Region Archives: Canada

Business & Politics

US declaration to exit USMCA to start a decade-long countdown for the pact

By David Lawder
Reuters
June 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, International

The Trump administration is expected to ​formally declare on Wednesday that it will not extend the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade, starting a decade-long clock to wind down the 32-year-old ‌North American free trade zone. That declaration will kick off a six-year review session, part of a “sunset clause” negotiated by President Trump’s first administration. However, it will do little to alter contentious negotiations over the pact’s future, including sweeping demands to boost US content in automotive production and trade protections to block ​Chinese goods. …Trade chiefs from the US, Mexico and Canada are expected to meet virtually on Wednesday and declare whether they ​want to extend the pact for another 16 years. …Failure to reach agreement on revisions to USMCA would keep the trade pact in an indefinite limbo, with similar review sessions annually for the next 10 years. …The review ​and sunset process is separate from a termination clause that the US could exercise, triggering a withdrawal within six months.

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B.C. premier visiting China to pitch the province’s forestry products and energy sector

The Canadian Press in CBC News
June 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

David Eby

British Columbia Premier David Eby says his first-ever trade trip to China will focus on pitching the province’s forestry products and energy sector around LNG development, approaching the mission with both excitement and caution. Eby says China is the province’s second largest trading partner, and expanding relationships beyond the United States with the goal of doubling international trade over the coming decade. He says U.S. tariffs are “really hurting” the province’s forestry sector, while a lot of jobs in B.C. are also dependent on the relationship with China and he hopes to see Chinese tariffs currently impacting the province lifted, including on seafood sector.

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North American free trade is gone, dead and buried

By Lawrence Herman, Senior Fellow
The CD Howe Institute
June 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Lawrence Herman

Any lingering hope about the survival of any kind of North American free-trade area – let alone USMCA – was put to rest this week with Trump saying he is “not looking to renew”. While some could read this as a tactical ploy, his comments actually reflect a key part of the MAGA philosophy – a deep-seated antipathy to trade agreements. …The lofty words in the USMCA preamble about creating a “high standard new agreement to support mutually beneficial trade leading to freer, fairer markets, and to robust economic growth in the region” are gone. …The question is where do we go from here, even if the agreement continues in some way through the mandated review process? …Assuming the review goes ahead more or less as prescribed, it will involve separate US negotiations with Canada and with Mexico, aimed at extracting maximum concessions from each country, all the while with the threat of US.

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How companies stopped panicking about tariffs and learned to tolerate Trump’s trade chaos

By Jason Kirby
The Globe and Mail
June 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Corporate bosses are more relaxed about tariffs now than at any time since US President Trump’s return to power unleashed a spate of trade policy chaos. The share of corporate earnings calls in which tariffs were mentioned has fallen to the lowest level since Mr. Trump won the 2024 election, according to an analysis of transcripts. …The same pattern has played out on both sides of the border, even though companies have plenty of reasons to remain anxious on the trade front. The USMCA is set to enter uncharted territory on July 1. …Steep sectoral duties remain in place. …Meanwhile, Mr. Trump is expected to launch a wave of hefty tariffs next month to replace temporary duties he imposed after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down his earlier emergency tariffs. [to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

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‘It has to be a real deal’: PM Carney says ahead of trade talks with Trump

By Rachel Aiello
CTV News
June 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Mark Carney

Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada will work with the United States and Mexico to “modernize” the trilateral trade deal known as CUSMA, but won’t accept a bad deal from U.S. President Donald Trump. “We could sign a bad deal this afternoon. We could have signed a bad deal a year ago. We’re not going to sign a bad deal, so it has to be a real deal,” he said Thursday. He was asked about U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra’s comment that officials are “not anywhere close” to a deal. “What I have seen with the president is that you’re not close to making a deal, and then you make a deal,” the prime minster said. “It doesn’t mean the deals are good deals, but it means being prepared, having done the work, knowing what you want,” he added.

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Forestry still shapes B.C.

