Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

Wrap-up of the International Pulp Week 2026 Convention

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 14, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

International Pulp Week brought together global market pulp leaders for two days of presentations, market intelligence, and industry dialogue hosted by the Pulp and Paper Products Council. Tim Brown, vice president with PPPC opens and introduced the program before before handing the sessions to day one speaker and moderator Kevin Mason of ERA Forest Products Research, and day two moderator Kelly McNamara of Numera Analytics. Now in its 21st year, IPW remains the premier annual gathering for the market pulp sector — drawing producers, end-users, analysts, and suppliers from across the value chain for a concentrated look at the forces shaping global markets. This year’s program covered an unusually wide range of territory, from geopolitics and macroeconomics to fibre performance, specialty cellulose, bleaching chemicals, carbon capture, and a comprehensive market outlook. For those who missed Tree Frog’s coverage, here are all of our summarized stories.

Day One – May 11, 2026

Day Three – May 12, 2026

Key takeaways from Vancouver include:

The 2026 program confronted an unusually turbulent global backdrop — the closure of the Strait of Hormuz following the outbreak of conflict in Iran, escalating US trade policy uncertainty, and a global pulp market navigating the dual pressures of Latin American capacity expansion and China’s accelerating shift toward domestic self-sufficiency. Eleven speakers across two days addressed the forces reshaping the industry, from macroeconomics and fibre performance to specialty markets, chemical supply security, carbon capture, and a comprehensive market outlook. …

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International Pulp Week 2026: Making the Right Fibre Choices

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 12, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Aki Temmes, Executive Vice President of UPM Fibres and a member of the UPM Group Executive Team, opened with a pointed observation about the moment the industry finds itself in: pulp buyers are operating under a tightening triangle of cost pressure, rising quality requirements, and supply security risk — three forces converging simultaneously in ways that make fibre selection more consequential than at any previous point in his 23 years with the company.

Aki Temmes

His presentation drew on UPM’s experience as a multi-fibre pulp producer — offering eucalyptus, Nordic softwood, and Nordic birch from mills on two continents — and on mill trial results demonstrating measurable value from deliberate, data-driven furnish optimization. Temmes noted that hardwood demand will continue to grow despite ongoing uncertainty and increasing Chinese domestic integration, and that softwood, while losing share across most grades, will maintain a relevant position because of its functional properties — particularly its impact on machine runability and end product quality.

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International Pulp Week: Tissue and Other End-Uses

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 12, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Mathieu Wener, Economist with Numera Analytics, presented PPPC and Numera’s latest data and forecasts on global tissue demand, wood-free paper, and boxboard markets, with a closing focus on China’s growing role as an exporter of finished paper and board products.

Mathieu Wener

His presentation painted a picture of a global industry in which aggregate growth continues but is increasingly uneven — slowing in mature markets, shifting in China from domestic consumption to export-driven production, and facing a demographic headwind in North America that will cap the upside for years to come. Global tissue demand grew 1.3% in the first two months of 2026 — the weakest pace since the post-COVID destocking period of 2021, and a slowdown from both last year’s pace and the decade-long trend.

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International Pulp Week 2026: China and Asia in Focus

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 12, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Li Meng, General Manager of PPPC’s Beijing Office, presented an overview of China’s pulp and paper industry development and near-term outlook, structured around the country’s five-year plans — the medium-term strategic blueprints through which the Chinese government sets targets for economic growth, industry development, and environmental protection. Understanding those plans, she said, gives international market participants a reliable window into where Chinese policy is headed and what trade and investment conditions to expect.

Li Meng

China’s pulp and paper industry has grown substantially across the three most recently completed plan periods, spanning 2010 to 2025. The 14th plan period, covering 2020 to 2025, delivered the strongest growth of the last three — approximately 4.6% annually, representing a nearly 25% increase in total production over five years, with 2025 alone showing close to 4% growth in total pulp, paper, and board output. The arc across the three periods, Li said, reflects a progression from volume-driven expansion, through a phase of regulatory consolidation, to what she characterized as accelerated and more sustainable growth.

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International Pulp Week 2026: Global Pulp Markets: Review and Outlook

Kelly McCloskey
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 12, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Emanuele Bona, Vice President Europe at the Pulp and Paper Products Council, delivered the conference’s closing presentation — a comprehensive review of global market pulp demand in the first quarter of 2026, near-term forecasts, and a five-year supply and demand outlook for both softwood and hardwood grades. He opened with an observation that had not been addressed directly by other speakers: the volume of pulp itself transiting the Strait of Hormuz. Of the eight countries with access to the strait, over 200,000 tonnes of softwood pulp — roughly 1% of global softwood demand, approximately half of it fluff — transited the region in 2025. Hardwood volumes were larger at over 800,000 tonnes, representing approximately 2% of global demand.

