Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

Forest History Association of BC presents Keith Moore – tonight at 7pm

BC Forest History Association
December 16, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

The BC Forest History Association is pleased to host its final speaker of 2025: Keith Moore, RPF, a longtime resident of Haida Gwaii and a respected leader in forest policy, regulation, and certification. Tonight, December 16th, 7:00 pm on Zoom.

In his presentation, “How the Long History of Forest Practices Regulation in BC Became a Key Part in a Recent BC Supreme Court Case,” Keith will explore how decades of statutory and voluntary forest practices regulation in British Columbia shaped the context and outcome of a recent court decision. Drawing on a career that spans research, policy development, enforcement, and auditing, he brings a rare, end-to-end perspective on how forest regulation actually works in practice.

Keith began his career with the Ministry of Forests Research Branch, followed by ten years with the BC Ministry of Environment. He was the inaugural Chair of the BC Forest Practices Board (1995–2000) and later became deeply involved with Forest Stewardship Council certification, conducting audits in forest regions around the world. Based in Daajing Giids, he continues to work with the Council of the Haida Nation and internationally through Assurance Services International.

Please register for a Zoom link here.

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Business & Politics

Ottawa launching softwood lumber task force aimed at industry competitiveness

By David Baxter
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
December 15, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Tim Hodgson

OTTAWA — Natural Resource Minister Tim Hodgson says he’ll launch a task force early in the new year to look at ways to ensure the long-term health of the softwood lumber industry. Speaking in Toronto, Hodgson says the group will bring recommendations forward within 90 days of its launch on how to increase productivity, reach new markets and expand the use of modern construction methods. Canadian lumber faces heavy U.S. tariffs and American lumber companies have accused Canada of unfair trade practices. Hodgson says the task force will work with lumber companies, provinces, Indigenous foresters, communities and labour groups. The minister also says Ottawa is providing $9 million to five projects to speed up the adoption of “innovative Canadian wood products” in the construction industry. Hodgson says the goal is to better address insurance challenges and advance building code changes for low-carbon materials.

Related news from the Conservative Party: The Liberals Have Lost it on Lumber

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The Build Canada Homes program invites softwood lumber exporters to come home—but will they respond?

By Tony Kryzanowski
The Logging and Sawmilling Journal
December 15, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

“We’re just waiting for the dust to settle.” That sentiment was expressed recently by Nick Arkle, CEO of Gorman Bros., regarding the current 45% tariff on Canadian lumber exported to the US. In other words, what the industry is seeking more than anything else is clarity. …Complicating this scenario for lumber producers—and one that should not and cannot be overlooked—is provincial government policy, especially in BC, Ontario and Quebec. …If there is a potential silver lining in Canada to the ongoing tariff soap opera, it’s the promise by the Canadian Liberal government to build 500,000 new, affordable homes per year, thus theoretically creating significant domestic demand for building materials like softwood lumber. …While the experts are skeptical that the federal government will meet its goal of building 500,000 new homes per year… it will be worthwhile watching to see if Canadian softwood lumber producers will step up and benefit from this initiative.

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Canada needs to plan for the worst’ as Trump devises an end-run around a Supreme Court ruling against his trade policy

By Ian Pattison
The Chronicle Journal
December 13, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Hopes for relief on the tariffs front are likely on hold until the new year now that the US Supreme Court has adjourned for the holiday season before ruling on the matter of President Trump’s illogical and, likely, illegal trade tariffs. Their decision could come in January, which is a long wait for affected economies around the world. …It took just 35 days for lower courts to decide Trump’s use of the act for tariffs was invalid, which he appealed. …Rampant speculation is outlined by Daniel Schramm In the Missouri Independent: “The Trump administration’s tariff appeal could mark the turning point when the US Supreme Court finally stands up to the president“. …What happens if the court strikes down Trump’s rationale? …Treasury Secretary Scott Bessant has indicated that the administration intends to turn to other trade acts in order to effectively keep the tariffs in place, regardless of what the Supreme Court thinks.