By Ian Biana
Resource Works
June 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Kurt Niquidet

Kurt Niquidet grew up in Williams Lake, a place shaped by forestry. When he speaks about it, it’s from the perspective of someone who knows. “I grew up in Williams Lake and really a forestry-dependent community,” he says. Kurt Niquidet is vice-president and chief economist at the BC Council of Forest Industries, with a career that bridges policy, academia, and central banking. He holds a PhD in natural resource economics and policy from the University of Groningen and has worked at the Bank of Canada and the University of British Columbia. He also serves as an adjunct professor at UBC’s Faculty of Forestry and has published widely on B.C. forest policy. Now, he is applying that perspective to new data on the sector’s reach across British Columbia. His latest report, Rooted in BC: Economic Impact of Forestry, tracks forestry’s economic footprint across the province. The findings challenge a common assumption. Forestry is not just a rural story.

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B.C. judge throws out property owner’s bid to reopen Cowichan lands decision

By Gordon Hoekstra
The Vancouver Sun
June 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — A BC judge has ruled against a Richmond company that sought to reopen the Cowichan Tribes Aboriginal title case. Last year’s landmark B.C. Supreme Court decision found the Cowichan held Aboriginal title to a swath of land in southeast Richmond, including privately owned lands. The application to reopen the case was brought by the Montrose companies, which owns warehouses, a Coca-Cola distribution centre and other facilities in the area. The company was not involved in the trial that led to the 2025 ruling, but said it affected the status of its property and, in one case, led to a potential deal being put on hold. In a decision dated Monday, BC Supreme Court Justice Barbara Young dismissed the company’s application. …She said the proper place for Montrose to make its case is through an appeal.

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

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

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

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Kurt Niquidet to step down from COFI and BC Lumber Trade Council

By Kurt Niquidet
LinkedIn
June 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Kurt Niquidet

After seven years with the BC Council of Forest Industries, today is my last day with the organization. It has been a privilege to serve as Chief Economist and, over the past two years, as President of the BC Lumber Trade Council. Thank you to everyone who shared their time, expertise, and friendship along the way. The relationships I’ve built and the experiences I’ve gained will stay with me long after today. While this chapter is coming to a close, I’m looking forward to a new opportunity and the chance to take on a different challenge. More to come soon. Thank you, COFI.

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Finance & Economics

Canadian investment in building construction increased 2.3% in April

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

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

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Capilano University opens first student housing building with exposed mass-timber dining pavilion

By BC Ministry of Infrastructure
Government of British Columbia
June 29, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

NORTH VANCOUVER, BC — Students at Capilano University (CapU) now have access to more housing options with the opening of the first on-campus student housing building at the university’s North Vancouver campus. …The new six-storey student housing building named Treehouse reflects a shared vision of “a home in the woods. …The new student housing building provides 362 on-campus homes for students on the North Shore, helping them focus on their studies while easing pressure on the local rental housing market. The building includes a 250-seat, mass-timber dining hall connected to the student housing building will provide meal service to students living on campus, as well as faculty, staff and commuter students. The dining space will support student life and create additional opportunities for students to connect and build community on campus.

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Camosun fine furniture grads to showcase salvaged wood chairs in Saanich

By Tony Trozzo
Victoria News
June 24, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Sixteen Camosun College students are turning reclaimed local wood into a statement on human craftsmanship at a new chair exhibition opening June 24. The showcase, titled “Against the Grain: An Exhibition of Handcrafted Chairs,” kicks off with a free gala event from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. this Wednesday at the Arts Centre at Cedar Hill. Running until July 19, the exhibition serves as the capstone project for students completing the 10-month Fine Furniture and Joinery Trades Foundation Certificate program at Camosun’s Interurban campus. This year’s graduating class designed their unique chairs out of reclaimed Garry Oak, Maple, and Horse Chestnut. The materials were supplied by the Vancouver Island Woodworkers’ Guild wood recovery program, which has supported the Camosun certificate program since its inception.