Emanuele Bona

Not extraordinary in the global context, Bona said, but significant enough to cause meaningful disruption to those supply chains. …Bona presented a world balance showing softwood operating rates holding at approximately 88% in 2026, with both demand and capacity falling roughly 1% each, and hardwood easing from 92% to approximately 90% as demand contracts more sharply than capacity. Over the longer term, both grades are expected to converge around 89% on average — a broadly balanced market, but one defined by slower growth, rising competitive pressure from Latin American hardwood and Western European softwood exports, and an end-use landscape that offers less upside than the previous decade.

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International Pulp Week: Carbon Capture in Pulp & Paper: Monetizing Biogenic CO2

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 11, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Jouni Martiskainen, Project Development Manager with Svante — a Vancouver-based carbon capture technology company with approximately 270 employees and nearly 20 years of development history — presented on the commercial case for carbon capture at pulp mills, covering the financial mechanisms available to support it, the technology the company has developed, and the specific projects underway in the forest products sector. …A central point in Martiskainen’s presentation was why pulp mills are particularly well positioned for carbon capture. The kraft pulping process produces black liquor, which is combusted in the recovery boiler — generating the white plume of steam visible at any kraft mill.

Jouni Martiskainen

That stack gas contains CO2 at a concentration of approximately 15%, compared to roughly 400 parts per million in ambient air. That concentration is a byproduct of the process rather than any deliberate design, but it makes pulp mills among the most efficient biogenic CO2 concentrators in the industrial landscape, significantly reducing the energy and capital required to capture and purify that CO2 to near 100% concentration for storage or utilization downstream.

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International Pulp Week: Specialty Cellulose: Market Dynamics and Outlook

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 11, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Christian Chavassieu, Managing Partner of CelCo, presented on the dissolving wood pulp market — a sector representing approximately 10% of total pulp production, with supply dynamics, competitive structures, and end-use markets that differ significantly from standard market pulp.

Christian Chavassieu

His presentation covered supply, demand, pricing, and competitive structure across the sector’s main sub-segments, with particular focus on the diverging fortunes of commodity textile grades versus specialty grades, the growing role of alternative fibres, and a live anti-dumping trade case at the US Department of Commerce whose outcome could materially reshape sourcing patterns in the US market within days of the conference.

On supply, Chavassieu noted that dissolving wood pulp capacity has grown at roughly 4.1% annually over the past decade, though that pace has slowed recently with the closure of two facilities — a GP mill in the US and the Tembec mill in Temiscaming — and only modest new capacity coming online, primarily from Brazil and a new mill in Portugal.

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International Pulp Week: Northern Softwood in TAD Tissue: Performance That Drives Product Quality

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 12, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Ismo Nousiainen, CEO of Metsä Fibre, the world’s leading bleached softwood market pulp supplier, presented research and mill trial results making the case that northern bleached softwood kraft pulp — NBSK — remains an essential and performance-critical component in through-air-dried, or TAD,

Ismo Nousiainen

tissue production. TAD is the manufacturing technology behind premium tissue products — high-end bath tissue and kitchen towels — in which hot air rather than mechanical pressure dries the tissue web, producing significantly higher bulk, softness, and absorbency than conventional wet-pressed grades. It is the most demanding end use remaining for softwood pulp as hardwood substitution continues across other grades, and the segment where softwood’s functional properties are most clearly differentiated.

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International Pulp Week: Global Trends in Bleaching & Pulping Chemicals

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 12, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Craig Murphy, Director and Global Service Lead for Bleaching Chemicals at Chemical Market Analytics by OPIS, framed his presentation around four regional stories — Latin America growing, China increasingly self-sufficient, North America in managed decline, and Europe under pressure — and traced how those trends are reshaping demand for the chemicals that pulp mills depend on to cook and bleach wood fibre.

Craig Murphy

Running through all of it is the Strait of Hormuz closure, which has created supply disruptions and cost pressures now working their way through chemical markets in ways the industry is still absorbing. …In the Q&A, Kelly McNamara asked which chemical market carries the greatest risk of supply disruption or price volatility for pulp producers. Murphy’s answer was sulfur — a core input to the kraft pulping process. It is a market already under structural pressure before the Hormuz closure, and one the closure is now compounding.

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Business & Politics

Tariffs are gutting Canadian lumber mills. Could higher housing costs follow?

