Stop The Wildlife Slaughter On Canada’s Rail Lines
Final signature count: 676
676 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site
Wildlife across British Columbia is dying in predictable, preventable rail collisions, yet CN refuses to release full data or take basic safety steps that could save lives.
Wildlife deaths along rail corridors in British Columbia occur out of sight, but the scale of these losses is far greater than the public ever hears. Scientists warn that collisions between trains and wildlife form a widespread, underreported conservation threat that governments and railway companies have failed to address1. Without accurate data or transparent reporting, communities cannot understand how many animals are dying or where the highest-risk areas exist.
Animals die on predictable stretches of track year after year. Grizzlies, elk, moose, deer, and many smaller species are struck in known hotspots where trains pass at high speeds and attractants like spilled grain draw wildlife toward the tracks2. These patterns are well documented by observers on the ground, yet the full record remains obscured because rail operators are not required to disclose collision data. The absence of mandatory reporting keeps the public from seeing the reality.
Predictable Hotspots Demand Action
Across western Canada, repeat deaths occur in the same bends, straightaways, and feeding corridors. Studies show that simple mitigation can save lives: reduced speeds in hotspot zones, removal of grain along tracks, targeted fencing, and warning systems that alert wildlife to approaching trains1. These solutions have worked in other regions. Where they are implemented, wildlife mortality drops.
Globally, the pattern is the same. Endangered Asian elephants in India die along rail lines that cut directly through their forest routes3. Amphibians in Europe face deadly crossings during seasonal migrations4. Desert tortoises in fragile U.S. ecosystems are struck during movements in search of food and water5. In every case, the danger is predictable, and preventable steps exist.
CN Must Acknowledge the Crisis
Canadian National Railway (CN) operates in landscapes rich with wildlife and has the ability to change this trajectory. Transparent collision data, lower speeds in known hotspots, and restored warning systems would make a measurable difference. Communities, scientists, and Indigenous nations are calling for honesty and responsibility from the companies whose infrastructure shapes these habitats. Without clear data, stakeholders cannot respond, and preventable losses continue unchecked.
These animals are part of Canada’s ecological heritage and cultural identity. Treating their lives with respect requires compassion and accountability from those with the power to act. CN must acknowledge the gravity of these deaths and adopt measures that reflect a commitment to coexistence.
Sign the petition urging CN to implement stronger protections, provide transparent data, and take meaningful action to prevent further wildlife deaths.