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Canada open to restart U.S. trade talks, but next engagement likely CUSMA review

By Benjamin Lopez Steven
CBC News
December 14, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Canada-US Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc says the door is open for American officials to restart trade talks with Canada. …”Canada believed it was making progress with the Americans — and talks would eventually move to automobiles and softwood lumber — but Trump “decided to suspend those negotiations. That’s regrettable.” …Canadian, American and Mexican officials are gearing up to review CUSMA, which offers Canada crucial protection from many of U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs. …On Thursday, Canada’s ambassador to the U.S. Kristen Hillman downplayed signals from the Trump administration about breaking down the trilateral pact and said she hasn’t “heard any indication from the US side that they want to change that foundation.” …All three countries must indicate by July 1 of next year whether they want to extend the agreement, renegotiate its terms or let it expire. LeBlanc said in private the conversations are “much more reassuring” about CUSMA.

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A look at Canada’s lumber industry in 2024

By StatsCan
The Government of Canada
December 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

This infographic, released December 12, 2025, provides an overview of the lumber industry, showcasing key metrics and trends related to production, exports and price change. It highlights significant data points, illustrating the state of the market and offering insights into the current landscape of lumber in Canada.

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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. 

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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.

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Historic agreement will strengthen forestry-sector stability on north Island

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
December 15, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

‘Na̲mg̲is First Nation and the Province have signed a joint decision-making agreement that advances reconciliation by supporting predictable harvesting and sustainable forestry operations on the north Island. …‘Na̲mg̲is First Nation and the Province have approved a Section 7 joint decision-making agreement under the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act and Forest Range and Practices Act. This work affirms that ‘Na̲mg̲is First Nation are partners in forestry decisions that directly affect their territory, community and future. The agreement will enable the joint establishment of forest landscape plans and approval of associated Forest Operations Plans within the area of Tree Farm Licence (TFL) 37 that overlaps ‘Na̲mg̲is territory, located …on northern Vancouver Island. …“Completing this agreement marks a major step forward in building a modern, collaborative planning approach for northern Vancouver Island firmly rooted in partnership with ‘Na̲mg̲is,” said Steven Hofer, president and CEO of Western Forest Products Inc.

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Forestry is a Solution | 2026 COFI Convention

The BC Council of Forest Industries
December 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Join industry, government, First Nations, and community leaders at the 2026 COFI Convention as we focus on rebuilding competitiveness and shaping a more resilient future for BC’s forest sector. British Columbia’s forest sector is at a crossroads — facing tough challenges, but also leading the way in solutions that matter most to our province: housing, wildfire resilience, reconciliation, and building a resilient provincial economy. At the 2026 COFI Convention, themed Forestry is a Solution, leaders from industry, government, First Nations, local government will come together to advance competitiveness and chart a strong, sustainable future for BC’s forest sector. Discounted hotel rates are nearly sold out, book now to secure conference pricing and guarantee your stay. April 8 – 10, 2026 | JW Marriott Parq in Vancouver

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Domtar extends deadline to close Crofton mill to January 4, 2026

By Skye Ryan
Chek News
December 15, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Steam kept pouring from the Crofton mill Monday, after Domtar issued a surprise extension that will keep the 68-year-old pulp mill running through the Christmas holidays. The 350 laid-off workers were expected to stop production at the mill and begin shutting it down on Monday (Dec. 15), but instead Domtar stated that production will now continue until January 4. …“This provides our employees with a continued schedule throughout the holiday season and our suppliers a few additional weeks to provide services to the mill,” stated Domtar’s Senior Director of Public Affairs Chris Stoicheff. …According to North Cowichan Mayor Rob Douglas, the District of North Cowichan is still crunching the numbers regarding the impact of the closure of the mill, on upcoming 2026 property taxes. …For now though, the priority of officials is supporting laid-off workers, and getting new programs and training in place quickly.

