Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

Wildfire Resilience Week: More Important Than Ever

By Sandy McKellar, Editor
The Tree Frog Forestry News
May 4, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

Tree Frog Forestry News is proud to once again partner with the Western Canada SFI Implementation Committee (WCSIC) to bring you Wildfire Resilience and Awareness Week—now in its fourth year. When we launched this initiative in 2023, wildfire was already a growing concern. Today, it’s a defining reality. Seasons are longer, fires are more intense, and the impacts reach well beyond the burn zone—affecting communities, economies, and public health across the region. That’s why this week continues to matter.

All week long, Tree Frog Forestry News—together with our sponsors and contributors—will feature stories that explore wildfire mitigation, resilience, and adaptation. From on-the-ground practices to broader policy and research, these perspectives highlight what it means to live with fire in a changing landscape.

We encourage you to follow along, dig into the resources, and share these stories with your networks. Because when it comes to wildfire, awareness isn’t optional—it’s essential.

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Forest Industry Leader Derek Nighbor Calls on Ottawa to Deepen Support for Japan Market Strategy

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 30, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, International

Derek Nighbor, President and CEO of the Forest Products Association of Canada, appeared before the Parliamentary Standing Committee on International Trade to outline the promise and complexity of growing Canadian forest sector exports to Japan — and to make a pointed case for sustained federal investment to make it happen. Canada currently ships roughly $1 billion annually to Japan, a figure Nighbor put in context: it reflects a century of Canadian forestry trade there and 50 years of work by the Canada Wood Group. “It’s a heavy lift,” he said. Against nearly $8 billion in annual softwood lumber exports to the United States — now facing combined duties and Section 232 tariffs in the 45% range — Japan is a real but incremental diversification opportunity. Canada holds 65% of Japan’s 2×4 dimension lumber market, built by actively developing a wood-building culture where one didn’t naturally exist. Holding and growing that share, Nighbor told the committee, requires sustained technical engagement on codes, standards, and the platform frame system — not simply shipping more product. He also flagged headwinds: declining Japanese housing starts, growing domestic Japanese lumber supply, aggressive European entry across lumber, pulp, and pellets, and tightening Japanese sustainability and traceability requirements.

Nighbor’s asks to the committee were specific. He called for dedicated multi-year funding for the Canada Wood Group to build on its export development work, and for doubling the funding of NRCan’s Global Forest Leadership Program. He asked for federal investment in market-entry infrastructure — spec alignment tools, testing labs, and distributor networks — applicable to both Japan and Korea. And he made the case for continued government-led trade missions, pointing to a BC and Alberta forestry-specific mission to Japan in November as the kind of targeted engagement that moves the needle. Beyond lumber, Nighbor identified mass timber and engineered wood — aligned with Japan’s housing renewal, decarbonization, and seismic resilience priorities — and bioeconomy products including biocarbon, biofuels, and biomass as the next frontier for Canadian forest exports to Japan.

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Getting Ahead of Fire: A Path to a More Resilient B.C.

By Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests
Government of British Columbia
May 4, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Each year, Wildfire Resilience and Awareness Week is a reminder of a reality we are all facing. Wildfires are no longer a distant or a seasonal threat. They are at our doorstep and part of our new normal, impacting communities throughout British Columbia. Since 2017, we have experienced some of the most destructive wildfire seasons in our province’s history. Entire communities have been changed. Through it all, we have seen the extraordinary courage of firefighters and first responders who step forward when others are told to leave. When others must evacuate, they risk their lives so communities can be saved. But we have also learned something very important. Preparation makes a huge difference. If we’re going to meet this moment, we cannot simply react to wildfire, we must get ahead of it. …

Over the past year, I’ve had the privilege of meeting with wildland and structural firefighters, community leaders, and people throughout this province who are already doing this important work. What I’ve seen gives me great confidence. When communities take action, when preparation is prioritized and when we all work together, we can reduce the risks and protect what matters most.

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Vancouver Island Enters 2026 Wildfire Season at Elevated Risk as Mosaic Forest Management Expands Detection and Mitigation Efforts

Mosaic Forest Management
April 27, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Vancouver Island is heading into the 2026 wildfire season under precarious conditions. Island snowpack is below normal, Environment Canada forecasts warmer and drier conditions through June, and there’s a 62 per cent chance of a strong El Niño by late summer — the weather pattern behind the prolonged heat and drought that intensifies wildfire risk. For Mosaic, which manages over 550,000 hectares of private forest land across Vancouver Island and the Sunshine Coast on behalf of two of Canada’s largest pension plans, wildfire preparedness is fundamental to responsible land management. This year, the company is further preparing by expanding its wildfire detection and mitigation capabilities. …This season, Mosaic is set to pilot an integrated detection system in the Nanaimo Lakes drainage, combining cameras, ground-level sensors and low-orbit satellite monitoring to identify ignitions faster and across a wider area. …“Our forests support local economies, local pensions and are cherished recreational spaces,” said Steve Mjaaland, Senior Manager of Forest Protection at Mosaic.

