Conservationists still waiting on years-overdue recovery plan for Quebec’s caribou
MONTREAL — Conservationists are urging the Quebec government to finally publish its plan to protect caribou habitat, several years after it first promised a strategy to save the dwindling herds.
The latest delays came last year, when the province’s Environment Department pushed back a scheduled June publication because of a record-setting wildfire season. The government said at the time it needed to consider the impact of the fires on the caribou — and on the logging industry, a lucrative sector that exploits the animals’ habitat.
The release of the plan was then tentatively scheduled for the end of 2023, but Environment Minister Benoît Charette confirmed to La Presse in a year-end interview that the deadline was again being pushed back, to “mid-January or thereabouts.” The government did not respond to a request for an update on when the strategy will be tabled.
The delays are a case of “history repeating itself,” says Henri Jacob, president of environmental advocacy group Action boreale. He said the Coalition Avenir Québec has promised a strategy to save the caribou since before it was elected in 2018. The protection plan was first supposed to have been presented in 2019, and has been delayed ever since, he said.