There will soon be no way for old-growth logging to go undetected in B.C. An online tracking system developed by an international environmental group goes live today. It will enable the public to monitor where old growth is being logged and is designed to hold the province accountable for promises to reform forestry, said project lead Angeline Robertson with Stand.earth. Forest Eye — an online mapping system and database — employs satellite imagery, remote sensing technology and government data to detect and alert users to logging and road-building in the most at-risk old-growth forests in the province, Robertson said. The mapped logging alerts will pinpoint old-growth logging two to four weeks after it begins. Most importantly, it will also determine if it occurred in areas considered for logging deferrals since 2020, she said. Site users can subscribe to get alerts or updates about activity in their areas of interest.