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Business & Politics

Canadian red tape is worse than Trump tariffs, say industry groups

By Ilyo Gridneff
The Financial Times in the Financial Post
April 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Derek Nighbor

Canada’s leading industry groups say Prime Minister Mark Carney’s effort to cut red tape is floundering, costing the country billions more in trade losses than Trump’s tariffs. Forestry, oil and gas, and auto industry representatives said they are frustrated at the pace of regulatory reform that is central to Carney’s efforts to insulate Canada from Trump’s devastating trade war. “Ottawa needs to align its regulatory policy objectives with economic reality,” said Derek Nighbor, president of the Forest Products Association of Canada, which represents one of the country’s largest employers. Nighbor said over the past decade overlapping government policies, mostly environmental regulation, have “chilled strategic investments” and become “a productivity and competitiveness killer, driving away investment”. Last week, Carney announced a “first-ever” investment summit in Toronto. …But industry groups warn this plan is impeded by the slow implementation of a red-tape review that found nearly 500 ways to streamline services.

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7 key takeaways from the Liberal government’s spring economic snapshot

By Darren Major
CBC News
April 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

François-Philippe Champagne

Prime Minister Mark Carney and Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne introduced their spring economic update on Tuesday. Here are some key highlights:

  • State of the federal books – a lower-than-forecasted deficit for the fiscal year that ended last month. November’s budget was projecting a deficit of $78.3 billion for the year, but Tuesday’s update says the deficit came in at $66.9 billion. The government saw a $60-billion uplift, in part due to revenue from surging oil prices. Tuesday’s outlook outlines $37.5 billion of spending on newly announced measures.
  • Emphasis on skilled trades recruitment – aiming to recruit 80,000-100,000 new skilled trade workers by the 2030-31 fiscal year. The government is pumping $6 billion over five years behind its promise to recruit, train and hire thousands of new workers. Included is an apprenticeship grant in the shape of a $400 per week income top-up to apprentices completing in-class training. There will also be a one-time bonus of $5,000 for apprentices who complete their Red Seal certification.

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Control the Controllable: Canada must focus on boosting competitiveness

Forest Products Association of Canada
April 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

The Canadian forest sector is weathering a perfect storm, facing three years of soft markets, protracted geopolitical conflicts and instability in global markets, and combined tariffs and duties averaging 45% on Canadian softwood lumber products entering the US.  “While we welcome the measures to improve the speed at which we can build homes, through code and regulatory improvements for modern methods of construction, we still need a clear signal that Canada intends to be a more competitive place for forest sector investment — more responsive regulation, improved transportation supply chain performance, and tax and investment tools that accelerate the use of Canadian wood products here at home while helping companies modernize facilities and keep people working,” said Derek Nighbor, FPAC President and CEO. “We look forward to Minister Hodgson’s release of the Forest Sector Transformation Task Force report, which should provide a much-needed blueprint for enhancing competitiveness and ensuring long-term growth and stability.”

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Bestar and South Shore closures: Unifor calls for emergency support for the furniture manufacturing sector

By Unifor
PR Newswire
April 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

LAC-MÉGANTIC, QC – The back-to-back closures of Bestar and Meubles South Shore within a 24-hour period send a clear message: Quebec’s furniture manufacturing sector is in jeopardy. A total of 120 Unifor members are losing their jobs after Bestar announced it would close its Lac-Mégantic plant. “Ottawa has the tools to act and has demonstrated its ability to respond quickly and effectively to sectoral crises affecting the country’s industrial economy. Minister Champagne’s announcement last week launching a safeguard investigation into low-cost imports in this sector is a step in the right direction. Now, that process must be accelerated and every effort made to protect good jobs in this country,” said Unifor National President Lana Payne. On April 27, Meubles South Shore announced it would cease furniture production after 86 years of operation at its Sainte-Croix and Coaticook facilities, another major blow to Quebec’s furniture manufacturing sector.

