Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

Canadian Forest Owners and Researchers at McGill University Launch First National Survey of Private Forests in Over 20 Years

By Sandra Bishop
Canadian Forest Owners
June 22, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON—Researchers at McGill University, in partnership with Canadian Forest Owners (CFO) and with support from MITACS Canada, are launching the first national survey of Canadian private forest owners in more than two decades. The survey aims to build a stronger evidence base to help governments better understand the role private forests play in Canada’s economy, environment and communities. The findings are expected to inform policy development and improve decision-making. CFO and McGill University researchers are working together to advance a national approach to private forest data. The project will gather information on forest area, condition and production potential, as well as insight into who owns and manages these lands, their objectives and their long-term stewardship plans. …Private forests are often managed over multiple generations, offering continuity of stewardship, patient capital and a long-term perspective. …The survey is intended to help close that information gap and improve understanding of Canada’s private forest sector.

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Business & Politics

Company sues B.C., says it was stripped of mining rights for First Nation deal

By Gordon Hoekstra
The Vancouver Sun
June 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

A Toronto company is suing BC, saying it was stripped of its mining rights as part of a deal with the Gitxaała Nation. In a lawsuit filed in BC Supreme Court, MCC Canadian Gold Ventures says it was asked to rescue a small gold mine on Banks Island, south of Prince Rupert. But then the BC government stripped its mining rights to offset some of the impacts of another BC Supreme Court ruling involving the Gitxaała. The company says it invested millions in the property and now cannot move ahead on the project. …The province has not filed a response. …MCC said their case has “striking” parallels to a lawsuit launched by Carrier Lumber in the 1990s. In 2002, the province paid a large settlement to Carrier Lumber over a lawsuit it won over government decisions the company said made it impossible to harvest timber in the BC Interior.

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First trilateral CUSMA review meeting set for July 1

By Jeremie Charron
CTV News
June 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, International

Canadian officials will meet their Mexican and American counterparts on July 1 for the first tri-lateral meeting to review the Canada-U.S.-Mexico (CUSMA) agreement, a spokesperson for Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc confirmed. …LeBlanc’s office tells CTV News the meeting is scheduled to be virtual for now, but that things could evolve. Minister LeBlanc and Chief Trade Negotiator Janice Charette met with the United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on the sidelines of the G7 summit in France last week. …July 1 is the deadline for all three parties involved in the trade pact to decide whether to renew the deal for another 16 years, withdraw from the agreement altogether, or start an annual rolling review process that could last years.

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Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force Report: What Will it Mean for the Building Materials Industry

Supply-Build Canada
June 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

The Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force report, Canada’s Transformed Forest Sector: Competitive Resilient Relevant, provides the government of Canada with a “playbook” to restore the competitiveness of Canada’s forest sector and strengthen its contribution to the national economy. How the Report Outlines the Current Situation of the Forestry Sector: The report assesses Canada’s forestry sector as declining in competitiveness. Despite possessing nearly 9% of the world’s forests Canada has experienced a reduction in lumber and pulp production over the past two decades, shrinking employment, mill closures, and reduced investment. For example, in Canada, between 2022 and February 2026, 23 sawmills closed, and more than 70 others have announced temporary curtailments. Softwood lumber production has fallen 42% since 2004. The report identifies several contributing factors to this reduction which includes U.S. duties and tariffs on softwood lumber, transportation and harvesting costs, regulatory complexities, and uncertainty surrounding long-term access to timber supply.

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Stop Panicking about CUSMA. Canada’s Trade Future Isn’t as Dire as It Looks

By Carmine Starnino and Pascal Chan
The Walrus Magazine
June 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

A disturbing effect of the Trump era is how the most routine bureaucratic exercises become freighted with existential panic. …Despite having negotiated it himself, Donald Trump has attacked the CUSMA deal relentlessly. …The drumbeat of reporting over the coming sit-down with US officials might have you believing we are headed for gladiatorial combat, and not besuited teams working out the fine print of customs classifications and supply chain logistics. In this world, Pascal Chan, who helps lead the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, has emerged as a kind of trade whisperer. …Pascal Chan: There’s concern that if we don’t get to a renewal right now, everything falls apart. That’s not the case. We just go then into an annual review cycle every year. Sure, if we can hit a renewal now, that’s great. It extends the duration of the agreement. But the practical effect of a failed renewal is more uncertainty, not instant collapse. 

