Calgary Herald

Lululemon founder, wife pledge $100M in mission to save B.C. wilderness

- ROBERT TUTTLE

Lululemon Athletica Inc. founder Chip Wilson is making his biggest philanthro­pic gift ever — and one of the largest among Canada's ultra-rich — to protect vast tracts of wilderness in the western part of the country.

Wilson and his wife Summer have pledged $100 million through their foundation to acquire wilderness space in British Columbia. The province is home to 5.3 million people and holds temperate rainforest­s, rocky coastlines, snowcapped mountains and even desert lands in an area larger than Germany and France combined.

The money will be used by the B.C. Parks Foundation to buy forests and repurchase mining, forestry and other resource licences, turning “massive amounts of land” into parks that Indigenous groups would manage and use for revenue-making purposes such as tourism, Wilson said in an interview.

“Our vision for our family is providing components for people to live a longer, healthier, and more fun life. So it all kind of fits,” said Wilson, 67, whose Us$5.8-billion fortune is derived primarily from his nine-per-cent stake in the athletic clothing company he started in Vancouver.

The Wilsons are hoping to encourage matching donations from government­s, businesses and other philanthro­pists to advance the B.C. Parks Foundation's goal of protecting 25 per cent of the province's land and water. But they're setting few conditions on spending the funds, which could happen “quite quickly,” said Wilson, Canada's 13th-wealthiest person according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

The province has long been a battlegrou­nd between environmen­talists and resource developers. At times, protests and violence have broken out over forestry projects and energy pipelines, including two that are under constructi­on, the Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion and the Coastal Gaslink line that will supply a liquefied natural gas plant on the coast.

Resource developmen­t doesn't have to live in contradict­ion with wilderness preservati­on, Wilson said. Canadian energy such as LNG could bring in billions of dollars that could be used to protect wildlife and nature.

“That would totally offset any kind of blemish” from the pipelines, he said.

The B.C. Parks Foundation has already earmarked some of the money to protect three areas, including the 528-acre Falling Creek Sanctuary in northeast B.C., Teit's Sanctuary at the confluence of the Thompson and Nicola rivers and Bourguiba Springs in the South Okanagan region. The group is also looking at other areas in the northern part of the province for protection.

“We've been lucky enough to travel the world and see how the impact of industrial approach has affected places that had previously been pristine,” Summer Wilson said. “I want to make sure that we preserve this province to the same level of beauty that awed me when I first came here.”

Chip Wilson founded Lululemon more than two decades ago but fell out with the company and clashed with then-chief executive Christine Day.

The Wilsons have also given millions to build schools in Ethiopia and to seek a cure for muscular dystrophy, a disease that afflicts Chip Wilson.

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Chip Wilson

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