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B.C., Treaty 8 First Nations build new partnerships to advance restoration

By Ministry of Energy and Climate Solutions
Government of British Columbia
May 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Province and seven Treaty 8 First Nations have taken a next step toward creating a thriving and community-centered local economy in northeastern British Columbia. Restoration agreements will restore and protect the environment, provide predictability and stability to existing industries, as well as establish new business opportunities in the region, while ensuring historic Treaty Rights are upheld. “The restoration agreements will build on the strong partnership that we have with the Treaty 8 First Nations, which is a First Nations led approach,” said Adrian Dix, Minister of Energy and Climate Solutions. “This work is guided by the belief that healing the land and healing the people are inseparable. …This partnership approach to land and resource management will help to uphold constitutionally protected Treaty Rights, while supporting a vibrant economy.”

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B.C. forests minister unveils new federal grant, says aid needs could reach $6B

By Mark Page
The Vernon Morning Star
May 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Ravi Parmar

B.C. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar announced on Thursday that the federal government is pitching in $21 million to support retraining and retooling forestry workers and operations in the province. The money comes as part of Ottawa’s more than $2 billion commitment to support the sector as it faces tariff tradewinds, stiff foreign competition and a lack of easy access to economically viable timber. It is funded through a $70.4 million workforce support fund announced in March. Parmar says that if a combined rate of tariffs and duties stays as high as it has been, roughly 45 per cent, the industry in B.C. will need billions of dollars more in aid.

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Minister says B.C. expects billions from feds for forestry if U.S. talks fail

By Wolfgang Depner
The Canadian Press in Victoria Times Colonist
April 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar

VICTORIA — British Columbia’s forests minister says he expects billions in additional federal support for the timber sector if future trade talks with the United States don’t benefit the softwood lumber industry. Ravi Parmer says BC will use every opportunity to remind Ottawa that the pending renegotiation of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico-Agreement on trade, better known as CUSMA, must include forestry. If it doesn’t, he says the province expects Ottawa to double or even triple the more than $2 billion in supports it has provided the sector nationwide since last August. Parmar says federal negotiators “must recognize that if they are unsuccessful” in addressing US duties and tariffs on timber, BC will need help. …He says Ottawa has been a strong partner so far and he is optimistic that the federal government will address CUSMA in a way that includes forestry.

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Conservative leadership candidate would move some resource officials out of Victoria

By Betsy Kline
The Vernon Morning Star
April 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Iain Black (Facebook)

B.C. Conservative leadership candidate Iain Black is making his way around the Kootenays this week… While he is emphasizing his usual campaign priorities … Black also revealed a philosophy that he has yet to speak of publicly. While in the forest-sector dependent community of Castlegar, Black told Castlegar News that if he were eventually elected as premier, he would like to re-locate some bureaucrats from Victoria to the areas rich in the resource sectors they represent. “Why is the chief forester of British Columbia in Victoria, why isn’t that office out where the forestry is?” asked Black. “We need to get senior officials, that impact the livelihoods of our communities, out of Victoria and in offices elsewhere. He also suggested moving agriculture leadership to somewhere like Abbotsford or Dawson Creek and oil and gas leadership to some place like Fort Saint John.

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Forestry grant supporting workers affected by tariffs

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
April 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Forestry workers, employers and communities throughout British Columbia are receiving targeted assistance through a forestry workers support grant, a $20.8-million investment to help employers and communities respond quickly to the needs of the sector, by providing funds for worker retention, wage support and job-creating local projects. “There are serious global pressures impacting forestry workers in B.C., including unfair and punishing duties and tariffs driven by U.S. President Donald Trump,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “We are not backing down, we’re going to fight like hell to defend our forestry jobs. The new forestry workers support grant is one tool we’re taking action on right now to protect jobs today.” Delivered through the Northern Development Initiative Trust the grant is anticipated to support 1,400 forestry workers. …“In times of crisis, workers and communities need support from the provincial government and this is a great example of that,” said Jeff Bromley, chair, United Steelworkers Wood Council.

Additional coverage in CBC News: B.C. forestry support grant welcomed by industry stakeholders amid tariff struggles

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B.C. premier dances rather than admitting DRIPA means co-government

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
April 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vaughn Palmer

VICTORIA — Premier David Eby faced tough questions this week for abandoning his changes to the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act in the face of strong opposition from First Nations. Are the New Democrats “now co-governing the province with First Nations leadership?” asked Opposition Leader Trevor Halford. Eby’s initial response was to accuse the Conservatives “of deliberately twisting this to spread fear.” But Halford pointed out that he was simply quoting Terry Teegee, BC regional chief of the Assembly of First Nations. …Teegee had said, “Ultimately First Nations have to get in the room — and to the negotiations table to make decisions on these important matters.” Halford pressed Eby a third time. …No way was Eby going acknowledge the regional chief on co-governance. …Eby’s ducking aside, it remained an open question whether the premier or the regional chief was the more reliable source of information on co-governance.