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Forest minister calls Nanaimo zoning motion a threat to Harmac mill

By Darron Kloster
Victoria Times Colonist
December 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Forest Minister Ravi Parmar says proposed new zoning regulations in Nanaimo for heavy industries could have “extreme” consequences for a local pulp and power producer. …A motion by Nanaimo Coun. Paul Manly at a Nov. 17 meeting targets emission-intensive industries such as garbage and waste incineration facilities and chemical, petroleum and LNG plants. …“This is not anti-Harmac,” Manly said in an interview on Friday. …In a letter to Nanaimo’s mayor and council this week, Parmar said the motion sends the wrong signal at a time when the B.C. forest manufacturing industry is in a downward spiral. “This move could result in lost investment, confidence and assuredness in the local forest sector,” said Parmar, noting Harmac Pacific is a key driver of the local forest sector and a major employer in Nanaimo’s economy. “We need to be supporting our forestry operators, not punishing them. This motion is closer to the latter.”

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Closure of Crofton mill will hurt Cowichan Valley

By Robert Barron
Cowichan Valley Citizen
December 13, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

…Steve Henry, Domtar paper and packaging president, said the closure of the mill, which has been supplying good-paying jobs to local workers for more than 65 years, is closing due to the continued poor pricing for pulp and lack of access to affordable fibre in B.C. Those factors have been hobbling many aspects of the coastal forest industry for years, and have led to shutdowns of other mills in B.C. and curtailed operations. …The mill pays approximately $5 million in taxes to the municipality annually, which translates to more than 10 per cent of North Cowichan’s total taxes each year. …Parmar said he believes strongly that good-paying forestry jobs in Crofton are still possible and he is planning to seek out prospective buyers for the mill, but I suspect that may be difficult in the circumstances that B.C.’s forest industry is operating in these days.

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Coastal Forest Policy Coalition Statement on Mill Closures and Sector Challenges

Coastal Forest Policy Coalition
December 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Coastal Forest Policy Coalition shares deep concern about mill closures and job losses, including the most recent in Crofton. BC’s coastal forest sector is facing structural collapse due to a lack of economic fibre supply that is primarily the result of today’s policy-driven constraints, making it extraordinarily difficult to get a stable supply of timber to market. The reality we’re facing In 2025, the Coast will harvest only 6.5 million cubic metres of timber, less than half the sustainable allowable annual cut of 15 million cubic metres. This situation has been decades in the making. The numbers tell the story: Permit submissions have dropped 93%, from 2,300 annually in 2016 to only 167 by mid-2025; Permit preparation now takes 300 days compared to 90 days historically; Coastal harvesting has fallen 50% over the past decade; Nine mills have closed since 2018, with 5,400 jobs lost since 2022. …BC log exports are a politically charged subject that some have suggested contribute to mill closures. This is not the case. 

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New Brunswick ruling highlights worries about reconciliation in B.C.

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
December 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West, Canada East

Vaughn Palmer

It took a judge from the other side of the country to put a finger on the challenge posed by the designation of Aboriginal title for the Cowichan Tribes over private land in Richmond. “A declaration of Aboriginal title over privately owned lands — which, by its very nature, gives the Aboriginal beneficiary exclusive possession, occupation, and use — would sound the death knell of reconciliation with the interests of non-Aboriginal Canadians.” That’s Justice Ernest Drapeau of New Brunswick Court of Appeal. …There are differences between the New Brunswick case and…both are likely to end up on the docket of the Supreme Court of Canada sooner or later. …” This week, the premier suggested there could be no Indigenous reconciliation without protection for private property. …The B.C. NDP government, it has been the most progressive in the country on Indigenous relations. If it fears that agenda is going off the rails, it ought to be taken seriously.