By Fergal McAlinden and Matt Sexton
Canadian Mortgage Professional
May 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Canadian lumber mills are curtailing production, absorbing historic losses, and in some cases closing permanently – all while American competitors operate with a built-in margin advantage engineered by US tariff policy, according to wood market analyst Russ Taylor. …The practical effect is a marketplace that strongly favours US producers. Insulated from import costs, American mills are generating margins that Canadian suppliers cannot access. “The only region really making any money is the US because they’ve got what I call a huge subsidy that they’ve put on importers,” Taylor said. “So they’re gaining the margins that importers aren’t getting.” Those margins have also given US producers room to manoeuvre aggressively on pricing, further cornering their Canadian competitors. “The US mills… know that the Canadians don’t have margins – or they have break-even at best,” Taylor said. Despite the pressure, many Canadian mills have held on far longer than Taylor anticipated. 

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Canadian Government Says Commerce’s Differential Pricing Methodology Is Unlawful

By Jackson Lanzer
Trade Law Daily
May 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The Canadian government is challenging the US Commerce Department’s differential pricing methodology in the ongoing softwood lumber dispute, arguing before the Court of International Trade that the approach is unlawful and that targeted dumping must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. In comments filed May 11, the Canadian parties also contend Commerce unlawfully abandoned its previously used “mixed methodology” analysis and argue the agency’s current approach fails to meet the stricter legal standards emerging after the US Supreme Court’s Loper Bright ruling. [to access the full story a Trade Law Daily subscription is required

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Canadian, U.S., and Mexican manufacturing leaders unite to urge preservation of CUSMA and free trade across North America

Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters
May 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, International

WASHINGTON — Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters (CME) and manufacturing executives from across Canada are joining their counterparts from the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) in the United States and the Confederation of Industrial Chambers of Mexico (CONCAMIN) at the North American Manufacturing Conference in Washington this week to send a clear, united message: North America’s highly integrated manufacturing supply chains depend on preserving CUSMA (USMCA) and the free flow of trade across borders. Leaders from all three countries are urging governments to maintain and strengthen the trilateral agreement that has been the foundation of North America’s industrial competitiveness. The conference program includes executive roundtables and participation from senior trade officials including Canada’s Chief Trade Negotiator to the US, the Deputy US Trade Representative, and the Undersecretary of Foreign Trade at the Mexican Ministry of Economy.

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U.S. Trade Law Enforcement and Section 232 Tariffs Boost Domestic Production and Cut Unfair Trade

By US Lumber Coalition
PR Newswire
May 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON — US trade law enforcement coupled with President Trump’s Section 232 tariff measures have forced a reduction in Canada’s US market share to more natural levels not seen in half a century – currently at 19%, down from 34% in 2016. Simultaneously, ample softwood lumber supply for the US market has been sustained as the US softwood lumber industry responded by making investments to add 8.6 billion board feet of softwood lumber production capacity since 2016. Through these investments, U.S. lumber manufacturing facilities have produced an additional 36 billion board feet of lumber since 2016. That is more U.S. lumber produced by U.S. workers to build U.S. homes while supporting 1.3 million U.S. jobs. …Since August 2025, Canada announced an estimated C$2.1 billion in forestry-specific subsidies designed to counter and undermine U.S. trade law enforcement. In total, Canada’s forest industry has access to new or augmented government support programs amounting to more than C$9.9 billion dollars.

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Federal government invests $12M in B.C. forestry sector

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
May 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Tim Hodgson

The federal government has rolled out financial supports for BC’s beleaguered forestry industry as part of a broader funding initiative to help diversify the sector. Tim Hodgson, Canada’s Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, said that $12.4-million will be provided for 14 BC projects. The funds are part of Ottawa’s commitment to provide $2.35-billion in financial supports for Canada’s forestry industry. …NRCan said, “These projects will advance new low-carbon wood technologies; expand the use of mass timber in construction; support Indigenous groups and forest sector businesses; increase the capacity of manufacturers to add more value to wood products; and diversify Canada’s export markets for forest products.” …The largest part of the newly announced funding in BC is $7.5-million for Nelson-based Spearhead Timberworks, which specializes in glued, laminated wood products. Other recipients include Yinka Dene Economic Development, Forestry Innovation Investment, BC Institute of Technology and Laxyip Management Office Society. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

Related coverage by:

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Governments of Canada and Alberta partner to support tariff-impacted workers and strengthen the workforce

By Employment and Social Development Canada
Government of Canada
May 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

CALGARY — Workers in sectors facing global tariff pressures will receive support to help them adapt, retrain and seize new opportunities as a result of a partnership agreement announced by federal Minister Eleanor Olszewski (on behalf of the Honourable Patty Hajdu, Minister of Jobs), and Joseph Schow, Alberta’s Minister of Jobs, Economy, Trade and Immigration. Specifically, $68.5 million over three years will be invested through the new Canada–Alberta Workforce Tariff Response to support workers and employers in the steel and softwood lumber sectors, as well as other directly and indirectly tariff-affected sectors. This new funding will help more than 7,800 workers in Alberta build new skills and transition into the in-demand jobs being created by Alberta’s strong economic growth and significant major project demand.