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Trump says US would do better without USMCA trade agreement

By Steve Holland and David Shepardson
Reuters
June 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

PARIS — US President Trump on Wednesday said that the United States would do better without the US-Mexico-Canada ​Agreement on trade and that he would prefer not to have a new ‌one, but added that he was open to doing it. “I would rather not have the agreement, but I may sign it,” Trump said in France. “We do better as a country if we don’t have ​an agreement.” …The US Trade ​Representative’s Office is holding talks with Mexico this week in Washington focused on agriculture and “a ​level playing field,” with a third set of talks in Mexico City scheduled for the week of July 20. Agricultural groups are urging Trump to extend USMCA for another 16 years with duty-free farm products, strengthened ​provisions for genetically modified corn and ethanol access in Mexico and improved access to Canada’s ​largely closed dairy market. Automakers are also pressing for an extension.

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B.C. trade falls back in April amid U.S. tariffs, construction slowdown

By Bryan Yu, chief economist, Central 1
Victoria Times Colonist
June 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

A volatile trade picture in B.C. continued into April as goods exports fell four per cent month-to-month (unadjusted for seasonality) to $4.5 billion, while imports fell by a more rapid clip of 14 per cent to $6.2 billion. That said, exports were still up significantly year-over-year by 6.7 per cent, while imports rose a more modest 2.1 per cent. …Current year-over-year growth has been driven primarily by energy products, which rose 9.7 per cent (+$128 million), along with metal ores and non-metallic minerals… In contrast, the beleaguered forestry sector declined nine per cent (-$81 million) to $823 million, although April marked the highest monthly export value for the sector in nine months. Forestry continues to face headwinds from elevated U.S. softwood lumber duties, broader trade measures (including Section 232 tariffs), timber supply constraints and softer demand conditions. Year-to-date … forestry exports fell 24.8 per cent (-$1 billion)… In B.C., building permit activity receded sharply in April…

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Premier’s mission supports good-paying jobs, new opportunities for people in B.C.

By Office of the Premier
Government of British Columbia
June 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

As part of ongoing work to diversify trade, Premier David Eby is leading a trade mission to China to strengthen commercial ties with the province’s second-largest trading partner and explore new opportunities to support good-paying jobs for people in British Columbia’s forestry, energy, tourism and agriculture sectors. … “China is the world’s second-largest economy and is our second-largest export market for B.C. goods and services. Encouraging tourism while selling more B.C. wood, agricultural products and energy will mean more money for families and more money to pay for the services British Columbians deserve,” said Premier Eby. …British Columbia and China share a longstanding partnership with collaboration across a range of areas from sustainable forest management to wood construction innovation and clean energy.

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Seaspan completes sale of chip and hog barge division

Seaspan
June 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Seaspan Marine finalized the sale of its legacy wood chip, hog fuel, chemical and railcar barging operations to Hodder Tugboat Co. Ltd., of Richmond, Friday. The sale is inclusive of customer contracts and key assets such as tugboats and barges. It is expected that current customers will remain unaffected by the sale. Hodder has also assumed the use of many tie-ups leased from the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority. “Hodder has a strong track record and shared union representation with our mariners — I am confident they are the right long-term owner of this division,” Jordan Pechie, President of Seaspan Marine Transportation, said. “As Seaspan moves forward, our focus remains on safe, reliable operations and consistent service.” Seaspan Marine’s reputation as a reliable partner in a competitive marketplace remains central to its operations going forward. …Hodder Tugboat Co. Ltd. maintains a modern fleet and team of experienced marine professionals committed to safety, reliability and customer service. 

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CN Rail fined $435,000 for wildfire near Spences Bridge

By Ben Bulmer
iNFO News
June 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

CN Rail has been fined $435,000, having been found responsible for causing a wildfire near Spences Bridge a year after the nearby town of Lytton was devastated by a catastrophic wildfire. According to a June 17 BC Forest Appeals Commission decision, CN Rail was found to have caused a wildfire that burned outside of Spencers Bridge in September 2022. Last year, the BC government issued a $435,371 fine to the company. Broken down, the fine covered $60,000 for damaged or destroyed mature Crown timber, $27,000 for damaging or destroying forest and grassland resources, and a further $348,000 to cover the cost of controlling wildfire K72249. “During their investigations, Natural Resource Officer Service staff collected field information and photographs and obtained recorded statements from several eyewitnesses. As a result of their investigation, the Natural Resource Officer Service alleged that CN Rail had contravened… BC Wildfire Regulation(s),” the decision reads.