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BC community left reeling from mill closure

By Jim Csek
NowMedia Group
December 13, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The community of Crofton’s very existence is tied to the Domtar pulp and paper mill. When that facility announced its indefinite closure in December 2025, roughly 350 high‑paying jobs will disappear almost overnight, alongside about $5 million in annual property taxes for the Municipality of North Cowichan. For a town of about 2,000 residents and a region already reeling from other sawmill shutdowns, the impact is hard to overstate. In our video interview (below), North Cowichan Mayor Rob Douglas explains how the community grew up around the mill. “Each job represents a family with a mortgage, bills and roots in the community,” he says.

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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.

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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.

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Pulp mill owners urged to ‘step up’ and heat shuttered northwestern Ontario plant

CBC News
December 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

People in Terrace Bay are calling for the owners of a pulp mill in northwestern Ontario to provide winter maintenance at the plant where operations came to a halt last year. Local officials, provincial politicians and union leaders are echoing this message. Terrace Bay Pulp Mill is owned by AV Group, which is part of Aditya Birla. The company in January 2024 temporary ided its pulp operations due to prevailing market conditions. Following the closure the province stepped in with temporary support to maintain the plant through the winter months. But there’s been no word from the company about maintenance this winter, a situation Terrace Bay Mayor Paul Malashewski said they need to urgently address. …“The heat should have been on probably by mid November at the latest.” …Minister Holland says Ontario has been clear that decisions about site maintenance are the responsibility of AV Terrace Bay.

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Northern Pulp pensions to be made whole as woodlands sale proceeds

Unifor Canada
December 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

HALIFAX—Unifor members at the now-shuttered Northern Pulp mill in Pictou, Nova Scotia, will see their pension fund made whole and fully wound up as the company’s woodland assets secures a buyer at auction for $235 million. This amount is enough to repay the $37 million owed to Unifor Local 440 members’ defined benefit pension plan. “This is a small but important victory for all workers as the bankruptcy process typically places workers and their pensions at the bottom of the list of creditors or off the list entirely,” said Unifor National President Lana Payne. “Current Northern Pulp pensioners can rest easier knowing their retirement is secure, and those who will retire in the future can now count on the pension they earned being there for them.” Unifor represented 220 members at Northern Pulp prior to its closure in 2020 and has continued to advocate for them through the closure, creditor protection and sale processes.

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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

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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.”

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Finance & Economics

Higher import taxes on Canadian softwood driving up construction costs, U.S. home builders say

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
December 16, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

The National Association of Home Builders in the United States is warning about rising costs that it says are squeezing the construction industry after a recent spike in U.S. import taxes on Canadian softwood lumber. Higher U.S. duties and new tariffs are having serious repercussions as American builders contend with escalating material and labour expenses, NAHB chairman Buddy Hughes cautioned on Monday. Builders have also been struggling during a period of sluggish sales. “Market conditions remain challenging with two-thirds of builders reporting they are offering incentives to move buyers off the fence,” Mr. Hughes said. The index’s latest survey also showed that 40 per cent of builders reported reducing prices in December, with an average price drop of 5 per cent. Warnings from the NAHB about inflationary pressures places it at odds with the powerful U.S. Lumber Coalition, whose members include Seattle-based Weyerhaeuser. [to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

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Canada’s value of building permits rose 14.9% in October

Statistics Canada
December 12, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

In October, the total value of building permits issued in Canada rose $1.8 billion (+14.9%) to $13.8 billion. The increase in construction intentions was led by the residential sector (+$1.1 billion). An increase was also observed in the non-residential sector (+$702.8 million). On a constant dollar basis (2023=100), the total value of building permits issued in October grew 14.9% from the previous month and was up 5.9% on a year-over-year basis. In October, residential construction intentions increased $1.1 billion (+14.6%) to $8.6 billion. Ontario (+$882.6 million) contributed the most to the national growth. The multi-family component grew $1.0 billion to $5.9 billion in October. The largest increase was recorded in Ontario (+$876.4 million), followed by Quebec (+$81.4 million). …The single-family component was up $47.0 million to $2.6 billion in October, with the gains being primarily attributed to Alberta (+$28.7 million). Across Canada, a total of 24,300 multi-family dwellings and 4,100 single-family dwellings were authorized in October, marking a 13.6% increase from the previous month. 