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Make More in B.C. project will protect, create forestry jobs

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
May 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A $2-million grant from the Province to FPInnovations will lay the groundwork to help support the development of economic hubs intended to support and grow the forestry sector. The Make More in B.C. project will support B.C.’s wood products. …Economic hubs are at the heart of the Make More in B.C initiative, fostering regional collaboration, connecting local manufacturers with local contractors and First Nations partners, unlocking fibre and forging new opportunities. …Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests said “The Make More in B.C. project is about building a stronger, more resilient forest sector that is never again dependent on a single trading partner like the US.” Nick Arkle, CEO of Gorman Group, recently found success with this innovative concept. …The groundwork Arkle has laid through his Merritt-based working group, sets the foundation for BC’s first official economic hub in the Merritt Timber Supply Area.

Additional coverage in:

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Domtar, owner of Maniwaki, Que., sawmill open to selling it

CBC News
May 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Domtar says it is open to selling the Maniwaki, Que., sawmill it’s been temporarily closing and reopening since the end of 2024, leaving more than 100 workers in further limbo. The company, which acquired the mill when it bought Resolute Forest Products in 2023, cited difficult market conditions and U.S. softwood lumber duties when announcing a closure in September 2025. Domtar gave staff and elected officials an update at a meeting Tuesday night and later confirmed the company’s latest thinking to Radio-Canada. “We don’t see recovery in the short, medium or long term,” said Guillaume Julien, Domtar’s eastern Canadian senior director of public affairs, in French. “We think the best scenario would be to find a local owner.”

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Ontario Investing $10 Million to Modernize Georgia-Pacific North Woods Facility

By Ministry of Natural Resources
The Government of Ontario
May 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ENGLEHART, Ontario — The Ontario government is investing $10 million in Georgia-Pacific North Woods to advance a major $191 million upgrade to its OSB plant. The project will support the increased production of Ontario-made wood products and protect more than 220 jobs and hundreds of indirect jobs in the region. …The province is making strategic investments to help forest sector businesses adapt, compete and grow to stay resilient in the face of US tariffs. …The government’s investment under the Forest Biomass Program will support Georgia-Pacific’s $191 million project, helping modernize and expand operations at its Englehart facility. The project includes upgrades to log processing operations, construction of new facilities, expansion of on-site storage and modern equipment. Once completed, these improvements will increase production by 14%, strengthening a key anchor facility in the northeast. Georgia-Pacific will also acquire a thermal energy system to use wood by-products for heat and power, supporting sustainable forest management by maximizing fibre value.

Additional coverage in Northern Ontario Business: Province chips in with biomass funding for Englehart OSB mill

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In Memoriam

William (Bill) Claude Williams Obituary

Everden Rust Funeral Services
May 15, 2026
Category: In Memoriam
Region: Canada West

Bill Williams

Bill Williams lived a life as expansive as the forests he dedicated himself to. He was born in Vancouver on February 28, 1947. Bill married Leslie in August 1976. After graduating from UBC Forestry and beginning his career with the BC Ministry of Forests, Bill moved to Prince George in 1978, where he built much of his life, later finding a new home in Penticton in 2017. For most of his working life, Bill was a Registered Professional Forester, a career he pursued with quiet pride and genuine commitment. His work left a lasting and positive mark on the forests of British Columbia, a legacy that will endure. Those who knew Bill best knew him first as a storyteller. On the long drives from Prince George to Vancouver with his family, he had a gift for spinning tales that kept the kids captivated for hours. To unwind from work, Bill found community through his love of bluegrass music. 