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Forestry Innovation Investment 2025/26 Year in Review

BC Forestry Innovation Investment
June 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Forestry Innovation Investment’s 2025/26 Year in Review is now available. It is a compilation of market development activities completed by FII and our many industry, association, government, academic and research partners over the past year. We are committed to a collaborative delivery approach, building on the strengths and shared resources that other organizations bring to this important work. The forest sector continues to face challenging market conditions and ongoing trade uncertainty. As we adapt to these pressures, diversification remains central to strengthening the sector. By expanding markets and making the most of B.C.’s forest resources, FII and its partners are supporting long-term resilience. This includes advancing wood use in B.C., supporting growth in mass timber and prefabricated construction, and pursuing opportunities across international markets. The report includes the range of work underway, and the milestones achieved over the past year. 

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Nova Scotia government, Pictou Landing First Nation consider alternative site for Boat Harbour sludge

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
June 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Fred Tilley

The Nova Scotia government and Pictou Landing First Nation are in talks about an alternative site to store contaminated sludge removed from Boat Harbour as part of the cleanup process of the former tidal estuary that for decades was used as the treatment site for a nearby pulp mill. Fred Tilley, the minister responsible is providing few details about the location in question. …The cleanup of Boat Harbour since the closure of the Northern Pulp mill in 2020 has been delayed for years due to a variety of factors, including what to do with the sludge after it’s removed. Although the province has federal approval to expand an existing on-site hazardous waste containment facility, that approval included a condition that they explore alternative sites with the First Nation. …Chief Tamara Young said it would be preferable for the sludge to be stored at the site of the former mill at Abercrombie Point.

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Cascades invests $15M to increase tissue paper production in Quebec

Cascades Inc.
June 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades announced the installation of a state-of-the-art tissue converting line at its Granby, Quebec facility. This equipment will increase the site’s production capacity while enhancing product quality. The installation of the new equipment, a $15 M investment, will take place over a period of 9 months. This builds on a $14 M investment made in recent years, for a total investment of $29 M. …The installation of this equipment will help secure the 239 well-paying jobs at the plant, thereby directly contributing to the economic vitality of the Haute‑Yamaska region. …”The installation of this new modern line is fully in line with our long-term growth strategy,” said Hugues Simon, President and CEO.

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Finance & Economics

Canadian investment in building construction increased 2.3% in April

Statistics Canada
June 22, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The total value of investment in building construction increased $540.8 million (+2.3%) to $23.6 billion in April. The residential sector rose 3.1%, while the non-residential sector edged up 0.7%. Year over year, investment in building construction grew 7.8% in April. …Investment in residential building construction increased $491.9 million to $16.5 billion. Both the multi-unit component (+4.0%) and the single-family component (+2.0%) contributed to the increase. …Investment in single-family home construction rose $153.1 million to $7.7 billion in April. Growth in Quebec (+$136.0 million) and Ontario (+$83.8 million) was moderated by broad declines across seven provinces and one territory, led by British Columbia (-$23.1 million).

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Canada’s annual inflation rate surges to a 29-month high of 3.2% in May

By Promit Mukherjee
Reuters in Yahoo! Finance
June 22, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — Canada’s annual inflation rate in May accelerated more than expected to 3.2%, a 29-month high, data showed on Monday, as the impact of ‌higher crude oil prices due to the Iran conflict continued to filter through gasoline ‌costs. Analysts polled by Reuters had estimated the annual inflation rate to touch 3% in May, up from 2.8% in April. The ​prices, however, are already showing a major reversal in June after an interim peace deal was signed between the United States and Iran last week, which, analysts have said, could help ease the headline number in June. Statistics Canada said excluding the impact of gasoline prices, the consumer price index still posted ‌a higher increase of 2.2% in ⁠May from 2% in April. The monthly inflation rate rose to 1% in May, exceeding expectations ⁠of 0.8% rise. This is the highest monthly rise in 15 months.