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Behold Vancouver’s New Earthquake-Proof Highrise

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

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

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The economic case for developing green buildings

By Danny Kurcharsky
Real Estate News Exchange
June 25, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Peter Howard

MONTREAL — The global transition to a net zero economy is inevitable but how Canada will take advantage of the opportunity to drive the development of green buildings remains a question mark. So says Peter Howard, founder of Zfolio. …He was the keynote speaker at the Building Lasting Change conference, hosted in Montreal by the Canada Green Building Council (CaGBC). Howard said the transition to low carbon technology is inevitable because it is being driven by economics and irreversible trends in technology. …Howard said mass retrofits would put Canadian tradespeople to work electrifying heating and hot water and creating buildings that generate and store their own electricity. …In addition, mass timber buildings can be built, drawing on Canadian forestry products, he said. Resilient buildings and neighbourhoods can be created that resist flooding, storms and blackouts and that generate and store some of their own electricity and water supply.

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Forestry

New research suggests invasive spotted lanternfly may be able to survive Canadian winters

By Faith Greco
CBC News
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

©Govt of Canada

Research out of the Great Lakes Forestry Centre in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., is raising new concerns about an invasive insect that has been steadily moving closer to the Canadian border. “Unfortunately, what we have found is that the spotted lanternfly, particularly their eggs, are actually able to withstand really cold temperatures,” said Amanda Roe, a research scientist with Natural Resources Canada based at the forestry centre. Recent studies have found that spotted lanternfly eggs can survive temperatures up to -25 C, suggesting winter may not be enough to prevent the destructive pest from establishing populations in parts of Canada, she said. “Winter itself isn’t going to be a barrier, particularly in the areas of Canada where their impact might be greatest,” Roe said. …The insect feeds on more than 100 plant species …including maple trees, something that has caught the attention of Canada’s maple syrup industry.

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Coulson Aviation’s night vision firefighting helped battle summer fires on Vancouver Island

By Austin Kelly
Alberni Valley News
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©CoulsonAviation

…When it came to fighting two of the worst fires in Vancouver Island’s history, BC Wildfire Service took advantage of Coulson Aviation’s successful night vision aerial firefighting program. Almost 15 years to the day after testing how effective a helicopter could be dropping water on hot spots at night, the Wesley Ridge fire broke out between Port Alberni and Qualicum Beach. “The first trial was 22 targets and with 22 loads, we were able to extinguish it and put water in all 22 (targets) and that’s when we knew we had something,” said Wayne Coulson, CEO of the Alberni-based Coulson Aviation. …One of the other challenges for aerial night firefighting was filling the helicopters with water. …Coulson said government officials didn’t believe it was safe to hover fill at night so on a November night in 2017 a company aircrew spent three hours at the Alberni Valley’s Sproat Lake testing the process.

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Warming streams are pushing young salmon beyond their limits

UBC Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Scott Hinch

As climate change warms rivers across B.C., young salmon are facing increasing heat stress at vulnerable stages of their lives.  Researchers from UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship’s Pacific Salmon Ecology and Conservation Lab found that younger fish cope with heat differently than older fish, and that current methods may be underestimating the risks salmon face in warming waterways. We spoke with Dr. Scott Hinch, professor in the Department of Forest & Conservation Sciences, about what these findings mean for salmon conservation. Hinch told us: We examined how young salmon respond to warming water and whether current methods accurately measure heat tolerance. Most studies assess fish at rest, but juvenile salmon are constantly moving to find food and avoid predators, so we need to mimic real-world conditions. We also considered how age and prior temperature exposures influence responses. 

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New University of Alberta-led research found some species fail to recover even 100 years after clearcutting

By Sarah Vernon
University of Alberta
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

EDMONTON — Current clearcutting practices sometimes outpace the recovery times of vital boreal forest species, according to a groundbreaking global analysis led by University of Alberta researchers. The study was co-led by biologist Dr. Ellen Macdonald and ecologist Dr. Anne McIntosh. It is the first of its kind to examine an extended timeline for recovery and a wide range of life in boreal forests after clearcutting… Analyzing 190 datasets across North America, Europe, and Russia, researchers tracked how clearcutting affects birds, small mammals, insects, spiders, plants and lichens. While faster-growing broadleaf forests like aspen and birch often recovered within 30 years — soon enough to fall within typical 60- to 80-year logging cycles — recovery in mixed and coniferous forests took much longer. In these habitats, recovery took more than 55 years for small mammals like mice and voles, 85 years for flowering plants, 95 years for lichens, and more than 100 years for mosses.