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Finance & Economics

Interfor reports Q1, 2026 net loss of $63 million

By Interfor Corporation
Globe Newswire
May 14, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

BURNABY, BC — Interfor Corporation recorded a net loss in Q1’26 of $63.3 million, compared to a net loss of $104.6 million in Q4’25 and a net loss of $35.1 million in Q1’25. Adjusted EBITDA was $30.7 million on sales of $643.2 million in Q1’26 versus an Adjusted EBITDA loss of $29.2 million on sales of $600.6 million in Q4’25 and Adjusted EBITDA of $48.6 million on sales of $735.5 million in Q1’25. Highlights include: Lumber production of 856 million board feet was up 103 million board feet versus the preceding quarter driven primarily by higher operating rates at the U.S. Northwest and B.C. operations. Q4’25 production was impacted by temporary production curtailments in response to weak market conditions. Due to weak market conditions and other factors, Interfor indefinitely curtailed operations at its Ear Falls, Ontario sawmill in Q1’26 and at its Nairn and Gogama, Ontario sawmills in April 2026.

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Canada’s housing starts jump 17% in April, six-month trend increases 3.2%

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation
May 15, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — The six-month trend in housing starts was higher in April, with an increase of 3.2% to 256,777 units, according to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC). The trend measure is a six-month moving average of the seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of total housing starts for all areas in Canada. Actual housing starts were down 1% year-over-year in centres with a population of 10,000 or greater, with 21,805 units recorded in April, compared to 21,938 units in April 2025. The year-to-date total was 71,011 units, up 6% from the same period in 2025, driven by higher starts in British Columbia and Ontario. The total monthly SAAR of housing starts for all areas in Canada increased 17% in April (279,317 units) compared to March (239,747 units).

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Conifex reports Q1, 2026 net loss of $9.4 million

By Conifex Timber Inc.
Globe Newswire
May 14, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC — Conifex Timber reported results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2026.  EBITDA was negative $7.7 million for the quarter compared to EBITDA of negative $12.6 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 and positive EBITDA of $4.9 million in the first quarter of 2025. Net loss was $9.4 million for the quarter versus a net loss of $11.4 million in the previous quarter and net income of $0.6 million in the first quarter of 2025. In March 2026, Conifex Mackenzie Forest Products, entered into a $19 million secured term loan with the Business Development Bank of Canada under the Softwood Lumber Guarantee Program… to support working capital and operations. In early February 2026, Conifex resumed sawmill operations at the Mackenzie Mill under a two-shift configuration following an extended period of single-shift operation. …The Power Plant continued to operate on its normal schedule.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Yukon First Nation says it can pump out 250 houses per year — if it gets the timber

CBC News
May 14, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Devin Brodhagen is building timber houses. Brodhagen is president of First Kaska, a contracting company wholly owned by Liard First Nation in southern Yukon. Through its subsidiary Heartland Timber Homes, the company has been replacing run down and mouldy homes in the First Nation with modern timber-frame houses, complete with electrical outlets embedded in every wood-panelled wall… “They’re long-lasting. You won’t find mould in these homes,” Brodhagen said. “The warmth in them, the efficiency, and just the beauty of living in a log home in the Yukon — it’s … nostalgic.” Now, with an investment from the Canadian Northern Economic Development Agency (CanNor), the company is accelerating its work thanks to new state-of-the-art milling equipment purchased from Italy. …Currently, each house is constructed using timber harvested from standing dead or fire-flashed trees in the region, a sustainable practice that ensures no healthy trees are cut. But that is already inadequate for meeting demand.

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Vancouver development team proposes city’s first-ever ‘pod hotel’ with 408 sleeping units

By Mike Howell
Business in Vancouver
May 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, US West

The City of Vancouver has received an application to rezone a downtown property to allow for the development of what would be a first in terms of a hotel design concept in the city—a 22-storey “pod hotel” containing 408 sleeping units. Unison Architecture and a developer want to build the hotel—out of a combination of concrete, steel and mass timber—on a narrow 25-foot-wide lot at 948 Howe St. “This project is targeted at budget-conscious urban travellers, especially 18- to 34-year-olds,” according to the development team’s application booklet. …Each nano pod would provide a private sleeping capsule of roughly 33 square feet. …Each nano room would be a fully enclosed space of roughly 105 square feet. The concept is not new, with Whistler and Richmond offering pod hotels. The form of accommodation is also popular in other countries, including parts of the US, Asia and Europe.

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Forestry

What is Forest Management Certification in Canada and Why Does it Matter?