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Families invited to Interior Logging Association’s 68th annual convention weekend

Castanet
April 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

“Stronger Together for Forestry’s Future” is the theme in Kamloops this weekend when the Interior Logging Association hosts its 68th AGM and Convention. The family friendly event is free and open to the public, and it promises a plethora of fun on Friday (May 1) and Saturday (May 2) at the Powwow Grounds. With vendors, live demonstrations and two food trucks: Kamloops’ own Hungryish and Frosty’s Ice Cream. “Everybody’s welcome, as it’s a great free family friendly event that is open to the public,” ILA representative Meagan Preston says. “Come down, walk around, have some local food, and enjoy the day. There’s lots to check out, including some large and impressive equipment you can see up close.” The event will feature the returning virtual tree falling competition. …On the business side of things inside Coast Kamloops Hotel and Conference Centre, Friday’s breakfast will be followed by the AGM and then B.C. Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar’s keynote address at lunch. 

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Alberta targets students with new skilled trades initiative

By Rich Christianson
The Woodworking Network
April 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

CALGARY, Alberta — Alberta’s government is investing $6 million over three years to support the next generation of skilled trades workers with the launch of the Alberta Trades Discovery Centre. The industry-led initiative will offer junior high and high school students hands-on exposure to careers in the skilled trades before they graduate. Set to open this fall, the Alberta Trades Discovery Centre will provide a dedicated, professional space where students can explore construction trades, learn directly from experienced tradespeople and discover what they are good at and what they enjoy, helping them make informed choices about high school courses, post-secondary pathways and future careers.

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eSolutions Furniture Group Announces Closure of Business and Lenders’ Proposed Motion to Appoint Receiver

By eSolutions Furniture Group
PR Newswire
April 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

MONTREAL – eSolutions Furniture Group, including Bush Business Furniture, Bush Furniture, and Bestar, announced today that the Fédération des caisses Desjardins du Québec, as lender and as administrative agent for the Company’s lending syndicate, is expected to present a motion on May 4, 2026 before the Superior Court of Québec under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (Canada) to appoint PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc. as receiver over the Company’s assets. …The Company’s financial position has worsened significantly since 2021. The business has faced additional pressure since 2024 due to the imposition of tariffs by the U.S. government, post-pandemic reductions in consumer demand, increased competition from offshore competitors, and ongoing cash constraints.

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Ford government pitches new strategy to protect, diversify Ontario forest sector

Northern Ontario Business
April 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Doug Ford & Ian Dunn

The Ford government is taking “swift, strategic and decisive action” with a new strategy to protect Ontario’s staggering forest products industry. Associate Minister of Forestry and Forest Products Kevin Holland provided those remarks in introducing the province’s new Roadmap to Protecting the Forest Sector, in Toronto, April 28. …It’s a 10-year plan geared to give the sector a competitive edge and position the Ontario sector as a G7 leader in manufacturing and export wood products. Natural Resources Minister Mike Harris summarized the three-pillared plan as protecting forestry-related jobs and business, identifying new global markets, and growing the demand for wood products at home. …Since 2020, Holland said, the province has spent more than $350 million on forest sector innovation. Expect to see more “exciting” funding opportunities in the months ahead, he said. Holland said the road map is a step-by-step plan to promote forest products at home and aboard while building up the industry’s workforce. 

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Finance & Economics

Atlas Engineered Wood Products reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $0.69M

Atlas Engineered Products
April 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Nanaimo, BC — Atlas Engineered Products announced its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2025. …Revenue was $17,645,972 compared to revenue of $15,069,615 for the three months ended December 31, 2024, representing a 17% increase. Revenue has increased due to acquisitive growth for the quarter. …Net loss after taxes was $686,098 for the three months ended December 31, 2025 compared to net loss after taxes of $838,728 for the three months ended December 31, 2024. This improvement in net loss after taxes was mainly due to increased revenues, but offset by a reduction in gross margins. …AEP is nearing completion of the first truss robotic facility in Clinton, ON. The building is in the final stages of interior painting and office setup while the equipment has been shipped and is anticipated to be operational at the beginning of July 2026.

