Region Archives: Canada

Business & Politics

Steelworkers: we fight for better

By Marty Warren, National Director
United Steelworkers
December 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Marty Warren

In September, our union and our movement lost a great leader – Leo W. Gerard, our longtime International President. …Today in our ongoing trade crisis with the US, Leo’s lessons on “fighting back” continue to resonate with me as a leader and trade unionist. …With an era of new leadership in our great union upon us, I am proud to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with International President-elect Roxanne Brown. She is a powerful and inspiring voice for workers across North America and around the globe. …Here in Canada, I’m proud of how we have been fighting every day since massive tariffs were imposed on Canadian steel, aluminum and forestry products. …Our union has led the way in demanding the federal government provide immediate support for communities under pressure and to deliver a real industrial strategy that secures the future of Canadian-made wood and forest products. …As the year draws to a close, I’m also thinking of our members who may be on strike or locked out over the holidays. 

Read More

Industry Stakeholders Discuss State of USMCA at US Trade Representative Hearing

Holland & Knight Alert LLP
December 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR) held a hearing regarding the six-year review of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA). Though some stakeholders advocated for maintaining the current framework, many called for targeted updates. Despite varied perspectives, there was broad consensus that USMCA should be preserved. Transshipment and circumvention of Section 232 tariffs emerged as recurring concerns, particularly from the automotive, steel and aluminum, and wood and lumber sectors. …Stakeholders from the wood products, millwork and cabinetry industries raised serious concerns about how USMCA’s current rules of origin are being exploited to circumvent U.S. trade remedies and undermine domestic manufacturers. …The organization’s representative urged the adoption of Labor Value Content (LVC) rules for wood products modeled after those used in the automotive sector to ensure that qualifying goods reflect substantial North American production and fair labor practices.

Read More

Kirsten Hillman, Canada’s lead trade negotiator and ambassador to U.S., to leave post in new year

By Catharine Tunney
CBC News
December 9, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Kirsten Hillman

Kirsten Hillman, Canada’s longtime ambassador to the United States, is leaving her post in the new year — marking a key shakeup amid tense trade relations with U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration. Hillman announced the move Tuesday, saying she will “remain available” to Canada’s negotiating team as they navigate the potentially rocky period ahead. “It has been the greatest privilege of my professional life to have served and represented Canada and Canadians during this critical period in Canada-U.S. relations,” she wrote. …The lawyer helped the former Liberal government negotiate the updated North American trade agreement — now known north of the border as CUSMA. …She also served as chief negotiator for the Trans-Pacific Partnership. …Mark Wiseman is one name being considered as a replacement for Hillman, but the process hasn’t been finalized, sources told Radio-Canada. Wiseman is a member of Carney’s Canada-U.S. relations advisory council.

Read More

Will Trump Torpedo North American Trade?

By Stephania Taladrid
The New Yorker
December 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, International

The negotiations that remade the North American Free Trade Agreement were, as one participant put it, a series of “near-death” experiences. …In the years since the U.S.M.C.A was signed, Mexico and Canada have become America’s top trading partners. Millions of jobs depend on this economic alliance, which exceeds $1.8 trillion in trade. …Last week, Trump suggested that he would exit the U.S.M.C.A.: “We’ll either let it expire or, well, maybe work out another deal with Mexico and Canada.” Some observers discount Trump’s bluster as mere gamesmanship. …He returned to the White House on a promise to create jobs and lower prices—to make the country “boom like we’ve never boomed before.” Instead, tariffs are fuelling inflation, and many experts believe that it is only a matter of time before the economy starts hemorrhaging jobs. …As in the previous round of negotiations, time does not appear to be on Trump’s side.

In related coverage:

Read More

West Fraser’s Al Caputo retiring after 40 years in HR

By Sara Dobson
The Canadian HR Reporter
December 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Al Caputo

After almost 40 years in HR and close to two decades at West Fraser, Al Caputo is preparing to step away at the end of the year to retire. The vice-president of human resources says he stayed on longer than originally planned to make sure the transition is solid. …Caputo’s start in HR was not automatic. Graduating from university in 1984 with a commerce degree from the University of Alberta, majoring in marketing and human resources, he entered a brutal recession with “no jobs” on offer. …Eventually Caputo landed an assistant HR role at a mill in Quesnel, B.C., backing up the HR manager. …Caputo has been based at West Fraser’s corporate office in Vancouver for roughly the past seven years. The company operates in a high‑risk industry, with around 10,000 employees across Canada, the US and Europe. The company runs about 50 manufacturing facilities, roughly split between Canada and the US. 