By Étienne Bélanger, VP, Indigenous Relations and Forestry
Forest Products Association of Canada
May 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Canada’s forests are managed responsibly, as expected by Canadians coast to coast to coast. Our forests support jobs and communities, are home to wildlife and biodiversity and must remain healthy for future generations. Forest management certification plays an important role in meeting those expectations by ensuring harvesting is carried out in a manner that respects and maintains the full range of environmental, social, and economic values across forest landscapes, while providing independent verification that forestry practices meet high standards. Forest management certification is a voluntary, third-party system …The three independent certification programs used in Canada – the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), the Program for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC) Canada and the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) – are applied voluntarily by different companies and groups, and information is often scattered across multiple sources. To make it more transparent and accessible, FPAC has brought this information together in one place through its forest certification webpage

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‘Everybody remembers where they were on that tragic day’: Lac du Bonnet marks 1 year since wildfire

By Santiago Arias Orozco
CBC News
May 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Manitoba — Spring brings a sombre and painful reminder for Lac du Bonnet resident Riva Karklin. “Remember when it was a normal spring? When we were getting our seedlings and our tomato plants planted and taking them over to the neighbours’ house ?” she said. “This is what we were doing last year when it all happened.” …Firefighters were called to put out flames burning through the grass only kilometres east of her house at around 9:30 a.m. Crews arrived, and the blaze had already engulfed dozens of pine trees in dry ground. Winds were gusting to 70 km/h, fanning what became a raging wildfire that burned through at least 40 square kilometres and forced around 1,100 residents out of their homes, the municipality said. …Fire Chief Earl Simmons said the majority of the fire spread that first day. Crews spent a week keeping the flames from spreading and putting out hot spots. 

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How can lightning strike, but a wildfire doesn’t appear until days or even weeks later?

BC Wildfire Service
May 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Think about a small chip in your car’s windshield. At first, it might seem minor and barely noticeable. But later conditions change, the temperature drops and you hit a bump in the road and that tiny chip suddenly spreads into a large crack. Lightning can work in a similar way. A strike may leave behind heat deep in tree roots, stumps or underground organic material without immediately creating visible flames or smoke, especially if the storm also brought rain. Then, days or weeks later, as conditions become hotter, drier and windier, that hidden heat can begin to spread and ignite nearby fuels, eventually becoming a visible wildfire. Areas with a higher Duff Moisture Code are more likely to sustain these holdover fires. So, how do we know where to watch? We use Environment and Climate Change Canada’s Canadian Lightning Detection Network (CLDN), for an instantaneous and constant feed of lightning data…

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Wildsight Revelstoke querying industry on proposed Mount MacPherson logging

By Evert Lindquist
Revelstoke Review
May 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Two cutblocks proposed for Revelstoke’s Mount MacPherson are prompting Wildsight Revelstoke to engage B.C.’s lumber licensee about minimizing logging in that forest. Following a commenting period last year, BC Timber Sales (BCTS) is putting the two cutblocks, No. 52065 and No. 52066, up for sale… Combined, they cover 19.4 hectares of old- and second-growth forest. BCTS is currently welcoming applications for timber sales licences to harvest forest in these lots, as well as applications for road permits… Wildsight Revelstoke will meet a local BCTS representative this month to discuss the two proposed cutblocks, part of a larger conversation about several logging operations pitched by industry for north of town. …Ahead of its meeting with BCTS, Wildsight has been visiting Cutblocks 52065 and 52066 to appraise the towering cedar-hemlock trees and moisture-rich riparian habitats there. Black Press Media visited one of them with Wildsight Revelstoke board members Arnoul Mateo and Fabien Stocco.

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Turning Forestry Research into Practice: New Opportunity in Smithers

Bulkley Valley Research Centre
May 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Bulkley Valley Research Centre is seeking a dynamic Knowledge Exchange Specialist to help bridge the gap between forestry research and on-the-ground practice in British Columbia. Based in Smithers — with remote work options across BC — the full-time, two-year position will support projects funded through the Silviculture Innovation Program and the Forest Enhancement Society of BC. The successful candidate will work closely with researchers, practitioners and grant recipients to turn complex forestry science into accessible, practical tools and stories for diverse audiences. Responsibilities range from field tours, workshops and webinars to technical writing, multimedia storytelling and extension materials focused on innovative forestry practices, ecosystem health and managing for multiple forest values. Ideal applicants will combine strong forestry knowledge with excellent communication skills and a passion for translating ideas into action. Applications remain open until May 31, 2026, or until a suitable candidate is found.

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B.C. firm penalized after government-mandated forest fertilizer kills 13 cows

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
May 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A BC government decision to source a forest fertilizer outside the US for “political reasons” ended in disaster in an incident that killed 13 cattle and triggered a major environmental penalty. Every year, BC’s Forest Investment Program tenders contracts to fertilize thousands of hectares of forest across the province in projects meant to boost tree growth for harvesting and to capture carbon. One of the sub-contracts went to Western Aerial Applications in late September 2025. Its job was to use helicopters to scatter a newly sourced blend of fertilizer onto forests near Quesnel, BC. That plan fell apart when employees overfilled bags used to load helicopters with fertilizer. In at least six locations off Highway 26, the blue pellets spilled to the ground in unintended concentrations. …Tim Singer, a range officer with the Ministry of Forests, would later document 13 dead cows, including several found next to spilled fertilizer. 

