BC pursues wood markets in India as diplomacy takes a back seat to trade

The Tree Frog Forestry News
January 12, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

BC pursues wood markets in India as diplomacy takes a back seat to trade. In related news: investors poke around the soon-to-be-closed Crofton pulp mill; while Arcadia Paper Mills plans to open a new mill in St. Helens, Oregon. In other news: in a challenge to the US central bank’s independence over interest rates, the US Administration launched a criminal investigation of federal chair Jerome Powellroiling markets amid push back. Meanwhile: lumber futures rebounded; US housing starts fell; and custom home building ticked up.

In Forestry news: an Indigenous law firm on how the BC and New Brunswick Aboriginal title decisions compare; Vaughn Palmer writes of BC’s recent forestry court case loss to a First Nation; and UNBC’s Phil Burton’s new book on forestry in the face of uncertainty. Meanwhile: police seek stolen logging equipment in Prince George; Resource Works is angry about the logging equipment fire on Vancouver Island; a self-described forest watchdog alleges illegal logging; a report on the lessons learned from BC’s 2025 wildfire season; and California strengthens its wildfire response approach.

Finally, what the US withdrawal from UN bodies could mean for climate and trade.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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