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Lumber Futures Rise to 8-Month High

Trading Economics
June 19, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber climbed past $630 per thousand board feet, the highest level since October, amid higher effective US import costs on Canadian softwood and tighter expected supply. Prices rose despite a small reduction in preliminary antidumping and countervailing duties, because the combined tariff burden remains high at about 35.9% including the existing Section 232 levy, set to take effect in August. The market is also being driven by uncertainty ahead of final duty decisions, prompting buyers to accelerate purchases and lift near-term demand. At the same time, US domestic production is still constrained, while housing-related consumption remains structurally large, with softwood lumber and engineered wood products heavily used in new construction. Each new home requires roughly 15,000 board feet of lumber plus extensive engineered wood products, keeping baseline consumption elevated even in a softer housing cycle. [END]

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Exhibit floor at Mass Timber+ 2026 is almost sold out!

Mass Timber+
June 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, United States

Mass Timber+ is bringing together top architects, engineers, contractors, owners, developers, and manufacturers from the integrated offsite construction industry for the purpose of creating a beneficial platform for education, innovation, networking, and policy discussions. This is your chance to put your company in front of North America’s most influential architects, developers, contractors, as well as mass timber producers, driving the future of modular and mass timber construction.

Why exhibit: Two days standing directly in front of architects, engineers, developers and contractors — as well as the producers and innovators defining where the industry goes next.

Mass Timber+ 2026 is on the East Coast – and so is the action! The East Coast is booming! Woodworks says 51% of current projects in design are on the East Coast, compared to just 22% on the West Coast. We have 60+ exhibitors and innovators: click here to see who’s already signed up. Email us today at lkelly@getfea.com to secure a booth before they sell out.

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Behold Vancouver’s New Earthquake-Proof Highrise

By Emily Latimer
Maclean’s Magazine
June 23, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver sits directly on the Cascadia Subduction Zone, a 1,000-kilometre fault line that runs from Northern California to Vancouver Island, and there’s a 37 per cent chance that the catastrophic earthquake known as the Big One will hit the region in the next 50 years. The city updated its building code in 2024, but many of Vancouver’s mid-century concrete highrises are still seismically vulnerable. Not the Hive. The new mass-timber office building in Vancouver’s False Creek Flats neighbourhood, designed by the architecture firm Dialog, has a distinctive honeycomb-style exoskeleton fitted with seismic dampers. …The team extensively tested the reimagined design to meet a strict safety standard, including full-scale seismic simulations at the University of Alberta. Researchers were especially focused on ensuring the connections between the timber beams and columns held up after an earthquake. The Hive passed with nary a tremble.

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BC Institute of Technology announces Breena Jackson as Interim Associate Dean, Industrial Construction

By Giselle LaCounte
British Columbia Institute of Technology
June 16, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Breena Jackson

The British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) is pleased to announce the appointment of Breena Jackson as Interim Associate Dean, Industrial Construction, in the School of Construction and the Environment. Breena begins her one-year interim role on July 6, 2026. Breena brings a strong combination of teaching experience, industry expertise, and a deep connection to applied trades education at BCIT. A member of the BCIT community since 2016, she has taught in the Cabinetmaking program and supported students through hands-on learning that reflects the realities of industry. …In addition to her teaching role, Breena has contributed to BCIT’s work in sustainable construction as a Mass Timber Project Manager. …BCIT also extends its sincere thanks to David Dunn for his leadership during this transition period and for his continued support of the School of Construction and the Environment.

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Forestry

Syilx Okanagan file emergency order for Canada to save southern B.C. caribou

By Evert Lindquist
Victoria News
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Syilx Okanagan Nation is petitioning the federal government to act swiftly to protect a prized and threatened caribou species that continues to fall off the map near Revelstoke and Nakusp. On May 28, the Nation announced it had filed for an emergency order under Section 80 of Canada’s Species at Risk Act to press Environment and Climate Change Canada to conserve federally threatened southern mountain caribou. The Nation says continued logging of critical old-growth habitat falls out of line with its forestry principles and standards, and jeopardizes the future of the three caribou herds that remain on Syilx territory. The Frisby-Boulder herd west of Revelstoke is already functionally extinct with just eight caribou, while the Central Selkirk herd … sits at around 27 caribou. The Columbia North herd, roughly 185 caribou strong in the Monashee Mountains north of Revelstoke, has the greatest likelihood of survival, though the Nation says long-term forest habitat recovery remains a challenge.

