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Subjects: GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS, MISCELLANEOUS, MISCELLANEOUS

Winner: Grand Chief Herb Norwegian awarded Glen Davis Conservation Leadership Prize


Fort Simpson, N.W.T., May 23, 2018 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- World Wildlife Fund Canada (WWF-Canada) and the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (CPAWS) are honoured to announce that unparalleled conservation leader Grand Chief Herb Norwegian, 66, of Dehcho First Nations is the winner of the 2018 $10,000 Glen Davis Conservation Leadership Prize. The award recognizes Grand Chief Norwegian's decades of work on the Dehcho Land Use Plan, which sets out a long-term plan to protect approximately 100,000 sq. km of critical boreal forests, wetlands and watersheds in accordance with Dene values.

About the prize

About winner Grand Chief Herb Norwegian

About Glen Davis

Grand Chief Herb Norwegian, Glen Davis Conservation Leadership Prize winner, says:

"Conserving our land is something that I've put my heart into right from day one when I got into public life. And I'm honoured to work for Mother Earth and my people. We hope that within the next year, the Dehcho will make a major contribution to protecting a good part of the Mackenzie Valley through our process. And we hope that it's a strong signal to the rest of Canada, and to the world, that First Nations have always been the driving force behind land protection."

Monte Hummel, president emeritus of WWF-Canada, says:

"Everyone talks about bringing together traditional knowledge with western science, but under Grand Chief Herb Norwegian's leadership the Dehcho have actually done that through their land-use plan, translating lived experience of the land into more than 50,000 digitalized data points. Grand Chief Norwegian is a Canadian visionary for nature and the Dehcho people, enduring delays for nearly 20 years from the Canadian government in his attempts to protect 50 per cent of the Dehcho First Nations territory. He is responsible for deploying conservation action on the ground at the scale of achievement that inspired the life of Glen Davis."

Éric Hébert-Daly, national executive director, CPAWS, says:

"Having worked closely with Grand Chief Norwegian over the last two decades on expanding and protecting Nahanni National Park Reserve, we've seen first-hand how effective he has been in articulating the vision of his nation. We are thrilled to recognize his past and ongoing leadership in conservation on behalf of his people and ultimately for the benefit of Canada and the world through his example."

About World Wildlife Fund Canada

WWF-Canada creates solutions to the environmental challenges that matter most for Canadians. We work in places that are unique and ecologically important, so that nature, wildlife and people thrive together. Because we are all wildlife. For more information, visit wwf.ca

About the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society

CPAWS is dedicated solely to the protection of Canada's public land, oceans and freshwater, and ensuring our parks are managed to protect nature. We work with all levels of government including indigenous decision-makers, as well as communities and industry to protect Canada's irreplaceable wilderness ? now and forever. cpaws.org

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