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Town of Ladysmith calls for provincial intervention to protect watershed at Banon Creek Forest Service Road

By Justin Baumgardner
My Cowichan Valley Now
June 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Town of Ladysmith said immediate action needs to be taken along the Banon Creek Forest Service Road to address water contamination and wildfire prevention. A letter has been sent to the province asking for emergency enforcement and protection of the watershed. “The province has already acknowledged the severity of the risk by closing the road; it must now ensure this measure is supported by the necessary physical infrastructure, enforcement capacity and operational resources required to make the closure effective,” Mayor Deena Beeston said. “The town can’t continue to accept conditions that place residents of all affected communities and others at daily risk.” The town said conditions have continued to go downhill …criminal activity is increasing and causing conditions to deteriorate. …the watersheds are located outside the town’s boundaries and supply drinking water to 12,000 residents across the town, Stz’uminus First Nation, the Diamond Improvement District and the Saltair area. 

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Osoyoos Indian Band set to restore native plants, species in wildfire-ravaged forests

By Aaron Hemens
IndigiNews
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Osoyoos Indian Band is working to revitalize forests in its territories that have been ravaged by wildfires — turning them into fire-resistent zones full of biodiversity, wildlife and medicinal plants for its members. The band-owned Nk’Mip Forestry is planning to revive two woodlands located above the First Nation’s reservation in the highlands between Oliver and Mount Baldy — making up just over 40 hectares combined. The forest tenure where the project is located is approximately 50,000 hectares in size, and is co-managed between the Osoyoos Indian Band and Gorman Bros. The two forests — a drier douglas fir ecosystem with ponderosa pine, and a montane spruce ecosystem dominated by dense lodgepole pile further up the hill — were both impacted by the 2021 Nk’Mip Creek Wildfire, which is estimated to have burned just over 20,000 hectares.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province.

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
June 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC) is highlighting the growing impact of community forestry across the province, recognizing projects that reduce wildfire risk, improve wildlife habitat and strengthen local economies. At the BC Community Forest Association’s 2026 Conference, FESBC presented its inaugural Community Forest Project of the Year Award to the Kaslo & District Community Forest Society for its “Jimi Crack Corn” project. The latest FESBC newsletter also features updates on fuel reduction work with Nazko First Nation, new federal funding aimed at reducing wood waste and supporting forest resilience, and a safety message from the BC Forest Safety Council encouraging supervisors to recognize early warning signs before serious incidents occur. Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar notes that more than 60 new FESBC-supported projects will build on last year’s wildfire mitigation and fibre utilization efforts, helping create safer, healthier forests and supporting jobs in rural British Columbia.

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Northern Rockies Regional Municipality calling for release of 2024 wildfire investigation

By Tom Summer
CBC News
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Northern Rockies Regional Municipality is calling on the province to release an investigation by the Natural Resource Officers Service into the 2024 Parker Lake wildfire. Mayor Rob Fraser says more than 3,000 people were forced to evacuate for 17 days because of the wildfire and alleges the province is holding back due to a clerical error. … Fraser claims the Natural Resource Officers Service is refusing to release an investigative report due to a clerical error that temporarily left his community out of the Wildfire Act. According to Fraser, his community was listed as the “Town of Fort Nelson” under the provincial Wildfire Act, when they should have been the “Northern Rockies Regional Municipality.” Looking at the governance, the Town of Fort Nelson was amalgamated with the Northern Rockies Regional District in 2009 to become the Northern Rockies Regional Municipality.