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Province establishes new compliance, enforcement agency for natural-resource sector

By Ministry of Environment and Parks
Government of British Columbia
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Province is creating a unified agency to bring together several compliance and enforcement functions from across the natural-resource sector, enhancing environmental protections and supporting a more fair and predictable business environment.  The BC Compliance and Enforcement Agency (BC-CEA) will take effect Wednesday, July 1, 2026. By consolidating several enforcement functions from natural-resource ministries, the change will improve consistency and timeliness of services, enhance accountability, and achieve efficiencies by bringing enforcement, compliance and investigations, as well as corporate and digital services, into a single integrated model that supports more co-ordinated operations, better data alignment and stronger, more consistent enforcement.

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Protest against logging in old growth falls short of intended audience

By Timothy Schafer
Castanet
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

It’s the universal Kootenay question: if a protest happens in Nelson, does Victoria hear? On Monday the answer was not likely, since a planned protest in Nelson against old growth logging had been organized for Premier David Eby’s arrival in the Heritage city, but he did not materialize. However, the message for the 150 people — some representing environmental groups from across the region — who arrived in front of the Kootenay Central constituency office in Nelson was clear and strong: stop old growth logging now or suffer the consequences. …Valhalla Wilderness Society biologist Amber Peters has been working on protecting ancient inland temperate rainforests in the Kootenay region for the last nine years, and has continued to “witness ancient growth and old growth forests fall.” She said the province is in “late stage corporate capture” because promises are being broken.

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Protesters urge province to follow through on old-growth promises

By Storrm Lennie
My Nelson Now
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Local forest advocates gathered in Nelson on Monday to call on Premier David Eby’s government to increase protections for old-growth forests. Eby was in the region this week, visiting and touring local facilities. More than 140 people attended a demonstration outside Kootenay Central MLA Brittny Anderson’s office… Organizer Rita Corcoran said protesters relocated to Taghum Hall after learning Eby was expected to attend an event there. …“We were hoping to talk to him directly and give him that same message directly in person about what we want and that we feel disappointed in the leadership,” said Corcoran. “But he didn’t arrive.” …“I’ve seen the premier meet with protesters across the province, and I know he would have been happy to meet with them here in Nelson as well,” Anderson said. “The RCMP made a security assessment, and we have to respect the decision that they made.”

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Inviting residents of Kootenay Lake region to help guide forest management

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Residents in Nelson, Creston, Kaslo and surrounding areas are invited to share their input on the development of the Kootenay Lake Forest Landscape Plan (FLP) to guide forest-management decisions in the area. The Kootenay Lake FLP initiative focuses on improving forest management for the 1.2-million-hectare Kootenay Lake Timber Supply Area. People can share their thoughts through a survey from June 22 until Aug. 21, 2026. The Kootenay Lake FLP team will be present at local events so people can learn more about forest landscape planning and ask questions. …FLPs are being developed through collaborative planning with First Nations and engagement with forest licensees, local communities and other stakeholders in each local area. The partnering First Nations in the Kootenay Lake FLP are yaqan nuʔkiy, Shuswap Band, Adams Lake Band, Skwlāx te Secwepemcúl̓ecw and Ktunaxa Nation Council Society.

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Be Not Afraid. Bats Are Amazing

By Kerry Banks
The Tyee
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

In his 2025 book, The Genius Bat, Yossi Yovel, an Israeli ecologist, describes experiments he conducted with six Egyptian fruit bats, including an exercise in which he trained them to land on a target and wait for him to approach with a reward — a slice of banana. …Many readers will find the image of bats as trainable, friendly and possessing intelligence, distinct personalities and perhaps even a sense of humour to be quite jarring. But this effect is exactly what Yovel is striving to achieve. His goal with the book is to dispel the many myths surrounding bats and to convey what remarkable and endlessly fascinating creatures they actually are. …Due to misinformation many people are unaware of the benefits bats provide by eating massive amounts of harmful insects, producing guano, which is an important natural fertilizer, and pollinating plants and spreading seeds. Without bats, humans would be in deep trouble.