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Canadian housing starts increased 9.4% in November, the six-month trend decreased 1.7%

By Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation
Cision Newswire
December 15, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — The six-month trend in housing starts decreased (1.7%) in November (264,445 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 3% year-over-year in centres with a population of 10,000 or greater, with 21,870 units recorded in November, compared to 22,501 units in November 2024. The year-to-date total was 219,077 units, up 4% from the same period in 2024. The total monthly SAAR of housing starts for all areas in Canada was up 9.4% in November (254,058 units) compared to October (232,245 units). “Both the six-month trend and actual starts fell in November, showing signs of slowing momentum in residential construction,” said Kevin Hughes, CMHC’s Deputy Chief Economist. “However, on a year-to-date basis, starts are still elevated compared to last year.”

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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.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canadian Wood Council Advances Wood Innovation and Education

Canadian Wood Council
December 15, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

The Canadian Wood Council (CWC) welcomes the announcement made today by the Honourable Tim Hodgson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources. The event celebrated funding for projects that strengthen Canada’s forestry sector and foster innovation in wood-based solutions. CWC received $8.5 million since 2023 to expand the use of wood-based products, broaden education on wood construction and contribute to the advancement of the National Building Code. …This funding has allowed CWC and its WoodWorks program to support design and construction professionals with expert resources, tools, and guidance that help accelerate the adoption of wood construction nationwide. As we continue this work, we will help catalyze sustainable demand for construction solutions that are not only innovative but also replicable and rapidly deployed, approaches that will help address Canada’s housing and affordability challenges at scale.

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NRCan launches website to promote the use of Canadian wood in construction, and the Forest Sector Transformation Task Force

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
December 15, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Tim Hodgson

TORONTO — The Honourable Tim Hodgson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources… announced the launch of a single-window pathfinding service, funding to promote the use of Canadian wood in construction, and the creation of the Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force. Natural Resources Canada’s new, single-window pathfinding service includes a new website with information on all programs available to forest sector businesses and direct access to Natural Resources Canada experts on eligibility and program applications. …Starting in early 2026, the Task Force will seek input from industry, provinces and territories, Indigenous foresters, communities, and labour groups on how to restructure the forest sector. Led by Ken Kalesnikoff of Kalesnikoff Mass Timber and Frédéric Verreault of les Chantiers Chibougamau, the Task Force will have 90 days to seek recommendations. …Additional members of the Task Force will be announced in the coming weeks.

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TreeFree Diaper Core — The Region’s First 0% Tree-Fiber Baby Diapers

By GreenCore Solutions Corp.
Cision Newswire
December 16, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West, International

VANCOUVER, BC and PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico – GreenCore Solutions Corp. today announced ecoVerificado.com, a new industrial standard that enables Latin American OEM baby diaper manufacturers (OEM-Cs) to produce premium ecological private-label diapers using TreeFree Diaper Core at the same cost–or lower–than standard branded diapers. For the first time, producers in Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, and Chile can offer retailers Zero-Tree product with major environmental gains–without imposing a European-style “Green Premium” on local families. …By adopting TreeFree Diaper® Core, manufacturers eliminate wood fiber entirely-removing the regulatory trigger for foreign audits and fees while lowering COGS. “We’re giving domestic producers the ability to say no to the German ‘Tree Tax’,” said Matthew Keddy, CEO of GreenCore Solutions.

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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.