Read More

U.S. businesses claim Canada is a back door for products from China

By Mike Crawley
CBC News
December 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

As US President Trump sticks with his campaign of tariffs on imports from Canada, some American industries are accusing Canadian competitors of using cheap materials from China in ways that violate free trade rules and undercut U.S. companies. The accusations emerged during recent public hearings in Washington into the future of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA). …Luke Meisner, counsel for the American Kitchen Cabinet Alliance, told the hearings that Canada and Mexico have become conduits for products from China, circumventing the hefty countervailing duties the US imposed on Chinese-made cabinets and materials in 2020. …Over the past five years, Canada “dramatically increased” its imports of made-in-China cabinets and cabinet materials — such as plywood, medium-density fibreboard (MDF) and moulding — while at the same time boosting exports of finished cabinets to the US, Meisner said. …The Canadian Kitchen Cabinet Association defends its products as Canadian-made.

Read More

Brink Forest Products begins three-week curtailment at three Prince George-area sawmills

By Brendan Pawliw
My Prince George Now
December 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The three-week shut down Brink Forest Products Prince George, Vanderhoof and Houston sawmills begins Thursday. CEO John Brink said there are a trio of reasons for the temporary shut down. …“The reasons are in public forest policies in BC, a lack of access to fibre and then on top of all of that duties through the US.” …“We will go down temporarily starting on December the 11th until the 6th of January where we will re-evaluate.” Brink noted this is just the second time in the company’s history, a tough decision like this had to be made. “We only slowed down once and that is when the river flooded back in 2008 for about three months. Gradually in the last six months, we have reduced our operations to about 25% of the volume.” The temporary closure impacts between 75 and 80 workers.

Read More

Cariboo-Prince George MP Todd Doherty calls for new softwood lumber agreement

By Patrick Davies
The Williams Lake Tribune
December 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Todd Doherty

The greatest gift the federal government could give BC workers this Christmas is a new softwood lumber agreement (SLA) with the United States. That’s the sentiment Cariboo-Prince George MP Todd Doherty has been expressing for not only the last several weeks but for the last 10 years he’s been in government. Doherty noted that following the imminent closure of West Fraser 100 Mile Lumber, the closure of the Draxx pellet plant in Williams Lake and now the closure of a pulp mill in Crofton, the forestry sector needs support like never before. …The pushback Doherty receives is that their funds and government support programs are in place to help displaced workers. His question is “what happens when the money runs out?” …“A softwood lumber agreement would bring long-term stability to an industry that has been rocked for the last 10 years,” Doherty remarked.

Read More

Port Alberni paper mill remains operational

By David Wiwchar
Nanaimo News Now
December 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Domtar officials are reassuring their Port Alberni workers that the closure of the company’s Crofton Mill will have minimal impact here. Chris Stoicheff – Senior Director of Public Affairs at Domtar – says the company and entire industry needs provincial forestry rules to change to ensure fibre supply to BC mills. “We’re going to continue to operate that mill for the foreseeable future, but I think we’re also quite direct about the challenges that the industry is facing in BC and what we’ve been quite clear that those are policy driven constraints.” he said. Stoicheff says while most of Port Alberni’s pulp came from Crofton, that supply will now come from their Howe Sound mill. He said local MP Gord Johns work to secure a biomass tax credit is an example of the government support the forest industry needs.

Read More

B.C. to amend Indigenous rights act after court ruling on mineral claims

By Justine Hunter
The Globe and Mail
December 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

British Columbia’s NDP government will amend its landmark reconciliation law, the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, in response to a BC Court of Appeal decision that found the province’s mineral claims regime is “inconsistent” with the requirements of DRIPA. The court’s judgment establishes a new benchmark for the implementation of the declaration… creating a binding obligation on government to abide by the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, or UNDRIP. It is the second time in recent months that Eby’s government has had to respond to a court decision that redefines his reconciliation agenda. …On Monday, Mr. Eby told reporters his government will amend DRIPA, although he rejects calls from the opposition to repeal the law entirely. …As Canada and the provinces seek to quickly advance major resource projects in response to international trade instability, those commitments to seek consent will be tested. [to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

In related coverage:

Read More

Canada rising to the challenge

By MP Stephen Fuhr
The Kelowna Capital News
December 9, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Stephen Fuhr

Softwood lumber has always been a cornerstone of British Columbia’s economy, and the pressures facing the sector today are significant. That is why our government has continued to step up with real and tangible support. This past summer, the Prime Minister, the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, and I announced new measures in West Kelowna to help mills weather the ongoing trade challenges. A few weeks ago, nearly a billion dollars in additional federal support was introduced to strengthen the industry and protect jobs in communities that depend on forestry. We are also taking action to prioritize Canadian softwood lumber here at home, cutting interprovincial freight rates for lumber by up to 50 percent… I saw first-hand what that means during a recent visit to Tolko in Kelowna. …This past week, I met with the Premier of British Columbia to discuss the issues that matter most to our province and to communities like Kelowna.