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BC forestry policies destroy priceless values and bias the regulatory system

By Laurisa Dohm
Northern Beat
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

B.C.’s forestry collapse is devastating communities across the province, with provincial policy failures identified as the primary cause. But the dysfunction is causing more than economic losses. It is also destroying two things which are arguably priceless: old growth forests, and a free, fair, and open market.  Old growth logging continues under licences the government has legal authority to restrict. Yet reportedly, less than half of the 2.6 million hectares identified by its own technical advisory panel as most at risk have actually been deferred. Forest protection advocates point to Canfor and West Fraser as the top two private companies logging old growth. What they omit is that Canfor’s tenures were transferred to two bands in 2024, months after West Fraser’s tenures were combined with a different band’s months earlier—tenures the province subsequently increased by more than 2,000 per cent in 2025. In the same timeframe, the mills these companies used to operate have closed at a steady clip.

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Woodlots Weekly for June 2026

Woodlots BC
June 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Woodlots BC has been invited to Victoria to work collaboratively with representatives from the BC Community Forest Association, the First Nations Forestry Council, and government officials in a solutions-focused dialogue to: explore a principled pricing framework that promotes greater equity across woodlots, community forest agreements, and First Nations woodland licences, to address inconsistencies among tenure types that have resulted in inequities within the current system; and understand, articulate, and assess the implications and implementation considerations of various policy options on Woodlot holders. The Province has committed to advancing this work through its Intentions Paper: Modernizing Forest Policy Initiative, with the goal of establishing a more consistent and equitable pricing framework for woodlots, community forest agreements, and First Nations woodland licences. Broader engagement with the woodlot community is tentatively planned for this fall. Woodlots BC are advocating for no changes to tabular rates and continue the 1 CP process on woodlots. 
 

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Kamloops Fire Centre warns Sicamous council of underlying dry conditions in local forests

By Luc Rempel
Castanet
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A Kamloops Fire Centre spokesperson told Sicamous council that local forests are still quite dry despite a burst of fresh green growth brought on by recent wet weather. At the June 24 District of Sicamous committee of the whole meeting, Kamloops Fire Centre manager Jeff Dunne gave council an overview of BC Wildfire Service’s regional operations and a look at what to expect in the coming months. Dunne said a dry start to the spring compounded on drought conditions experienced over the winter. “As everyone is aware, our spring this year looked a little bit challenging,” Dunne said. “Over-winter snows in some parts of the region were way below average.” …Dunne said typically, the Kamloops Fire Centre will be the busiest in the middle of July, but this year BCWS has already seen significant fire behaviour and growth across the region. 

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

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

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

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Indigenous-led forest rehabilitation work at Palmer Lake site creating opportunities

By Yashvika Grover
The Williams Lake Tribune
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC) recently highlighted the Indigenous-led efforts of the Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. (CCR) at the Palmer Lake forest fire site. Through an article and video, WPAC described CCR’s work and how it treats fire-affected stands by removing dead and damaged material, reducing fuel loading, and spacing young lodgepole pine to support forest recovery. It is also demonstrated how the CCR uses recovered fibre to be put to productive use rather than leaving it at the site. “It’s such a good news story,” wrote Gord Murray, WPAC executive director. “CCR is turning what might otherwise be seen as waste into jobs, economic development, community pride, and contributions to the biomass industry.”

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

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

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

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Protest against logging in old growth falls short of intended audience

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

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

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Polinators, Plants and Forestry in Eastern Canada

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

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

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Ban on open fires in or near forests

Société de protection des forêts contre le feu
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Quebec – The Ministère de la Sécurité intérieure (MSI) will prohibit open fires in or near certain forests as of June 23 due to current conditions. This decision has been made in collaboration with the Société de protection des forêts contre le feu (SOPFEU). Currently, there are 33 active wildfires across the entire province of Quebec. Since the start of the fire prevention season, 205 fires have affected 193.9 hectares in the intensive protection zone, and 41 fires have burned 4,195.8 hectares of forest in the northern zone. The aim of this ban is to limit the risk of forest fires. Everyone’s cooperation is essential. Consequently, it is forbidden to set or maintain an open fire or to be in the vicinity of such an active fire.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Building Canada Stronger — Join the Conversation at the 2026 WPAC Conference

