, and the communities that depend on them, remains one of the Fund's top conservation priorities. Watch the video to learn why.{videobox}GbVK02P9xCo|Sustainable Forestry? How Does It Work?{/videobox}
Why Do Forests Matter?
At The Conservation Fund, we believe that well-managed forests can be both economically viable and ecologically sustainable, but like all other necessary parts of our national infrastructure, they need to be invested in and maintained. That's why, since 1985, we've protected more than a million forest acres across America. Protecting and maintaining working forests, and the communities that depend on them, remains one of our top conservation priorities.{videobox}V_--VB6rEQA|Why Do Forests Matter?{/videobox}