Read More

Still standing, still fighting, still supporting our communities

By Ted Dergousoff, president, Independent Lumber Manufacturers Association
The Nelson Star
December 9, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Ted Dergousoff

The independent, family-run mills that form the backbone of the Independent Lumber Manufacturers Association have been here for generations. Long-term sustainability is at the core of what we do. We want B.C.’s forest resource available for our kids and grandkids: for recreation, preservation, watersheds, and responsible harvesting. Critics of the current system say they support sustainable logging. So do we. Even in today’s circumstances across British Columbia, ILMA members are still standing. Still operating. Still fighting to support the workers, families, and communities that rely on us. Not a single ILMA mill has shut down. …Our business model is sustainable, labour intensive, and community centred. …ILMA members are not giant corporations beholden to distant boards and shareholders. …We are urging the Province of British Columbia to act immediately to address policies that make B.C. the highest-cost lumber producer in Canada. Thousands of direct and indirect jobs are on the line, not just in forestry, but in transportation, equipment repair, construction, local government, and service industries that rely on mill workers as customers.

Read More

Sawmill closure ‘devastating’ to small B.C. community

By Lyndsay Duncombe and Akshay Kulkarni
CBC News
December 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

100 Mile House Mayor & Council

The closure of a lumber mill in BC’s South Cariboo has local officials warning the impact will reach far beyond the more than 100 people directly losing their jobs. West Fraser Timber announced it would shut its mill in 100 Mile House by the end of the year, saying it couldn’t reliably access enough economically viable timber either locally or further afield. Its closure will put more than 165 people out of work as a result. …”The impact — emotionally, physically, spiritually — when these things happen is very devastating,” said 100 Mile House resident and longtime forestry worker Sven Birkner. …100 Mile House Mayor Maureen Pinkney says she is lobbying federal and provincial governments for cash, and is trying to attract new business to the community of around 2,000 people. She knows other communities are doing the same.

Read More

Top New Brunswick court removes private forest land from Wolastoqey title case

By Jacques Poitras
CBC News
December 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

New Brunswick’s top court has narrowed the scope of a major title claim by the Wolastoqey Nation, excluding private lands belonging to three large forestry companies from any ownership claim [J.D. Irving Ltd., H.J. Crabbe and Sons, and Acadian Timber]. The Court of Appeal says however that the Wolastoqey can continue their case against the Crown — but only for damages and compensation they deserve for the loss of those same now-private lands. Former chief justice Ernest Drapeau said he was seeking “to open a clearer path to peaceful and respectful reconciliation between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Canadians in this province.” The ruling distinguishes between a declaration of Aboriginal title — the equivalent of awarding present-day ownership — and a finding of Aboriginal title, which would acknowledge the Wolastoqey never gave up ownership and deserve compensation. …Wolastoqey chiefs said they were asking their lawyers to seek an appeal at the Supreme Court of Canada.

Related in the Financial Post: Wolastoqey Nation plans to take title claim of forest land appeal to Supreme Court

Read More

Bragg family in line to buy Northern Pulp timberlands for $235M

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
December 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

John Bragg

The Bragg family, one of Nova Scotia’s richest families is in line to buy the former timberland holdings once controlled by Northern Pulp. The family was selected as the successful bidder for 173,000 hectares of land and assets. The deal, worth $235 million, is subject to certain conditions and regulatory approvals, including approval by the Supreme Court of British Columbia, where Northern Pulp’s creditor protection process has been playing out. A hearing is scheduled for Dec. 16. “The Bragg family has been in the forestry business for several generations,” said John Bragg. The Bragg Group holdings also include Oxford Frozen Foods and Eastlink. “Our management team and family are dedicated to good forestry practices. We look forward to working with the forestry team at Northern Pulp and Northern Timber, and their associates. We are unable to comment on existing forestry operations, as it is very early days.”