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West Fraser reports Q1, 2026 net loss of $188 million

West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd.
April 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

VANCOUVER, BC — West Fraser Timber reported the first quarter results of 2026. First quarter sales were $1.334 billion, compared to $1.165 billion in the fourth quarter of 2025. First quarter earnings were $(188) million, compared to earnings of $(751) million in the fourth quarter of 2025. First quarter Adjusted EBITDA was $(66) million compared to $(79) million in the fourth quarter of 2025. Included in first quarter Adjusted EBITDA in the Lumber segment is ($114) million of duty adjustments related to prior periods compared to nil in the fourth quarter of 2025. …North America Engineered Wood Products segment Adjusted EBITDA of $11 million, and Europe Engineered Wood Products segment Adjusted EBITDA of $10 million. …Sean McLaren, West Fraser’s President and CEO said “Excluding the impact of prior year duty adjustments, we were pleased to see all of our core segments – lumber, NA EWP, and Europe EWP – report positive Adjusted EBITDA.” 

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Bank of Canada holds interest rate for fourth time but warns on oil shock, trade risks

By Paula Tran
The Financial Post
April 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The Bank of Canada held its policy interest rate at 2.25 per cent for the fourth consecutive time on Wednesday, but warned that it would be closely watching the impact of rising oil prices on inflation in the coming months amid ongoing uncertainty caused by the war in Iran. …Inflation has been close to two per cent for over a year but rose to 2.4 per cent in March after slowing to 1.8 per cent in February. The central bank base case forecast is that inflation will peak in April at about three per cent before returning to the two per cent target in early 2027, but that is assuming global oil prices decline. U.S. tariff measures along with the uncertainty surrounding the Canada-United-States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) have also added to the uncertainty ahead of the July 1 CUSMA review deadline, especially since the Canadian government has not yet launched formal discussions with U.S. officials.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Inside a Mount Pleasant architecture studio that practices what it builds: mass timber

By Mihika Agarwal
BC Business Magazine
April 29, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

©SLA Architect

Vancouver, BC — Stephane Laroye Architect (SLA), a Mount Pleasant–based firm focused on sustainable, low-carbon design and mass timber buildings across B.C., has set up shop in a mass timber building. Founded in 2016 by urban planner and architect Stephane Laroye, the studio works across everything from master planning and infrastructure to multi-family, mixed-use and single-family housing. A throughline across the portfolio: engineered wood. …SLA’s own office—located inside Vancouver’s On5 building—uses timber panels throughout and is designed to Passive House standards by Vancouver-based Timber Engineering. Much of the structure was prefabricated off-site, allowing for faster installation than conventional construction methods.

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Postmedia to print most New Brunswick newspapers out of province

By Shane Magee
CBC News
April 29, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — Postmedia plans to stop printing most New Brunswick newspapers in Moncton. Postmedia publishes the Times & Transcript, Telegraph-Journal, Daily Gleaner and other local newspapers. They are printed and distributed from a building along Main Street in downtown Moncton. Dave Arsenault, president of the New Brunswick Media Guild, confirmed that print and distribution will cease in Moncton and be moved elsewhere. …”Following an assessment of printing and insert packaging operations, it was determined that outsourcing these operations from Postmedia’s Moncton facility would allow us to continue serving print subscribers and advertisers while supporting long-term financial sustainability,” the company said Wednesday. The printing will be outsourced out of province starting Aug. 2. Postmedia bought most of New Brunswick’s English-language newspapers from Irving-owned Brunswick News in 2022.

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Forestry

More than 5,800 people raised $1.46 million at WWF-Canada’s CN Tower Climb for Nature

By World Wildlife Fund Canada
PR Newswire
May 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

TORONTO – This weekend, 5,805 people took on the CN Tower’s 1,776 stairs for World Wildlife Fund Canada’s Climb for Nature fundraiser. Supported by nearly 23,033 donors and volunteers, they raised $1.46 million (and climbing) for conservation efforts across Canada. “It’s been an awesome weekend for wildlife in Canada.” says Megan Leslie, president and CEO of WWF-Canada. “From protecting areas of the Arctic for walrus, beluga, polar bears and caribou to doing salmon habitat restoration in B.C., arm in arm with First Nations, every step taken and every dollar raised was in support of nature and wildlife across Canada.” …The 2026WWF Climb for Nature is not over. Canadians can step up for wildlife from anywhere (and anytime) or conquer the stadium steps of BC Place in Vancouver this fall.