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Logging planned for Peachland watershed will be modest: BC Timber Sales

By Pat Bulmer
Castanet
May 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Promises that Peachland’s watershed won’t become a massive clearcut reassured some members of council, but didn’t fully alleviate their concerns on Tuesday. “We need to protect our water. Hearing this gives us a little bit of hope,” said Mayor Patrick Van Minsel, pointing out that “if any more sediment comes down into our streams, into our water treatment plant, it will cost us money.” Representatives from Gorman Bros. and BC Timber Sales presented to council and a full house of observers from the Peachland Watershed Protection Alliance. … The Peachland watershed is about 12,000 hectares … BCTS has rights to log about 11% of that, or 1,370 hectares. Gorman Brothers logs about five per cent. Gorman representatives Matt Scott and Jason Carmichael outlined logging techniques used to avoid clearcutting and leave a healthy number of trees standing — or “retention” as the loggers called it. 

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Ontario clamps down on conservation authorities as consolidation planning continues

By Fatima Syed
The Narwhal
May 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The amalgamation of Ontario’s 36 conservation authorities into nine regional bodies is expected to take effect in early 2027. A new directive from Environment Minister Todd McCarthy orders conservation authorities to halt any major decision-making processes, such as changing staffing structures or purchasing property, in the meantime. After a meeting between Environment Ministry officials and conservation authority staff on May 6, 2026, one public servant told The Narwhal, “The province has essentially handcuffed conservation authorities.” …A leaked document and a recording of an internal conversation between Ministry of Environment officials and conservation authority officials for this story. …In the recording, ministry officials are heard assuring attendees that they were happy to keep working with conservation authority staff, and that the government remains committed to preserving drinking water protections. But the officials repeatedly said things are still being figured out. They acknowledged the lack of answers was “not terribly reassuring” and “anxiety producing, probably” for conservation authorities.  

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Ontario forest fire officials warn of quickly-changing conditions ahead of long weekend

By Sarah Law
CBC News
May 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

While Ontario has seen a much slower start to the wildfire season compared to last year, officials are warning people heading into the May long weekend that conditions can quickly change. There have been 22 wildfires confirmed in the province since the season began April 1, compared to 68 fires this time last year, said Alison Bezubiak, a fire information officer with Aviation, Forest Fire and Emergency Services in the northwest region. “The 10-year average for this date is 56, so we are below last year and the 10-year average in terms of total number of fires confirmed,” she told CBC News Thursday morning. One small fire, measuring 0.1 hectares, is being held in the Kenora district near Grassy Narrows First Nation as of Thursday. However, forest fire danger ratings range throughout the region, with the Fort Frances area seeing extreme hazard levels, according to the province’s interactive forest fire map.

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Nova Scotia unveils water bombers contracted for wildfire season

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
May 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Nova Scotia’s emergency management minister says the province is better prepared going into wildfire season this year with the addition of five contracted aircraft. “We cannot control the weather and cannot eliminate risk entirely,” Kim Masland told reporters. “But what we can control is how we are prepared and today we are even more prepared than we were yesterday.” Masland and Premier Tim Houston were on hand at the Debert air tanker base to show off four Air Tractor AT-802 water bombers and a Cessna Caravan Bird Dog co-ordination plane that the province contracted from New Brunswick-based Forest Protection Ltd. The $6.5-million contract runs until the end of September, with the ability to be extended, and includes pilots and operational staff, as well as housing and maintenance for the planes. …The money for the contract is part of $6.8 million announced earlier this year…

See photo gallery in Government of Nova Scotia release: Province Contracts Water Bombers for Wildfire Season

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Wood Heat Conversions to Support Forestry Sector, Strengthen Energy Security

By Ministry of Natural Resources
Government of Nova Scotia
May 15, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

NOVA SCOTIA — The Province continues to support the forestry sector by making wood heat and building materials a priority in public buildings. A request for proposals issued Thursday, May 14, will see five buildings converted to heating systems that use local wood products. “We are seizing an opportunity to prioritize a local product from our forestry sector that also makes our province more self-reliant and energy secure,” said Public Works Minister Fred Tilley. “By using more local wood products, we are creating jobs, growing our economy and creating a brighter future for Nova Scotia.” …This is the first major project under the government’s wood initiative announced in July 2025. The deadline for submissions is June 24. Using wood products aligns with the Nova Scotia Loyal program, reduces reliance on imports and enhances export markets. It also supports the forestry sector, reduces greenhouse gas emissions and helps the province move to a low-carbon economy.