Read More

A seven-day strike has been called at the Kruger plant in LaSalle

The Canadian Press in CTV News
December 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

LASALLE, Quebec — Around 100 workers at the Kruger cardboard packaging plant in LaSalle launched a seven-day strike on Wednesday morning. This strike follows another in November, which lasted a day and a half. Wage increases are at the heart of the labour dispute. Union members rejected the latest offers by a margin of 92.5% last Saturday. The offers were a compromise submitted by the conciliator assigned to the case. Union president Benoît St-Cyr says that the future collective agreement must “prevent the impoverishment of workers, considering the high inflation during the term of the last collective agreement.” Company management denies that the employers’ offers will result in impoverishment. “Contrary to what seems to be being conveyed, our offer makes up for the high inflation of recent years and improves the purchasing power of our employees in the future,” it said. 

Read More

New questions raised about future of Terrace Bay pulp mill

By Gary Rinne
Northern Ontario Business
December 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TERRACE BAY, Ontario — New concerns are being raised about the future of the idled pulp mill at Terrace Bay. A source with the Steelworkers union has told Dougall Media he understands the company is keeping the mill unheated this winter for budget reasons. Thunder Bay-Superior North MPP Lise Vaugeois said she’s heard the same thing from Terrace Bay Mayor Paul Malashewski. There’s no confirmation so far from AV Terrace Bay, but Vaugeois raised the issue in the legislature. “If the mill is not being heated, it’s game over, and this important piece of forestry infrastructure becomes worthless,” she said. …Mike Harris, the minister of natural resources said, “We’re currently evaluating all options when it comes to AV Terrace Bay,” he replied. “We’re going to continue to work with stakeholders and make sure that we do the right thing by Northern Ontario.” …The company suspended production in January 2024.

Read More

Finance & Economics

Lumber futures Lifted by Dovish Fed

Trading View
December 12, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures traded above $550 per thousand board feet as markets absorbed a dovish turn from the Federal Reserve that brightened the demand outlook for construction materials. The Fed’s widely anticipated 25bp cut and Chair Powell’s dovish rhetoric pushed traders to price additional easing next year, which should put downward pressure on mortgage rates and lift homebuilding and renovation activity. Those interest rate dynamics have heightened the incentive for builders and distributors to restock, while persistent tariff and trade frictions have constrained supply. Canadian log exports are down year to date even as shipments into the US have risen, Canadian manufacturing output has slipped and US lumber exports are lower, a mix that reduces available millfeed and forces buyers to compete for the supplies that remain.

Read More

Bank of Canada holds key interest rate at 2.25%

By Jenna Benchetrit
CBC News
December 10, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The Bank of Canada is holding its key interest rate at 2.25%, a move that was widely expected after an encouraging round of third-quarter data showed the Canadian economy has withstood some trade war-induced turmoil. Central bank governor Tiff Macklem wrote in his opening remarks that the current rate is at “about the right level” to give the economy a boost while also keeping inflation close to its 2% target rate. Canada’s economy proved more hardy than expected in the third quarter, with GDP and jobs growth beating expectations, and the unemployment rate dropping to 6.5% in November. Inflation is hovering just above 2%, and the Bank of Canada’s core measures of inflation are trending closer to 3%. While the steel, aluminum, auto and lumber sectors have been pummelled by US tariffs, which is weighing more broadly on business investment, “the economy is proving resilient overall,” Macklem said.

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

News from naturally:wood

naturally:wood
December 12, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

The newsletter presents a new publication from WoodWorks BC and BTY Group that provides detailed mass timber business case studies, analyzing financial performance across three building types in British Columbia. This report offers developers and investors direct cost comparisons between mass timber and traditional construction, highlighting economic insights and lessons from affordable rental housing, office, and market rental projects. The resource is positioned as a practical tool for evaluating mass timber’s financial viability in real-world applications. Additionally, the newsletter promotes BuildEx Vancouver 2026, an industry event on February 11–12, 2026, which will feature a dedicated WoodWorks program with 12 educational sessions focused exclusively on wood construction trends, technologies, and innovations. The message also includes a visual feature — a video showcasing mass timber use at the Audain Art Museum in Whistler, noted for its extensive wood application and sustainable construction practices. Finally, subscribers are encouraged to explore the broader B.C. Wood Supplier Directory to connect with regional wood product suppliers and industry experts.