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Columbia Shuswap protective services manager urges haste on ‘Canada on Fire’ recommendations

By Barb Brouwer
Victoria News
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Wildfires in Canada are now a crisis. Canada on Fire, a report of the federal Standing Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, calls for immediate action on managing the rapidly escalating wildfires across the country and the impact they have on forestry and agriculture industries as well as rural and Indigenous communities. Considering the report to have many positive aspects, Derek Sutherland, the Columbia Shuswap Regional District’s general manager of community and protective services, has concerns about the roles of the federal and provincial governments, including their ability to respond to wildfires quickly and the need for long-term funding for wildfire mitigation programs. …The report indicates there is no single authority responsible for wildfire preparedness, response and recovery in Canada and that municipalities struggle with limited resources, including adequate evacuation supports and training for firefighters. …Overall, Sutherland called the recommendations contained within the report “super positive,” but cautioned that putting them into play quickly is important.

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Millions in Forest ‘Enhancement’ Funds May Be Spurring More Logging

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbians are subsidizing the province’s forest companies to the tune of tens of millions of dollars each year under a government program that defrays the cost of shipping logs from remote forests to distant mills. In 2023, logging companies received nearly $33 million in public funds to underwrite the costs of hauling “low-value” logs to wood pulp and pellet mills. …The subsidies are posted online by the Forest Enhancement Society of BC, or FESBC, an organization created and funded by the provincial government and that reports to Forests Minister Ravi Parmar. The society’s mandate includes “preventing and mitigating the impact of wildfires” and “improving habitat for wildlife.” But many FESBC funds simply underwrite the increasing costs of hauling logs. Those expenses have been marching upward as logging activities push farther into the hinterland. That has some questioning whether the funding is accelerating the logging of forests, rather than enhancing them.

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B.C. environmental group’s ad campaign during World Cup puts spotlight on old-growth logging

By Tiffany Crawford
Vancouver Sun
June 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

If you were downtown in Vancouver on Thursday celebrating Canada’s big win at the World Cup you may have noticed several large billboards alerting visitors to one of B.C.’s controversial forest practices. Environmental group Sierra Club B.C. launched ads this month to coincide with the Cup in Vancouver to put the spotlight on logging of B.C.’s old-growth forest. The ads, which are online, on buildings, streaming in bars and restaurants, on TV and on billboards downtown and at SkyTrain stations, say an average of 100 soccer fields of old-growth forest in B.C. are still being clear-cut every day. This figure is from a 2025 report by the same group on the state of B.C.’s forests called Closer to the Brink. …B.C.’s Forest Ministry said in an emailed statement that there are 111,000 square kilometres of old forests and, of that, 89,000 are either protected, deferred or uneconomic to harvest, or 80 per cent of old-growth forest.

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New Forest Act introduced at Powell River City Hall

By Paul Galinski
The Powell River Peak
June 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jennifer Houghton

City of Powell River councillors were introduced to a proposed New Forest Act, which would change the way that forests in BC are managed. On June 18, Jennifer Houghton, campaign director from Boundary Forest Watershed Stewardship Society, introduced the act and its implications for public and private forested lands and community watersheds. “The New Forest Act is a citizen-developed legislative proposal that has been under development for several years, with input from foresters, scientists, rural residents and people from communities across BC,” said Houghton. “I’m here to discuss the larger forestry system that governs BC, how it affects communities, and a proposal for a replacement.” Houghton said she wanted to focus on three questions. The first was: what problem is the proposal trying to solve? The second was: what is the New Forest Act? The third was: why would it matter to communities like Powell River?

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Witnessing Wildfire Forest Recovery: My Visit to the Cariboo Chilcotin Region

By Gordon Murray
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

I recently had the opportunity to see firsthand how Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. (CCR), a joint venture of three First Nations, is transforming stands of burned trees just outside Williams Lake, BC, into a fibre source for wood pellet and pulp & paper production. We recorded the visit so that others could experience what we saw. …The recovered deadwood is chipped, ground, and used in pulp, paper and wood pellet production. WPAC members will take the lower-end fibre and pelletize it for use in a renewable, low-carbon energy source that can help displace fossil fuels in heat and power generation. It’s such a good new story. CCR is turning what might otherwise be seen as waste into jobs, economic development, community pride, and contributions to the biomass industry. At the same time, they are strengthening partnerships across industry and government—collaboration that is essential to scaling these solutions.