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Concentrated rainfall is increasing global aridity says Université du Québec à Montréal

By Université du Québec à Montréal
PR Newswire
May 13, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada East

MONTRÉAL – With global warming, rainfall is increasingly falling in short, intense, concentrated bursts separated by longer dry periods, and these changes could have a potentially devastating effect on the planet. These are the conclusions of a new study co‑authored by Corey Lesk, at the Université du Québec à Montréal, and Justin S. Mankin, at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. … They observed that regardless of the total amount of water received annually, this new rainfall regime alters how precipitation is absorbed by the soil and promotes greater aridity across the Earth’s surface. “Drought is often measured by what is lacking–the total amount of rainfall–but how precipitation falls is just as important,” explains Professor Corey Lesk. “This new type of rainfall regime leads to increased evaporation at the land surface, limiting the soil’s ability to retain moisture, and thus reducing the amount of water available on land for human populations and ecosystems.”

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Health & Safety

Planning for travel, being prepared this long weekend

By Ministry of Emergency Management and Climate Readiness
Government of British Columbia
May 14, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Residents and long-weekend travellers are encouraged to plan, be prepared and stay safe this Victoria Day long weekend as fire prohibitions take effect in parts of B.C. Most new wildfires at this time of year are preventable. People are asked to take precautions with any fire use, stay up to date on current wildfire activity, check for road closures, evacuation alerts and orders, and pay attention to weather conditions. Know the campfire restrictions wherever you are: Category 2 and 3 open fire prohibitions are in place throughout the Cariboo Fire Centre, Coastal Fire Centre, Kamloops Fire Centre and parts of the Prince George Fire Centre and Northwest Fire Centre. Effective Friday, May 15, 2026, noon, the Category 1 campfire prohibition will be rescinded throughout the Coastal Fire Centre.  

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2025 New or Revised ACGIH Threshold Limit Values and B.C. Exposure Limits (December)

WorkSafeBC
May 15, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

The Occupational Health and Safety Regulation provides that, except as otherwise determined by WorkSafeBC, an employer must ensure no worker is exposed to a substance exceeding the Threshold Limit Values (TLVs) prescribed by the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH). Twice a year, the ACGIH publishes a list of substances for which they have set new or revised TLVs. When WorkSafeBC adopts the new or revised ACGIH TLVs as regulatory exposure limits for chemical substances, these exposure limits are referred to as B.C. Exposure Limits (ELs). An EL is the maximum allowed airborne concentration for a chemical substance for which it is believed that nearly all workers may be exposed over a working lifetime and experience no adverse health effects. ELs may be set out as an 8-hour time-weighted average concentration, a 15-minute short-term exposure limit, or a ceiling limit.

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Province of BC recommends grab-and-go kits for evacuations

By John Arendt
Alberni Valley Times
May 12, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

The B.C. provincial government has information about preparing a grab-and-go kit in case of an evacuation. The small emergency kit is designed to be easy to take in case of an evacuation alert or order. The supplies should be stored in one or two containers such as plastic bins or duffel bags, and should be stored in an area of the home that is easy to access. …The non-perishable food items should be enough for three days to one week, with a manual can opener. Four litres of water per person per day is also suggested, for drinking and sanitation. During the 2025 wildfire season, 30 communities were affected, and 2,670 people were evacuated. In addition, other disasters, including atmospheric rivers and floods, have resulted in evacuation alerts and orders. PreparedBC has information on planning for emergencies and dealing with evacuations.

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Forest History & Archives

Elliot Lake native documents Northern Ontario’s logging past, one hike at a time

By Sandra Maitland
Elliot Lake Today
May 14, 2026
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada East

The Elliot Lake Historical Society is hosting a June 25 event that will bring together logging historians from across Northern Ontario—and spotlight Dan Kachur’s latest work chronicling how companies like Cook Brothers, Waldie, and McFadden built their camps. Dan Kachur, 63, grew up in Elliot Lake and now teaches information technology at Sault College, but his passion is searching for signs of the logging industry that took place in Northern Ontario in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s. His passion comes from having grandparents involved in the logging industry. …He has documented his findings in three volumes of Old Lumber Camps. Volume 1 is about Elliot Lake; volume 2, Blind River; and volume 3, Thessalon. Volume 1 will be on sale at an upcoming event at Collins Hall on June 25, hosted and organized by the Elliot Lake Historical Society.

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