Read More

Forestry

The More We Study Forests, the More It Seems Like Plants Might Be Cooperating With Each Other

By Heather Djunga
ZME Science
December 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Dr. Richard Karban, a trained ecologist and member of the UC Davis Entomology Department… who covers an array of intriguing topics, from “eavesdropping” plants to distinct plant “personalities”, is fully aware of the controversy surrounding his field. But he emphasizes that plant communication isn’t a fantasy; it is a biological response to specific cues. …Decades ago, little was known about it. Today, many researchers, such as Dr. Karban, argue that forests are highly communicative biological networks. These are sophisticated behaviors, but Karban attributes them to evolution and natural selection, not hidden sentience. He cautions against projecting human emotions onto biology, but suggests that to understand plants, we must understand their version of a “Hierarchy of Needs.” …Dr Kathryn Flinn, an ecologist at Baldwin Wallace University, believes that while mycorrhizal networks move resources, this does not mean the tree sending those resources is making a strategic or selfless decision. …Another notion gaining attention is that of a ‘Mother Tree’ recognising family members.

Read More

Halalt chief says band-aid solutions won’t solve Chemainus River flooding

By Robert Barron
The Cowichan Valley Citizen
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Band-aid solutions are not going to fix the flooding problems in the Chemainus River watershed, Chief James Thomas from the Halalt First Nation told North Cowichan’s council on Nov. 19. He said the watershed and its salmon are in jeopardy mainly due to logging practices that were conducted upstream in the watershed over the past 50 years. Thomas said the Halalt and its partners, who are working on finding solutions to the watershed’s issues, didn’t create the problem, they inherited it. There is general community consensus that gravel and sediment accumulation, scoured banks, and increased debris, largely from logging operations upstream, have increased in recent years causing extreme flooding downstream, including on Halalt reserve lands. …Thomas and Cheri Ayers from Waters Edge Biological Consultants made a presentation to council on the Chemainus Watershed Initiative. The initiative began following two flooding events in 2020 and 2021.

Read More

2 more arrests at Vancouver Island forestry blockade, RCMP say

By Ian Holliday
CTV News
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mounties enforcing an injunction against anti-logging protesters on Vancouver Island say they made two more arrests Thursday. The latest arrests at the protesters’ Walbran Forest Service Road blockade bring the total to 13 since enforcement began on Nov. 25, police said in a news release. The arrests were made after officers patrolling the injunction area “located some individuals perched on top of tree structures that blocked the roadway.” Two people were arrested for breaching the injunction, Mounties said. One of them was released at the scene with conditions. The other was held in custody for breaching the conditions of their release after a previous arrest at the blockade last month. …Of the 13 arrests made since enforcement began, two have involved individuals who had already been arrested at the site previously.

Read More

B.C.’s forest industry needs massive overhaul

By Jim Pine, logger, highschool teacher, Elders for Ancient Forests
Victoria Times Colonist
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jim Pine

The closure of the Crofton pulp mill is the latest symptom of forest mismanagement. How did we get to this point? The Indigenous people were always here, but we Europeans started as a colony of Britain, hence the name British Columbia. …The purpose of a colony was to grab the land and to send wealth back to the colonizing country. Here, that meant forest products, fish and minerals. We still retain that colonial mentality. …Herein lies the great paradox. We have handed over our natural legacy to distant corporations with a fiduciary responsibility to maximize profits… Short-term thinking is incompatible with long-term life cycles. What’s to be done? Switch from corporate control tree farm licences to community forest licences; Implement an immediate moratorium on all old-growth logging; Ban raw log exports; Ban the export of cants; Appropriately tax “Managed Forest Land”; Pass the Species At Risk Act; and Support value-added manufacturing.

Read More

Professional Master’s Panel Discussion Info Session 2026 – UBC Forestry

UBC Faculty of Forestry
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The University of British Columbia Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship will host an online Professional Master’s Panel Discussion and Information Session on January 15, 2026 (10:00–11:00 am PST) via Zoom. The session is designed for prospective graduate students and professionals seeking to deepen technical expertise, strengthen leadership capabilities, and expand industry networks within forestry and environmental management fields. Representatives from four accelerated professional master’s programs will present and answer questions: the Master of Geomatics for Environmental Management, emphasizing geospatial technologies for natural resource planning; the Master of International Forestry, combining experiential learning with applied coursework; the Master of Sustainable Forest Management, focusing on professional land management; and the Master of Urban Forestry Leadership, an interdisciplinary program targeting urban forestry strategy and climate adaptation. Participants will engage directly with program directors, coordinators, and advising staff to assess fit and clarify admissions, curriculum, and career outcomes.

Read More

Resilient Forest Management provides a roadmap for progressive forestry in uncertain times!