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Sustainable Forestry Initiative Announces Second Round of Funded Support for Indigenous-Led Climate Smart Forestry in Canada

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Ottawa, ON—The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) is proud to announce funding awards to eight projects to Indigenous partners advancing Indigenous-led Climate Smart Forestry (CSF) in Canada. Building on the momentum of the first round of funding, SFI has committed 2 million in funding to support Indigenous-led CSF projects as they implement innovative strategies that strengthen forest resilience, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and uphold Indigenous values in forest stewardship. The projects are part of the SFI Climate Smart Forestry Initiative – an effort to advance the interpretation and implementation of CSF practices across the SFI Canadian and U.S. footprint of more than 145 million certified hectares. “With this second round of funding, we are broadening the impact of Indigenous-led solutions that will help sustain forest health and advance climate action at a landscape scale.” said Lauren T. Cooper, Chief Conservation Officer of SFI. 

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Vancouver park board staff recommend easing tree maintenance policy

By Joanne Lee-Young
Vancouver Sun
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Vancouver park board staff want to inspect the health of city trees less often, partly because they can’t keep up with new demands related to maintaining the city’s 150,000 street trees and 38,000 park trees. But an expert in tree risk assessment warns that while a proposal to change the manner and frequency of tree inspections could be cost-efficient, it might not be cost-effective as it could result in dangerous trees being missed. “It comes down to money, but you’ll miss defects in trees that cause tree parts to fail,” said Norman Oberson, a provincially certified tree risk assessor, owner of Arbutus Tree Service, and a board member of the Trees of Vancouver Society. Instead of conducting detailed inspections and pruning every seven years, park board staff are proposing doing this every 10 years for the city’s street and park trees.

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Fort McMurray’s 2016 beastly wildfire prompts new firefighting strategies

By Jackie Carmichael
Edmonton Journal
May 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©AlbertaWildfire

Ten years on, the devastating Fort McMurray wildfire is still teaching Albertans and informing policy. “Even a very large developed community in northern Alberta is not immune from the impact of wildfire, and that really hit hard with a lot of people, and I think there are some lessons that we’ve taken on as an organization that and we’re sort of living those changes now,” said Christie Tucker, information unit manager with Alberta Wildfire of the May 3, 2016 fire that ravaged the northern Alberta city, causing the evacuation of roughly 90,000 residents at the time. …If Fort McMurray had its lessons, one is that wildfire risk isn’t just out where the wild things are. The wildland urban interface is where Albertans are living and working up in resource-based industries, up against what used to be wilderness. That is a space the province is paying a lot of attention to, Tucker said.

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Look at forestry policies needed

Letter by Peter Rusland
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Dear North Cowichan mayor and council, and Premier David Eby: It’s not surprising a four-councillor cluster voted against a cogent April 15 motion urging our province to review and strengthen our forest policies, including those governing raw-log exports. The difference this time is right-wing councillors Findlay, Manhas, Caljouw Jr., and Hogg seemingly disregarded valley forest workers, and backed corporate timber firms’ desires for less, not more, public land-harvesting rules and regulations. Coun. Chris Justice’s logical, timely motion aimed to boost wood-fibre supplies for Canadian processing and value-added manufacturing — supporting local and Island forestry jobs — partly through a long-sought raw-log export ban. …Admit the current industry’s end is near. Instead, let’s finally explore making alternative, job-rich building materials in North Cowichan and elsewhere.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Marking its 10th anniversary, the Forest Enhancement Society of BC is highlighting a decade of work advancing forest resilience, fibre utilization, and climate action across the province. Framed by Earth Day reflections, the latest update underscores how thoughtful forest management—from wildfire risk reduction to rehabilitation and better use of low-value fibre—can play a meaningful role in addressing climate change. FESBC continues to support projects that reduce slash burning by turning residual fibre into bioenergy, cutting greenhouse gas emissions while creating economic opportunities for communities. The newsletter also points to the importance of collaboration, including Indigenous leadership, in delivering lasting forest stewardship outcomes. Featured stories include a fuel management project with Kenpesq’t Forestry, reflections from former forests minister Doug Donaldson, and recognition of FESBC’s impact at the BC Legislature. A safety tip from the BC Forest Safety Council rounds out the update, reinforcing the sector’s ongoing focus on worker safety.

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Skies are buzzing in west-central Alberta as prep for wildfire season gets underway

By Maggie Kirk
CBC News
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Air traffic in parts of west-central Alberta has been busier than normal over the last few days as the province prepares for another wildfire season. Newly recruited wildland firefighters are participating in training sessions in Hinton, Alta., about 270 kilometres west of Edmonton. The rookies will learn how to initially attack a fire, a process that includes a helicopter ride. Meanwhile in nearby Edson, Alta., about 90 kilometres to the east, seven planes have been stationed at the Edson Air Tanker Base. The planes, which arrived on Monday, are ready to be deployed in the event a wildfire breaks out in the region, said Derrick Forsythe, an information officer with Alberta Wildfire. The area has seen less snow than other parts of the province.

