Tongass National Forest

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KEY FACTS
  • Size: 16.8 million acres – America's largest national forest, larger than West Virginia.
  • Protection History: Created in 1907 via presidential proclamation by President Theodore Roosevelt. In 1908, the Tongass was combined with the Alexander Archipelago Forest Reserve. Additional proclamations were made in 1909 and 1925, bringing the Tongass to its current size.
  • Most Recent Development: Roadless Rule Exemption Review Process. As of September 2018, the U.S. Forest Service is evaluating a state-specific Roadless Rule as requested by the State of Alaska.
  • Threats: A Roadless Rule rollback and/or exemption for the Tongass could re-start wide scale clearcutting of old-growth logging. Additionally, land transfers to private corporations could fragment the forest even further.
  • Climate Change: When old-growth rainforests like the Tongass are cut down, they release up to two-thirds of their stored carbon to the atmosphere.
  • Wildlife: The Tongass is home to five species of Pacific Salmon, humpback and orca whales, otters, beavers, wolves, deer, plus some of the largest concentrations of brown bears and bald eagles in America.

At 16.8 million acres, the Tongass National Forest is America’s largest national forest, encompassing the majority of the southeast Alaska panhandle. Each year more than 1 million people come to experience glaciers flowing from the mountains into the sea and iconic wildlife that thrives in one of the largest remaining temperate rainforests in the world.

Alaska’s national forests were protected under the 2001 Roadless Rule expressly because forested wildlands persist in Alaska on a scale unknown elsewhere in the country. In addition to harboring great natural beauty and iconic wildlife, scientists believe that retaining the intact roadless areas of the Tongass is a “key element” in sustaining the region’s extraordinary salmon runs (and its commercial, subsistence and recreational fisheries). Unfortunately, through legislation and regulatory rollbacks, the Alaska delegation and the current administration are attempting to exempt the Tongass from roadless protections.

Now the Trump administration is attempting to gut protections for the entire Tongass through an Alaska state-specific Roadless Rule. After a meeting between President Trump and Alaska Governor Dunleavy, the Secretary of Agriculture identified a preferred alternative in the draft Environmental Impact Statement for the rulemaking process which would exempt the entire state of Alaska from the Roadless Rule. This would open more than 9 million acres of roadless areas to roadbuilding activities and clear-cut logging of old-growth forest. In November, the House Natural Resources Committee held an oversight hearing focused on the impacts that removing roadless protections in the Tongass would have. Please see below for relevant legislation, talking points, fact sheets and more on what we're doing to defend the Tongass National Forest.

Fact Sheets | Congressional Letters | Public Letters | Maps | Research & Reports


Recent Legislative Activity


Talking Points

  • Opening up the Tongass National Forest roadless areas to road building and logging threatens the abundant wildlife and beautiful scenery essential to the tourism and fishing industries in Southeast Alaska, each of which contributes approximately $1 billion dollars to the region’s economy each year.
  • The Roadless Rule is the result of one of the most extensive public processes in U.S. history – more than 1.6 million people submitted comments on the rule, and 95% of those commented favorably on roadless protections.
  • As part of the world's largest temperate rainforest, the Tongass stores a huge percent of the world's carbon8 percent of all forests in the Lower 48 combined. In total, the Tongass stores an estimated 1.5 billion metric tons of carbon and sequesters an additional 10 million metric tons annually. It makes no sense to subsidize the clearcutting of the United States' largest carbon sink at a time when the world and American communities are increasingly suffering from climate change impacts. When it comes to battling climate change, the Tongass National Forest is a life raft.
  • The Roadless Rule rollback will ultimately cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. In total, the US Forest Service has lost approximately $600 million over the last twenty years or $30 million per year on average. Moreover, the USFS could end up losing more than $180 million in the Tongass over the next four years.

Fact Sheets

Congressional Letters

Public Letters

Maps

Research & Reports