By Philip J. Burton
Oxford Academic
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

I am pleased to announce the release of my book, “Resilient Forest Management,” published by Oxford University Press. While sustainability remains aspirational, changing values, shifts in climate, accelerating natural disturbances, and trade barriers call for a new approach to forest stewardship. Building on the principles of complex adaptive systems, this book provides a roadmap for progressive forestry in uncertain times, supported by several examples and case studies. Attention is paid to the management of protected areas, agricultural woodlands, and the urban forest as well as to multi-purpose and industrial forestlands. See the Read More below for more details and a table of contents. Suitable as a textbook or as an armchair read, this book is available for purchase as a Google Play ebook, and in paperback and hardcover versions through on-line and local booksellers, or directly from the publisher.

Read More

7,600 voices help guide Mosaic as it revamps its Island backcountry access strategy

By Marc Kitteringham
Ladysmith Chemainus Chronicle
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mosaic Forest Management is moving forward with plans to modernize its access program, following a survey earlier this year. In May, 7,600 respondents “clearly indicated Islanders want well-managed public recreation access,” Mosaic said. To that end, Mosaic hired RC Strategies and Legacy Tourism Group. The two firms will build a stronger system for managing recreation on Mosaic lands, balancing public access with environmental protection, safety, and operational needs. Pilot initiatives are expected to be implemented in 2026. …The upcoming engagement process will include First Nations, users, and community members, [as well as] local and provincial governments to address challenges that private forest landowners cannot resolve independently. …“Mosaic is taking a progressive step that very few private landowners have undertaken at this scale,” said Justin Ellis, Partner at RC Strategies. “We’re excited to help develop a recreation access program that balances great outdoor experiences with the operational and environmental realities of a privately owned working forest.”

Read More

No chronic wasting disease found in tested Okanagan deer

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
December 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Further testing has confirmed that a sample submitted from a male white-tailed deer harvested east of Enderby is negative for chronic wasting disease (CWD). CWD is an infectious and fatal disease affecting cervids, including deer, elk, moose and caribou. The initial screening test by the B.C. Animal Health Centre showed a “non-negative” finding for the sample, meaning the disease could not be definitively ruled out and required more testing. Following standard protocol, the sample was sent to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency reference laboratory for confirmatory testing. The laboratory conducted confirmatory testing using three different methods. All results were negative for CWD.

Read More

Old-growth advocates gather in Langford to press forest minister

By Olivier Laurin
Oak Bay News
December 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

About 35 members of Elders for Ancient Trees and their supporters gathered outside Forests Minister Ravi Parmar’s office on Dec. 8 to call for stronger protections for old-growth forests. … “We stand together with the brave and intrepid forest defenders protecting the Walbran,” said organizer Jackie Larkin. “If the NDP government won’t protect these precious forests, we will. “Once these forests are gone, they’re gone, and the species who live there are gone as well.” Larkin said the group intends to continue putting pressure on the province. “We brought our message to Ravi Parmar and the NDP government today, and we will for as long as necessary,” she said. During the event, speaker Joan Rosenberg informed attendees that RCMP had arrested six protesters earlier that day for blocking a logging road leading into the Upper Walbran Valley, northwest of Port Renfrew. Among those arrested was Mohawk musician Logan Staats.

Read More

We must do a better job on managing forests

By Norman Marcy
Victoria Times Colonist
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

I have great sympathy for mill workers in Crofton and Chemainus and the other 43 mills in towns throughout B.C. that have closed because there is “insufficient viable fibre supply.” This statement is smoke to hide the fact that the companies, with the complicity of the province, have over-harvested the forest since at least the 1970s. Second-growth trees are not as voluminous as virgin timber. Second-growth is harvested in a last gasp to get as much profit from the woods before shuttering mills due to “insufficient viable fibre supply”. The forest sector has made high profits and paid tariffs and softwood lumber duties since the 1980s, and now that the merchantable timber is gone, the blame is being transferred. …This situation even has a name — “The Fall Down Effect” — and has been predicted since the 1970s. …Timber processing will have to adapt to less volume and evolve toward greater value added.

