Winnipegger wins environmental award
Last Updated: Wednesday, October 14, 2009 | 4:03 PM CT
CBC News
Related
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
Robin Bryan attends an environmental rally against logging in February. (Submitted by Robin Bryan)A Winnipeg forest activist has won North America's top environmental prize for youth.
Robin Bryan, 21, is among the six recipients of the 2009 Brower Youth Award for his effort to protect nearly one million acres of boreal forest in Manitoba from industrial logging.
A student at the University of Winnipeg, Bryan has fought for years to put an end to industrial logging activity within the boundaries of provincial parks in Manitoba.
A news release from the California-based Earth Island Institute, which hosts the Brower Youth Awards, notes that while attending classes full time, Bryan organized rallies, spoke with elected officials, delivered classroom presentations about the issue, raised funds, and organized volunteers.
Originally from the hamlet of Prawda, about 95 kilometres southeast of Winnipeg, Bryan's home community is close to the world's largest single-land storehouse of carbon and most abundant source of fresh water — the boreal forest of the East Shore Wilderness Area in Manitoba and Ontario.
As a young activist canvassing with the Wilderness Committee — Canada's largest membership-based, citizen-funded wilderness protection group — Bryan said he began to realize how much is at stake, locally and globally, if the ecology of the province isn't protected in large sections.
'If I didn't begin to dream big, act fast, and lead by example, I felt that I would have to sit back and watch a historic opportunity to stand up for public lands and protect the second-largest wild area in the biosphere pass me by.'— environmentalist Robin Bryan
"I also began to realize just how unregulated and destructive industrial logging and mining have been in Manitoba," he said.
"If I didn't begin to dream big, act fast, and lead by example, I felt that I would have to sit back and watch a historic opportunity to stand up for public lands and protect the second-largest wild area in the biosphere pass me by."
In 2008, Bryan was rewarded for his efforts when the provincial government announced in its legislative throne speech that it was banning logging in four of the five parks that had logging operations.
Bryan is now campaigning for the protection of the East Shore Wilderness Area, encompassing more than 250,000 square kilometres of Ontario and Manitoba.
Bryan will join five other environmental leaders under the age of 23 in receiving the Brower Youth Award and a $3,000 US cash prize for their achievements, while being recognized at a gala celebration in San Francisco on Oct. 20.
The six winners were chosen from more than 125 applicants whose work ranged from food justice to deforestation, global warming to pollution, according to Earth Island Institute.
The winners were chosen by 13 judges who are leaders in business, journalism and the nonprofit sector, including Josh Dorfman of The Sundance Channel's Lazy Environmentalist, Judith Helfand, director of the global warming film, Everything's Cool, and Philippe Cousteau, CEO of EarthEcho International and grandson of Jacques Cousteau.
Share Tools
Latest Manitoba News Headlines
- Missing boater may have struck reef, police say
- A boater who has been missing since Tuesday may have struck a reef, police say, adding a search for the man is continuing. more »
- Crime spree ends with 46 break-in charges
- Police in Winnipeg think they have caught the person behind a string of early-morning break-ins, where a vehicle was used to smash into businesses. more »
- RCMP to close labs in Halifax, Winnipeg, Regina
- The RCMP is closing forensic laboratories in Halifax, Winnipeg and Regina and consolidating them with three others in a move the force says will lead to faster, more efficient service. more »
- Winnipeg's Union Station to get facelift
- The 100-year-old Union Station in Winnipeg is set to get a $6.5 million facelift. more »
Top News Headlines
- Attack on Syrian villages deadliest yet, activists say
- More than 90 people have been killed by regime forces in a district of central Syria, activists say, and as many as half the victims may have been children. more »
- Aylmer triple stabbing leads to first-degree murder charges

- The estranged partner of a young mother who was stabbed to death along with her parents at their home in Aylmer, Que., has been charged with first-degree murder Friday. more »
- Tornado touchdown confirmed near Montreal
- Trees were uprooted, roofs damaged and windows shattered as severe thunderstorms, and possibly a tornado, rattled through southwestern Quebec Friday night. more »
- The risks and responsibilities of taking on Mt. Everest

- The deaths of six climbers last weekend on Mt. Everest, with more summits underway this weekend, fuels the debate about the risks and responsibilities of high altitude climbing. more »
- Winnipeg WWE wrestler Chris Jericho suspended after flag incident
- Crime spree ends with 46 break-in charges
- Missing boater may have struck reef, police say
- Outhouse bear attack survivor was grabbed from 'throne'
- First-time homebuyers find frustration in Winnipeg
- Winnipeg's Union Station to get facelift
- Kelvin High School celebrates 100 years
- RCMP to close labs in Halifax, Winnipeg, Regina
- MPI asked to cover tab for officers' overtime