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Bees and Bark

By Melissa Steidle
Woodlots BC
June 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Did you know that BC has nearly 600 native bee species? This is among the highest diversity in Canada. The Southern Interior alone has around 400 species. The forest provides both forage opportunities and nesting habitat for bees. Many bee species live in trees, specifically cracks, bark sloughs and small crevices. So snags! We knew they were good for something. Over the decomposition of a standing tree it provides different types of standing habitat. As the tree rots, the bark begins to slough. Sloughing Bark on a snag is an important old forest attribute. While we can’t maintain everything in a block, keeping snags provides habitat for a variety of bees and other insects.

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New floodplain maps support flood preparedness

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

People and communities in B.C. will be safer and better informed about flood hazards as the first phase of new floodplain maps is completed. The Province, in partnership with Natural Resources Canada and the Fraser Basin Council, has released new floodplain maps, covering five waterways and 58 communities, under the Government of Canada’s Flood Hazard Identification Mapping Program. …“Floodplain maps do more than chart where water may go, they reveal where risk lives, reflect how our world is changing and shape how we prepare for the future,” said Randene Neill, B.C.’s Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship. “Updating these maps through the mapping program is one more step in implementing the B.C. Flood Strategy. They help turn insight into action and can go a long way in helping communities make informed choices, plan ahead and act quickly if the time comes.”

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Polinators, Plants and Forestry in Eastern Canada

By Joe Bowden, Lucas Brehaut and Healy Hamilton
Sustainable Forestry Initiative Blog
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEWFOUNDLAND — Pollinators play a critical role in ecosystems around the world. Pollination is essential for the majority of the fruits and vegetables we depend on for our agricultural systems. But pollination is just as critical for the health of our forest ecosystems. This makes the well-documented downward trend of global insect populations very concerning, including in northern regions, where climate change may be exacerbating the drivers of pollinator decline. …In the boreal forest of the Island of Newfoundland, a diverse group of partners are working to understand the role of managed forests in conserving pollinating bees and other insects. …The team is studying plant and pollinator diversity across forests of differing ages and therefore different stages of forest regeneration. This project aims to advance ecological understanding of how the biodiversity of plants and pollinators change in response to time-since-harvest, while also focusing on plant species in a changing climate.

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Quebec town recognizes trees as living beings with rights

By Morgan Lowrie
Canadian Press in CBC News
June 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A small town west of Montreal has decided to officially recognize trees as living beings with rights of their own, in what an environmental organization describes as a first in Quebec and Canada. A resolution adopted by Terrasse-Vaudreuil city council on June 9 declares that trees are worthy of protection, “including the right to life, to natural growth, to integrity and to regeneration.” Mayor Michel Bourdeau says Quebec filmmaker André Desrochers inspired the community to take action. He said Desrochers’ film, called Des arbes et des arts convinced citizens that trees are living entities that breathe and communicate with each other through their root systems. …Bourdeau says the new resolution means the town will review its existing rules and bylaws to ensure that trees are protected or replaced if they must be cut down.

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Health & Safety

Canada Border Services Agency seizes more than half a tonne of opium concealed in paper shipment

By Canada Border Services Agency
Government of Canada
June 23, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Delta, BC — The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) seized more than half a tonne of opium after examining a marine container at the Tsawwassen Container Examination Facility, in Delta, B.C. The container was referred by CBSA border services officers for examination on January 14, 2026, based on information provided by the CBSA’s National Targeting Centre, Pacific Regional Intelligence Section, and the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP). Upon arrival at the Tsawwassen Container Examination Facility, CBSA’s detector dog team provided positive indication for contraband. Officers conducted an x-ray examination of the container. The container held 20 industrial-sized rolls of paper and images revealed internal inconsistencies in nine of them. A subsequent progressive examination confirmed that opium had been concealed deep within 10 paper rolls. Border services officers seized a total of 520.6 kg of opium. This seizure highlights the strength of continued collaboration between Canadian and U.S. agencies in combatting drugs and organized crime. 

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WorkSafe Magazine — Summer 2026

WorkSafe BC
June 19, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

From workplace inspections to emerging equipment hazards and practical ways to strengthen safety culture, the latest issue of WorkSafe Magazine is packed with insights to help employers and workers create safer workplaces.

Rotating telehandlers: Understanding and reducing the risks: Use of this mobile equipment is growing fast in B.C. Our occupational safety officer talks about the steps employers, operators, and other groups can take to reduce risks.

Demystifying workplace inspections: Our cover story spotlights how employers and WorkSafeBC work together to identify hazards early, support compliance, and enable a more proactive approach to safety.

