Media Contacts

Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship

Media Relations
GCPE.WLRSMedia@gov.bc.ca
250-419-8775

Backgrounders

Overview of conservation planning projects

Qat’muk:

  • The area known as Qat’muk, and as Le7 té scenc by the Shuswap Band, is of significant cultural importance to both Ktunaxa Nation and Shuswap Band. It’s located west of Invermere and north of Purcell Wilderness Conservancy Park.
  • Ktunaxa Nation has made significant efforts over three decades, in collaboration with local community and stakeholder groups, to conserve this area due to the habitat, biodiversity and cultural values it contains. The Shuswap Band also maintains enduring relationships with these lands and waters. Environment and Climate Change Canada has supported advancing these conservation interests.
  • A conservation planning process could recommend conserving 70,000 hectares to connect the Bugaboo and Purcell Mountain Protected Areas and provide protection for important habitat and cultural and recreational values.
  • If approved, a Qat’muk conservation area would support species at risk, healthy watersheds, grizzly bear habitat and stands of whitebark pine trees, and would improve ecological connectivity in the Purcell Mountains between existing parks and conservancy areas.
  • A three-year pause on applications for new mineral tenures was implemented on Monday, July 6, 2026, to support the conservation planning process and ensure that the area’s values are maintained, while this work is underway.
  • This pause does not restrict current mining tenure holders from normal, everyday operations in the proposed conservation area.

Skagit Headwaters:

  • A proposed Skagit Headwaters conservation area would cover about 5,800 hectares in a pocket of Crown land between E.C. Manning Provincial Park and Skagit Valley Provincial Park, about 15 kilometres north of the B.C.-Washington border.
  • Establishing a new conservation area would help protect ecologically and culturally significant lands within the Upper Skagit River watershed.
  • There are no existing tenures in this area.
  • There is an existing 2022 restriction on acquisition of mineral tenures.
  • This area has long been an area of environmental and cultural interest to First Nations and environmental groups.
  • From the perspective of First Nations in the region, this land is integral to their cultural identity and traditional practices.
  • This area also provides a source of clean water to the downstream watershed that includes provincial parks, transboundary U.S. tribes and Seattle’s hydroelectric supply.
  • The B.C. government and Sto:lo, Nlaka'pamux and Syilx Nations have established a collaborative, inclusive process to work on this project, with support from the federal government.

Raush Valley:

  • The Raush Valley planning area is a largely untouched landscape that contains approximately 51,000 hectares of highly biodiverse habitat.
  • It is located west of the Robson Valley between McBride and Valemount and east of Cariboo Mountains Park and Wells Gray Park, near the existing Upper Raush Protected Area.
  • The entire watershed is largely undeveloped and is mostly free of roads, cutblocks and other industrial disturbances.
  • It includes intact forests and wetlands from the valley bottom to higher elevations and supports a diverse range of wildlife habitats, old-growth trees and rare plants.
  • The area is home to grizzly bears, whitebark pine trees and southern mountain caribou.
  • The Raush Valley is also of significant cultural importance to Simpcw First Nation.