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Plantation gone wild: human hands help nature restore a forest in Comox Valley

By Lisa Hamilton
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
April 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mother Nature is the expert on growing forests, but sometimes she needs a helping hand. This hand is especially helpful when something disrupts her well-honed process in the first place. Such is the case with the forestry plantations in qax mot and the effort to restore these areas by the Comox Valley Land Trust (CVLT). Located at the Morrison Creek headwaters up Lake Trail Rd., the qax mot Conservation Area consists of 22 hectares of riparian forests and forestry plantations. …About 9 per cent of qax mot consists of forestry plantations. While it might seem like planting trees is always a good idea, the way the Douglas fir plantations were installed prohibit the natural regenerative cycle essential to a healthy forest. The trees were planted too closely, making it nearly impossible for light to break through the canopy, leaving the forest floor virtually barren of the undergrowth species we associate with a thriving West Coast forest.

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BC Quietly Cuts Penalty for Exporting Unprocessed Logs

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Ben Parfitt

As pulp mill and sawmill jobs plummet in number, British Columbia’s Forests Ministry is opening the door to more exports of unprocessed logs, including those produced from trees cut down in old-growth forests. Under current rules, companies … pay a “fee in lieu of manufacturing”… But in February, the provincial government quietly lowered those fees. The reduced fees will make it more profitable to ship logs away, and although the government says it will incentivize more logging, others warn that the change risks undermining  jobs in the province’s struggling forest industry. …Arnold Bercov, a former worker at the Harmac pulp mill and former president of the Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of Canada, warns that the move will hurt B.C.’s forestry sector. …[Saying] the government’s surplus test is “a trap.” “The more logs you export, the more mills that shut down,” he said. “And the more mills that shut down, the more exports you have.”

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Lack of weather radar affects work of firefighters in northern Manitoba, emergency co-ordinator says

By Mike Arsenault
CBC News
April 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Extreme weather events in northern Manitoba are challenging to navigate, and the lack of weather radar sites in the northern part of the province only adds to that challenge, experts say. “We experienced that a lot last summer during our forest fire,” said Mike Funk, the emergency co-ordinator for the City of Flin Flon. “We would get reports from Environment Canada, [saying] ‘We’re expecting rainfall,’ and they were great at predicting the time that it would hit [elsewhere]. But by the time it got close to your area, nothing happened.” Last spring, Flin Flon, more than 600 kilometers northwest of Winnipeg, was nearly encircled by wildfires. The city of roughly 5,000 was evacuated for weeks. Funk said a weather radar station in the north would give his community a clearer picture of what type of weather they could expect.

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Mosaic launches crowdsourced reporting pilot as Ladysmith preps for major forest cleanup

The Lake Cowichan Gazette
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

On May 2 volunteers will converge on the Bush Creek hatchery in Ladysmith to haul illegally dumped waste out of the surrounding forest and watershed. Over the past three years, the community cleanup, run by the Ladysmith Sportsmen’s Club, has removed nearly 160 tonnes of garbage. “Illegal dumping is a serious offence, one that harms our forests and puts communities at risk,” said Ravi Parmar, minister of Forests. “But because of this initiative, we’re reducing the risks and protecting our environment. We’re adding to the 160 tonnes already removed, through on-the-ground, people-led land restoration.” Mosaic Forest Management, which manages approximately 585,000 hectares of private forest land across Vancouver Island and the Sunshine Coast, will once again supply staff volunteers, donated materials and disposal support for the effort. Volunteers can email judsonboys@shaw.ca to get involoved. More information on Mosaic’s reporting pilot will be available at MosaicForests.com this summer.

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Thousands apply to become B.C. wildfire fighters — but only a few will make the cut

By Akshay Kulkarni
CBC News
April 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Thousands of people from across the province applied to become wildfire fighters this season — but the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS) says only about 200 made the cut for boot camp last week and even fewer will ultimately land a position. A BCWS official says in his 20-year-long career, this year features the largest-ever group of people applying to be a wildfire fighter. …Chandler Bachtold, an instructor at the boot camp with five years of experience, said that teamwork was a critical aspect of the job — as firefighters build fire lines with tools, lay hose along the forest floor and extinguish hotspots. …BCWS firefighters can spend 14 days out in the field before they get a break, so Bachtold says good physical and mental health is critical — along with the ability to be a team player.