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
June 30, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Get ready for WPAC’s annual conference, September 22-23, 2026, in beautiful Victoria, BC! This year’s theme, Building Canada Stronger: Navigating the Global Wood Pellet Transition, covers securing supply, resilient energy and next-gen bioenergy. Day 2 focuses on the innovation, decarbonization and domestic markets. Sessions include:

  • BECCS, CDRs and Carbon Markets: Examine how bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) can deliver benefits beyond emissions reduction, including fibre utilization, export competitiveness and forest sector resilience. Also explore Canada’s readiness, global project developments and the role of carbon markets and investment signals.
  • Strengthening Canada’s Energy Resilience with Biomass: Heat, Industry, and Domestic Supply: Explore how biomass can help strengthen Canada’s energy security by delivering reliable, low-carbon heat across diverse applications. Discover the projects, infrastructure and logistics needed to scale domestic biomass energy nationwide.
  • Industry Leadership Session—What We Do Next: Engage with WPAC Board members to discuss the strategic priorities for WPAC and the Canadian wood pellet sector in the next few years.

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Joint Australia-Canada-United Kingdom Statement on Energy and Climate Cooperation

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
PR Newswire
June 25, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

Julie Dabrusin

Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom recognise the immediacy with which we must act to secure a clean energy future, following a prolonged period of global disruptions to energy security, markets and supply chains. We affirm that accelerating the clean energy transition, and shifting from fossil fuels to clean electricity, will greatly reduce exposure to volatile fossil fuel markets and improve long-term energy supply resilience, affordability, and economic competitiveness. …Our three nations … are rapidly transitioning to decarbonise our economies, powered by clean energy; making record investments in clean energy and electrification…; enhancing our grids to deliver reliable, clean power…, while creating new job opportunities across our regions. … To further these efforts, we have committed to working together on building and contributing to diverse, secure and sustainable supply chains that can power the world with clean energy, including the critical minerals, technologies and components required for grid flexibility, reliability and resilience. 

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Health & Safety

Tick reports are surging in Canada. These areas are most affected.

By Daniel Otis
CP24 News
June 24, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

©Ordre des pharmaciens du Québec

Tick reports are surging across Eastern Canada this year – and especially in Ontario. Driven by climate change, migratory birds, and expanding mice and deer populations, experts expect the troubling trend to continue well into the future, increasing the risk of serious tickborne illnesses like Lyme disease. Data submitted to eTick.ca as of June 23 shows that confirmed tick reports are up 38.5 per cent in Canada so far this year compared to the same period in 2025. Reports of blacklegged and western blacklegged ticks – the two species that carry Lyme disease – are also up by 35.2 per cent. After suffering through a late-stage Lyme disease diagnosis in 2015, Justin Wood founded Geneticks, Canada’s first private tick testing lab. “I expect this upward trend to continue every year in Canada for the foreseeable future,” Wood told CTVNews.ca from Uxbridge, Ont. “Climate change is the driver to this process.” …To help aid national monitoring efforts, and to help you identify potentially dangerous species, Canadians are encouraged to submit tick sightings with photographs to eTick.ca.

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3 dead in plane crash near Fort Simpson, Northwest Territories, fire officials confirm

By Chris Windeyer and Emma Tranter
CBC News
June 25, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Three people are dead after a plane responding to a wildfire near Fort Simpson, N.W.T., crashed on Wednesday evening. N.W.T. Fire said in a news release Thursday afternoon that responders went to the crash site and confirmed the deaths. “Our organization is grieving alongside the families, friends, colleagues, and the broader wildfire community as we process this unthinkable loss,” Mike Westwick, the manager of wildfire prevention and mitigation, said in the release. “We will honour those who lost their lives in the line of duty at the appropriate time and in accordance with the wishes of their families,” Westwick added. The RCMP said they are helping to recover the deceased and the N.W.T coroner’s office is also investigating. …The plane involved was a fixed wing Turbo Commander 690 Bird Dog 104. Bird dog aircraft are small, typically single-engine planes that carry crew who direct air traffic near a fire and coordinate the airtankers.

