Garcia River Forest
First Large Nonprofit-Owned Working Forest
To help protect and restore these lands, in 2004 the Fund acquired the 23,780-acre Garcia River Forest, the centerpiece of one of the largest river systems on California’s north coast. As a nonprofit owner, we are protecting Garcia from conversion to vineyards or second-home development. By managing Garcia as a sustainable forest, we are able to rebuild commercial timber inventories that would support the local economy and, at the same time, help repay loans taken to acquire in the property, upgrade roads and restore stream conditions for rare and threatened species.The Nature Conservancy owns a conservation easement on the property, ensuring protection regardless of ownership. Nature Conservancy scientists helped develop the forest’s management plan, conduct forest-carbon research and monitor biodiversity conservation on the property. Keeping the land in production will generate revenue to support ongoing forest and stream restoration work and preserve jobs within the community.
But these towering stands of trees are doing even more—they are also trapping carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas linked to climate change. Redwood forests store more carbon per acre than any other forest type. Sustainable forest management of Garcia River enables the storage of more than 77,000 tons of carbon emissions annually.
In February 2008, Garcia became one of the first forests—and the largest—to receive verification as a source of greenhouse gas reductions under the protocols of the Climate Action Reserve, adopted by the California Air Resources Board in 2007. Transitioned to the California Air Resources Board Compliance Offset Protocol, U.S. Forest Projects in 2015. Garcia now provides some of the most reliable and valid carbon credits in the country to private companies and public organizations seeking to offset their greenhouse gas emissions. Carbon finance also provides significant additional support for forestry and restoration activities on the property.
Why This Project Matters
With the purchase of Garcia River Forest, the Fund pioneered a new approach to land conservation that balances environmental restoration and stewardship with the economic imperatives of ownership and the desire to sustain the local timber economy, the lifeblood of this region. We have demonstrated that large, understocked tracts of coastal forest can be returned to ecological and economic viability through patient, adaptive management by a non-profit organization, in partnership with private and public entities and community stakeholders. Our success at Garcia has led to additional projects, totaling more than 70,000 acres of forest owned and managed on the North Coast. Learn more about our North Coast Forest Conservation Initiative.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?
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.LEARN MORE
- The Nature Conservancy
- State of California Coastal Conservancy
- California Wildlife Conservation Board
- NPR News: “Scientists Turn Trees into Carbon Banks
- CNBC.com: "Certified Forest Products: A Great Choice for the Environment"
- Living On Earth: “Forest Salvation”
- Face Of This Place: Chris Kelly
- Download Project Description
- Go Zero®
- North Coast Forest Conservation Initiative Reference Documents
- Garcia River Forest Integrative Resource Management Plan