Building safety together: When joint health and safety committees move beyond compliance, they can spot risks earlier and drive real change. See how B.C. workplaces are making it happen.

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Your June safety checklist: Heat stress, electrical safety awareness, and more

WorkSafeBC
June 19, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

As summer temperatures rise across British Columbia, WorkSafeBC is urging employers to take proactive steps to protect workers from heat stress. Simple measures such as providing shade, cool-down areas, drinking water, and adjusting work schedules can significantly reduce the risk of heat-related illness. WorkSafeBC has also updated its Preventing Heat Stress at Work guide and released a new incident investigation video examining an explosion caused by a key fob left in a service vehicle. WorkSafeBC is drawing attention to another serious hazard: contact with power lines. New data shows that 74% of power-line-related injuries involve non-electrical workers, particularly those in construction, painting, and heavy equipment operations. Additional updates include consultations on proposed safety rule changes for shotcrete work, upcoming 2027 assessment rate information sessions, and a free June 24 webinar on road safety for small businesses. New incident investigation report summaries are available to help employers and workers understand the factors that contribute to workplace incidents so similar incidents can be prevented from happening in the future. 

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Glassy water contributed to fatal north Island seaplane crash: Transportation Safety Board

By Darron Kloster
Victoria Times Colonist
June 19, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Canada’s Transportation Safety Board is urging seaplane pilots to be aware of risks when landing on calm and glassy water, after a crash two years ago that claimed the life of a passenger. The Cessna seaplane carrying three people was landing at a logging camp at Warner Bay, northeast of Port Hardy, when it flipped over on Oct. 2, 2024… One of the passengers was able to escape the submerged cabin and help the pilot to surface, but the second passenger was trapped by a safety belt and drowned, the report said. The investigation found that the landing happened in “glass-water” conditions, with a mirror-like water surface devoid of any disturbance, which can make it hard for pilots to judge a plane’s speed and position. …Vince Crooks of Port Hardy-based Wilderness Seaplanes said witnesses saw … one float “dug fairly deep … the wing caught and it more cartwheeled.” He said the pilot … has about 30 years of experience with float planes all over the world.

Transportation Safety Board of Canada: Investigation report: Fatal seaplane accident in Warner Bay, British Columbia

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Forest Fires

Wildfire near Lytton, B.C., which triggered evacuations is declared held

The Canadian Press in Energetic City
June 23, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

The Saw Creek blaze that triggered evacuations in and around the community of Lytton, B.C., is now being held, the provincial wildfire service reported on Tuesday. The status of the seven-square-kilometre blaze discovered last Friday was downgraded after a days-long battle involving about 200 firefighters. The Thompson-Nicola Regional District and the Village of Lytton ended evacuation orders and alerts on Tuesday for approximately 230 properties in the area, labelling them as “all clear,” and a stretch of Hwy. 1 that had been closed due to the wildfire risk was re-opened. Tricia Thorpe, a director with the regional district, said she’s relieved to hear the news, though there is also sadness that the fire destroyed at least one home. “Moving from that red flame to the yellow is huge when you watch B.C. wildfire maps,” she said, describing the colour-coded system used online by the fire service to identify the status of a fire.

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47 properties in Lytton downgraded to evacuation alert due to Saw Creek wildfire

Canadian Press in Global News
June 21, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

Firefighters battling a wildfire near Lytton, B.C., say cooler temperatures and light winds helped overnight but that fire activity could increase throughout the day as temperatures climb. An update posted online Sunday by the BC Wildfire Service says crews overnight prioritized the protection and defence of structures near the Saw Creek wildfire burning south of Lytton. The report says firefighters and aircraft continue to focus on securing the perimeter of the communities near the fire. It says temperatures are expected to be between the mid-20s to low-30s on Sunday and relative humidity will trend lower, “meaning there is the potential for fire activity to increase throughout the day.” The latest estimate puts the size of the out-of-control fire at about seven square-kilometres, up slightly from Saturday. The wildfire has triggered evacuation orders and alerts in the area, affecting more than 230 properties, while also shutting down a more than 115-kilometre stretch of Highway 1.

Additional coverage from CBC by Shaurya Kshatri and Sarah Penton: ‘How can this be happening again?’: Lytton residents face another wildfire

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