Read More

Letters to the editor of the Victoria Times Colonist

By various letter writers
Victoria Times Colonist
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

These letters are all in today’s Victoria Times Colonist “Letters” section:

  • Ken Gurr, Gabriola: On the gravy train, and we thought it would last: With news of the Crofton mill closure, we see the mayors and other spokespersons of the Alliance of Resource Communities busily blaming the provincial government’s old-growth policy, environmentalists, First Nations and others.
  • Dr. Robert Hay, Cassidy: We’re watching jobs disappear to Asia: It’s odd how, in the aftermath of the recent report of the Crofton pulp mill’s demise, there’s been precious little comment on the related issue of raw log exports.
  • Phil Le Good, Cobble Hill: Pulp mill’s tax bill was just a minor cost: Domtar did not close the pulp mill in Crofton due to North Cowichan taxation; it closed the mill because there just isn’t enough affordable fibre to continue operations with no immediate or long-term relief in sight.
  • Lawrence Lambert, Cobble Hill: We need bold thinking to escape socialism: …Crofton pulp mill? Shut down. Forests? Locked up by idealistic tree-huggers who worship greenery over paycheques. This isn’t governance; it’s economic suicide fueled by reflex votes from folks too comfy in their echo chambers to see the province crumbling.
  • Mike Wilkinson, Duncan: Consider the many jobs that the mill supports: With the shutdown of the Crofton mill, the trickle-down impact on many businesses such as machine shops, sawmills, trucking companies and many suppliers is quickly becoming obvious.

Read More

Four more arrested at old growth logging encampment in Upper Walbran

By Alura Brougham
Chek News
December 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Four people were arrested, one for the second time, at an old growth logging protest encampment in Upper Walbran, according to RCMP. On Sept. 12, a judge granted an injunction to Tsawak-qin Forestry, which is co-owned by Western Forest Products and the Huu-ay-aht First Nations. RCMP have been enforcing the injunction, going into the forest for the third time. On Dec. 8, RCMP says four men were arrested for allegedly breaching the injunction. One is being held for breaching release conditions from his arrest on Nov. 25. One person was arrested for criminal obstruction of police for allegedly resisting arrest. RCMP says when officers arrived on Dec. 8, they found “physical structures” had been set up on the only bridge leading to a work site where the employees needed access. …Solène Tessier said “Why would the Eby keep clearcutting ancient forests instead of protecting the communities that rely on this dying industry?”

Read More

Northwest B.C. author wins creative non-fiction award

By Marisca Bakker
Terrace Standard
December 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A book that aims to show both sides of the logging industry and the conflict that ensues from it has now won an award. Aaron Williams is an author and also a third-generation British Columbia logger who returned to the forests of Haida Gwaii to witness what he calls a way of life in the “grip of change.” Wilfrid Laurier University has named Williams the winner of its 2025 Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction for his book The Last Logging Show: A Forestry Family at the End of an Era (Harbour Publishing). …“There’s sort of three braids. It’s about my family’s history as well as the history of logging in BC. And then, sort of the third, final, most prevalent, the conflict between First Nations groups and settlers over logging rights,” he explained.

Read More

Over 200 Natural Resources Canada employees face job loss amid lack of transparent communication from Ottawa

By Keira Miller
98 Cool FM
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Over 200 employees at Natural Resources Canada have been informed that their positions either have been, or will be, cut in the near future. Mark Grimson is Union of Canadian Transportation Employees’ Regional Vice President for the Prairies & the North. He says last week, about 100 employees at Natural Resources Canada were told that their positions had been cut, and notices were sent out to over 100 more, warning that they could face the same fate. He says the cut workers were responsible for tasks such as forest fire tracking, flood tracking, and identification of other environmental risks. Although these are important jobs in an everchanging climate, Grimson says what’s more disturbing is the human impact these job cuts have had. …Most of the information being received comes in the form of public news releases, not personal addresses. Grimson says it would be nice to hear directly from the federal government.  

Read More

Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

The Power of Pellets – Fall Newsletter

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
December 10, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Welcome to the Wood Pellet Association of Canada’s Fall 2025 newsletter. We hope you enjoy reading it, and we welcome your feedback. The Headlines:

  • Belledune Coal Power Plant Conversion: A “Buy Canadian” Opportunity for Canada’s Bioeconomy
  • Arctic Bioenergy Summit and Tour: Advancing Renewable Energy in Canada’s North
  • Advancing Renewable Energy Partnerships in Japan
  • Setting the Record Straight: How Canada’s Wood Pellet Sector Supports Sustainable Forestry
  • Turning Wildfire Recovery into Renewable Energy
  • AFPA Forestry Talks: Sawdust to Sustainability with Gordon Murray
  • Industry Leaders Gather to Tackle Self-Heating Risks in Wood Pellet Storage
  • Arctic Bioenergy Summit and Tour, January 26-28, 2026 in Yellowknife
  • First Nations Deepen Collaboration Through Forestry Field Tours