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Forestry

Old growth vital to Vancouver Island’s threatened screech-owls, says scientist

By Jessica Durling
Nanaimo News Bulletin
December 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Megan Buers

Coastal screech-owls once flourished over the east coast of Vancouver Island, but now the subspecies has become a rare sight for birders. …Both subspecies have been considered threatened for more than a decade, with the committee on the status of endangered wildlife in Canada noting that the coastal subspecies faces ongoing threats including predation from barred owls, as well as habitat loss where logging has altered the age structure of the forest. “They were ubiquitous, they were everywhere at very high densities and not that long ago,” ornithologist Megan Buers said. …The largest reason for the low number along the east coast, the scientist said, is land development. “Those Garry oak ecosystems are highly degraded,” she said. …Currently, Buers believes Vancouver Island should be able to support “three or four times” the population of coastal screech owls that it has now.

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Conversations That Matter: Trees, genomics and climate

By Stuart McNish
The Vancouver Sun
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

“Trees are the lungs of the earth and home to millions of organisms, fungi and animals,” says Sally Aitken at the University of BC’s forestry department and lead of the AdapTree project. “Without a doubt one of the most successful species on earth.” Aitken also warns, “they are a species under threat due to rapid environmental changes.” The biggest challenge for trees is the rate of change. “For time immemorial, trees have adapted to a changing environment and they continue to do so,” says Aitken. The objective of the AdapTree project is to address that pace of change by identifying alleles in Douglas fir, spruce, western larch, jack pine and lodgepole pine trees that have adapted to a variety of environments. Using genetic tools, the team at AdapTree, works with a variety of stakeholders within forestry to identify strains of species that will survive in regions where environmental conditions are changing.

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Amid mill closures and tariffs, comes a different kind of forestry

By Eric Plummer
Ha-Shilth-Sa | Canada’s Oldest First Nation’s Newspaper
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Gold River, BC — This has not been a good year for forestry as the industry continues to feel the pain from escalating tariffs, mill closures and job losses. But in Nootka Sound a First Nation is looking to a future where trees have a higher value staying in the ground. …the Mowachaht/Muchalaht First Nation is looking at an entirely different economic approach to managing its territorial forests and waters in Nootka Sound. The First Nation’s Salmon Parks project aims to have 66,595 hectares, comprising approximately 20 per cent of its land territory, under a protected designation by 2030. The initiative strictly limits industrial activity within the Salmon Parks – particularly old growth logging – with hopes of eventually allowing nature to heal itself to the point that salmon runs rebound from the headwaters to the ocean. …As the project seeks an economic future, the Salmon Parks initiative is looking at the economic value of keeping trees standing by selling carbon credits. 

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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Province, feds funding wildfire planning for 50 New Brunswick communities

By Ian Curran
CBC News
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Michael Boyle

The federal and provincial governments are providing 50 New Brunswick communities with a combined $2.6 million for wildfire planning. According to the Department of Natural Resources, there have been 448 wildfires in 2025, burning over 3,412 hectares of New Brunswick’s forests. This is almost double the 281 wildfires that were recorded in 2024. “I think in New Brunswick and the Maritimes, we’ve sometimes not thought that wildfires were much of an issue,” said Kennebecasis Valley Fire Chief Mike Boyle. “It’s obvious that it’s something that we need to be aware of and a concern for us.” Boyle said his community is one of the 50 that have been selected to receive some of the funding. It will go towards allowing fire departments to hire consultants who will help create or update wildfire preparedness plans.

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Standing dead … the hidden risk of ash trees across region

By Monika Rekola
Orillia Matters
December 14, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©NRCan

What used to be a healthy ash forest now stands as a thin, brittle skeleton along Tay Shore Trail. Last winter’s ice storm didn’t just knock out power across southern Ontario, it uncovered a serious hazard: thousands of tall, brittle, and bone-dead ash trees, silent casualties of the emerald ash borer (EAB). Ash forests once stretched across Ontario floodplains, including pockets of Simcoe County. They filtered groundwater, stabilized riverbanks, and sheltered entire ecological communities. Indigenous peoples relied on ash for basket-making; farmers used it for tool handles; athletes swung ash baseball bats. To lose them so fast — in a single generation — is heartbreaking. Simcoe County is now fully infested. And we are entering the phase where the last remaining dead trunks are collapsing.

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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.  

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