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Expansion of the emerald ash borer regulated area in Quebec and Nova Scotia

By The Canadian Food Inspection Agency
PR Newswire
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

OTTAWA, ON – The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA)… has put in place measures intended to protect Canada’s economy by slowing the spread of emerald ash borer (EAB) to non-infested areas of Canada. Following detections outside of regulated areas, the CFIA has updated its regulated areas for EAB to include three areas in Quebec (one municipal territory and two Regional County Municipalities) and part of one county in Nova Scotia. Preventing and slowing the spread of invasive species, such as EAB, is critical to safeguarding forests, native plants and forestry-related industries. The regulated area now includes the Regional County Municipalities of Bonaventure, Charlevoix-Est and the City of La Tuque, in Quebec, and part of Hants County, Nova Scotia. As a result, ash material (such as logs, branches and woodchips) and all species of firewood cannot be moved outside the regulated area without permission from the CFIA. 

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Saint John takes steps to protect itself better against wildfires

By Nipun Tiwari
CBC News
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Saint John’s fire department wants the city to adopt a long-term plan to reduce the risk of wildfires and strengthen the ability to fight them. A proposed plan, which includes raising public awareness and improving wildfire training for firefighters, earned the support of the city’s public safety committee at a meeting Wednesday. Recommendations came after a detailed evaluation of wildfire risks based on terrain, weather and climate influences, locations of homes and other factors. Saint John has not experienced large-scale wildfires in recent history, as other areas of New Brunswick have, but the evaluation identified a moderate overall wildfire risk in some areas of the city. Steep hillsides, and extensive forestry, park space and other green areas — particularly near dense neighbourhoods — create risky conditions for the city uncommon in other parts of the province, Deputy Chief Ed Moyer of the Saint John Fire Department told the committee.

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McMaster expands Forest Nature Preserve and launches first-of-its-kind climate research station

By Peter Rukavina
McMaster University
April 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

McMaster University is expanding the McMaster Forest Nature Preserve with the addition of more than 14 acres of ecologically significant, biodiverse land in West Hamilton, strengthening opportunities for research, learning and long-term environmental stewardship. The expansion was made possible through a philanthropic gift from the Patrick J. McNally Charitable Foundation, along with land donations from local landowners Mark Tamminga, Joany Verschuuren, Bill Walker, Heather Hill and Ken Vanderlaan. Together, these contributions ensure the land will be protected in perpetuity. The announcement coincided with Earth Week at the McMaster Carbon Sink Forest, where more than 100 students, faculty, staff and community members gathered for the forest’s annual tree planting. “What makes today meaningful is not only what has been protected, but what has been made possible,” said McMaster President and Vice-Chancellor Susan Tighe.

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Forest Fires

Evacuation alert issued due to wildfire between Williams Lake and Quesnel

By Ian Holliday
CTV News
April 30, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

A large swath of sparsely populated land in B.C.’s Cariboo region has been placed on evacuation alert due to a nearby wildfire. The Cariboo Regional District issued the alert for eight parcels covering 696.57 hectares in the Webster Creek Fire Area on Thursday, citing “potential danger to life and health.” The Webster Creek wildfire was discovered Wednesday. It’s located west of Highway 97 between Williams Lake and Quesnel, two of the region’s largest population centres. According to the B.C. Wildfire Service, the blaze is currently burning on roughly 66 hectares and displaying Rank 1 and Rank 2 fire behaviour, the least intense levels on the scale. There are 19 firefighting personnel responding to the wildfire, supported by helicopters and heavy equipment.

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Ferrabee wildfire near Hell’s Gate remains out of control at 53 hectares

By Dillon white
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
April 29, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

BC Wildfire Service (BCWS) crews continue to respond to a wildfire between Hope and Lytton. According to the latest update from BC Wildfire Service on Wednesday morning (April 29), the Ferrabee fire near Hell’s Gate remains out of control. BCWS defines out-of-control blazes as spreading or anticipated to spread beyond their current perimeter. “This wildfire does not currently pose a threat to structures, critical infrastructure or public safety,” the update reads. The blaze was discovered on Thursday afternoon (April 23) and was estimated to be 27 hectares in size on Saturday (April 25) and 36 hectares on Monday (April 27). The fire has since grown to 53 hectares. Approximately two dozen ground personnel are responding to the blaze alongside aerial support. …The wildfire is believed to be human-caused.

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