Read More

Advancing Renewable Energy Partnerships in Japan

By Gordon Murray
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
December 8, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, United States

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC) was proud to participate in the November trade mission to Japan alongside Alberta Minister of Forestry and Parks, Todd Loewen and British Columbia Minister of Forests, Ravi Parmar. This mission was important for strengthening relationships with Japanese energy partners and showcasing Canada’s role as a trusted supplier of renewable biomass energy. Japan has emerged as the world’s fastest-growing export market for wood pellets. These pellets are used by power utilities to generate electricity, either by co-firing with coal or in dedicated biomass power plants. Over the past decade, Canadian wood pellet exports to Japan have grown eighteen-fold—from CAD $11 million in 2014 to $207 million in 2024. All of these exports originate from British Columbia (BC) and Alberta, with approximately 70 percent shipped from BC and the remainder from Alberta through BC ports.

Read More

Arctic Bioenergy Summit Heads to Yellowknife, Jan. 26–28, 2026

Wood Pellet Association of Canada
December 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

The Arctic Energy Alliance and the Wood Pellet Association of Canada will co-host the Arctic Bioenergy Summit and Tour this January in Yellowknife—an emerging hub for northern renewable energy innovation. With the speaker roster nearly complete, Day 1 will set the tone with a deep dive into bioenergy’s role across Canada’s North, from evolving policy frameworks to community-led energy solutions. Sessions will explore regional strategies, technology developments, and bioenergy success stories, highlighting what’s working in remote and Indigenous communities and the lessons learned along the way. Speakers will also tackle supply-chain challenges, including logistics, fuel production and distribution, and the unique complexities of operating in northern climates. The program wraps up with a networking reception—an opportunity for delegates to connect, share insights, and build partnerships advancing sustainable energy in the Arctic and beyond.

Read More

Why Hydrogen at a Kamloops BC Pulp Mill Fails the Cost Test

By Michael Barnard
CleanTechnica
December 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada West

Pulp and paper mills sit at the intersection of several decarbonization pressures. …This makes them tempting targets for hydrogen developers who are trying to find new markets… In Prince George the firm Teralta attempted what was possibly the only hydrogen-for-energy scheme in British Columbia with a chance of working. Their idea was to capture hydrogen produced as a by-product by the nearby chemical plant Chemtrade (from its sodium-chlorate process), purify and pipe it about 500 metres to a nearby pulp mill owned by Canfor. …The Kamloops Clean Energy Centre proposal which crossed my screen today with its announcement is a clear example of hydrogen for energy types desperately seeking for any reason to exist. It is presented as a modern solution for industrial decarbonization, led by an Indigenous economic development corporation, with a promise of cutting natural gas use at the mill. It reads well at a distance. 

Read More

Ontario Investing $2.2 Million to Unlock New Markets for Forest Biocoal

By Ministry of Natural Resources
Government of Ontario
December 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

THOROLD, Ontario — The Ontario government is investing $2.25 million through the Forest Biomass Program to help CHAR Technologies commercialize biocoal, a rapidly emerging low-carbon fuel derived from forest mill by-products and underused wood. This work will develop a new supply chain for made-in-Ontario forest products, create new revenue streams to drive growth in forestry and empower heavy industries to adopt sustainable fuels. …Kevin Holland, Associate Minister of Forestry and Forest Products said “We are ready to lead and establish Ontario as a global leader in biocoal.” This Forest Biomass Program investment will help CHAR Technologies improve biocoal’s storage and transport durability, needed for use in steelmaking at ArcelorMittal Dofasco. This project will support six existing jobs, create four new jobs and build a more productive and diversified forest sector by putting up to 180,000 tonnes of forest biomass to use each year. 

Read More

Biomass heating system among federal funding recipients

Northern Ontario Business
December 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada East

Federal funding of nearly $460,000 will enable Bingwi Neyaashi Anishinaabek to move forward with the installation of a district biomass heating system in the community. The project is one of 10 being supported with $4.8 million from FedNor’s Northern Ontario Development Program, announced Dec. 5. Bingwi Neyaashi Anishinaabek — also known as Sand Point First Nation — has been working on its district biomass heating project for well over a decade. The system will be fed with wood residue generated from the community’s sawmill, and the resulting energy will heat residential, commercial and institutional buildings. Excess materials are expected to be sold to neighbouring communities pursuing their own district heating projects. …See the FedNor site for the full list of projects and their allotments.

Read More