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Forest Fires

First Nation in Manitoba orders residents to leave due to evacuation of nearby town

Canadian Press
June 28, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

LYNN LAKE – A First Nation in northern Manitoba is evacuating its residents due to a wildfire that’s threatening a nearby town. Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak (MKO), an Indigenous advocacy group, says the Marcel Colomb First Nation has ordered the evacuation because it relies on critical infrastructure and resources from Lynn Lake, a town about 25 kilometres to the west whose residents have already left. The statement says Lynn Lake, which began evacuation flights on Saturday, serves as a key supply and service hub for the First Nation and that it would be unsafe for its people to remain. …the Manitoba government’s wildfire information page said the fire was over 50 square kilometres in size as of Saturday. …Further east, the MKO statement says O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation is under a state of emergency and is evacuating priority residents, which includes people in need of medical assistance.

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Residents of Fort Simpson, Northwest Territories, ordered to evacuate

By Jessica Davey-Quantick and Katherine Barton
CBC News
June 28, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©NWT Fire

Residents of Fort Simpson, N.W.T., have been ordered to evacuate due to a nearby wildfire. The Village of Fort Simpson issued the evacuation order at 7:10 p.m. MT on Sunday. Residents are advised to head for Yellowknife. …An evacuation alert was issued Friday evening warning people to be prepared to leave on short notice, after a fire was detected about 10 kilometres from Fort Simpson’s airport. As of Sunday, the fire was about seven kilometres away. A fire information officer told CBC News the fire is not expected to reach the community overnight. The Village of Fort Simpson also declared a local state of emergency on Sunday evening. It said on Facebook that gas stations will remain open 24/7… The community of about 1,300 is approximately 600 kilometres, or a 7-hour drive, from Yellowknife, and requires crossing a ferry at the Liard River. …the ferry is running 24 hours so people can drive out.

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B.C. firefighters battling 11 new out-of-control wildfires Wednesday

By Tiffany Crawford
Vancouver Sun
June 24, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

Cougar Mountain Fire ©BCWS

Firefighters are battling 11 new out-of-control wildfires that broke out Wednesday in B.C., as hot and dry conditions mix with lightning strikes in some areas. Two of the new rapidly spreading wildfires that ignited Wednesday are south of Lillooet, including the Riley Creek wildfire, located about 25 kilometres south of Lillooet. Both are believed to have been ignited by lightning. In Lytton the Saw Creek wildfire forced evacuations and a highway closure on Friday. That fire is considered to be under control as of Tuesday. …Firefighters were also called out to another quick moving wildfire that sparked Wednesday evening between Whistler and Pemberton. Fire officials say the .06-square-kilometre blaze was also ignited by lighting. Overall there are 39 wildfires burning in B.C., including 23 that broke out between Tuesday and Wednesday night, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service.

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

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

©BCWildfireService

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

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Water bombers make ‘significant’ progress on wildfires burning near Labrador City, government says

By Alex Kennedy
CBC News
June 30, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

Fire crews are continuing to battle two wildfires that forced some residents of Labrador West to evacuate. Newfoundland and Labrador’s Department of Forestry, Agriculture and Lands said in a Monday night social media post that water bombers made “significant progress” on wildfires in the Walsh River area west of Labrador and the De Mille Lake area east of Wabush. Around 120 residents were evacuated from their homes and cabins on Monday afternoon. The Town of Labrador City said that the evacuation order remains in place as fire suppression efforts continue. Labrador City Mayor Jordan Brown said on Tuesday morning that the fire was between eight and nine kilometres from the town, and that the region is blanketed in a thick smoke. …An incident management team will be on the ground in Labrador West on Tuesday to help fire crews, the department said. Forestry officials will reassess conditions on Tuesday evening.

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