50 million tree program

Ontario government cancels program to plant 50 million trees

A healthy amount of trees is considered superfluous, it seems, under Ontario Premier Doug Ford's new cost-cutting regime.

The Canadian Press reported Thursday morning that Ford's PC government has cancelled a tree planting program that would have seen some 50 million new trees planted across Ontario by 2025.

Fitting titled the "50 Million Tree Program," the initiative started in 2008 with an annual budget of roughly $4.7 million. More than 27 million trees have already been planted as a result but, sadly for the health of our forests, the program's funding has been pulled.

Forests Ontario CEO Rob Keen said he was told the by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry that the program was being eliminated as a way to cut costs following the announcement of 2019's contentious provincial budget.

"Premier (Doug) Ford wants to reduce the deficit and this was... something they thought was expendable," Keen said to the Canadian Press.

"We certainly recognize that with climate change coming it's going to be more important than ever to have healthy, contiguous, large forests to be able to mitigate climate change and certainly adapt to climate change."

Keen says that 40 per cent forest cover is needed in Ontario "to ensure forest sustainability." Right now, we're sitting at an average of 26 per cent with some areas showing numbers as low as five per cent forest cover.

Lead photo by

Hector Vasquez


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

Disturbing video shows Toronto car theft suspect slam into cop and send him flying

Toronto's new park with fake beach and lookout tower to open this summer

People are losing it over driver that lodged their truck under a bridge in downtown Toronto

Several species of lobster-like creatures spreading and causing havoc across Ontario

Ontario is the least satisfied with life out of every Canadian province and it's getting worse

All the ways Canadians will get more money from the government this summer

Toronto news headlines from 1881 are just as weird as today's

Long-closed Toronto park with hidden waterfall won't fully reopen until at least 2026