Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

A call to all forestry students and young professionals of BC: Are you interested in being a part of the future of forestry?

BC Forestry Youth Conference
February 13, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

We are gauging interest in a conference for students and young professionals across B.C. in the forestry industry. The goal of this conference is to create a more unified forestry sector throughout the province by bringing together students and young professionals to discuss current and future challenges in forestry, explore innovative solutions, and build relationships that can support us throughout our careers. This is a youth-led initiative and so having your opinions and participation is crucial to determine the topics and speakers for the conference. We have created a short survey (see link) to help determine the topics and timing of this conference.  This is a chance for young professionals and students like yourself to build a more connected, informed, and forward-thinking forestry community and empower them to help shape the future of forestry in B.C. 

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Forest Professionals BC Honours Seven Outstanding Forest Professionals

Forest Professionals British Columbia
February 11, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver — Forest Professionals British Columbia (FPBC) honoured seven individuals as part of its recognition program in Vancouver on February 5. Forest Professionals BC recognized three Distinguished Forest Professionals, one Forest Professional of the Year, one Jim Rodney Memorial Volunteer of the Year, and two authors for BC Forest Professional Magazine Best Article at the 78th Forest Professionals BC forestry conference recognition banquet. Jeff Fisher (North Vancouver), BSF, RPF, Christopher Vukovic (Qualicum Beach), HBScF, RPF(Ret), and John Walker (Williams Lake), RPF, were honoured as Distinguished Forest Professionals for 2025. This category recognizes significant accomplishments over a career, for providing outstanding service to the profession of forestry and for furthering the principles of Forest Professionals BC. It is the profession’s highest honour for a registrant. Peter Flett, MSFM, RPF, of Penticton is the 2025 Forest Professional of the Year. Margaret Symon, RPF, PCP, of Duncan is the 2025 Jim Rodney Memorial Volunteer of the Year. Lastly, Vanessa Fetterly, BSc, RPBio, and Carl Pollard, BSc, RPF, collaborated on the 2025 BC Forest Professional Magazine Best Article.

Additional coverage:

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Business & Politics

PM Carney taps former head of public service to spearhead CUSMA negotiations

By Darren Major
CBC News
February 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Prime Minister Mark Carney has chosen former Privy Council clerk Janice Charette to head Canada’s trade negotiations as it prepares for a review of the North American trade pact. Charette’s title is chief trade negotiator to the United States, according to a Monday news release from the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO). She’ll be a senior adviser to Carney and Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc. “Charette brings extraordinary leadership, expertise and a deep commitment to advancing Canada’s interests,” Carney said in the release. “She will advance Canadian interests and a strengthened trade and investment relationship that benefits workers and industries in both Canada and the United States.” The announcement comes as the federal government prepares for a scheduled review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) this year. It also comes a day after Mark Wiseman, a global investment banker and pension fund manager, took the reins as Canada’s next ambassador to Washington.

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Penticton’s Structurlam bankruptcy fight over $80M US Walmart claim returns to court

By Brennan Phillips
The Summerland Review
February 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Almost three years after declaring bankruptcy, and more than two years under new owners, legal proceedings for Penticton’s Structurlam are continuing through the courts as it fights with the company that sent it into bankruptcy in the first place. In January, the case returned to the BC Supreme Court in Vancouver to order two Canadian engineering firms to produce documents and reports for the proceedings as Structurlam faces $80 million US in claims from Walmart, according to a decision published on Feb. 11. In 2023, Structurlam began bankruptcy proceedings after Walmart ended its contract to build the company’s new home office campus in Arkansas. …In July, Walmart filed a claim for over $80 million US for allegedly defective, nonconforming, rejected, nondelivered, or returned goods that it had paid for and alleged costs to replace said goods. The January 2026 B.C. Supreme Court decision orders two engineering firms to provide their documentation.

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Reopening of trade negotiations a sign of hope for Canadian businesses

By Adrian Ghobrial
CTV News
February 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WINDSOR, Ontario — For months, trade negotiations between Canada and the United States have been stalled. This week that all changed when US President Trump announced negotiations were back on. During his social media tirade about Windsor, Ontario’s Gordie Howe Bridge, and a list of other perceived transgressions, Trump wrote… we will start negotiations, IMMEDIATELY.” While Trump’s political speed bump threatens to derail the planned opening of the commercial corridor, some industry leaders see an opening to accelerate negotiations. “Trade conversations have now restarted, a few weeks ago conversations weren’t happening. I see this as a positive,” says Canadian Association of Moldmakers Nicole Vlanich. …With Trump restarting trade negotiations that he once brought to a screeching halt, business leaders in Windsor hope this will be an important first step towards paving a clearer picture for economic growth for both the Canadian and US economies.

In related coverage:

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Six House Republicans defy Trump to block his Canada tariffs

By Sarah Ferris and Veronica Stracqualursi
CNN Politics
February 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON, DC — In a vote that GOP leaders fought hard to avoid, a half dozen Republicans sent a blunt message to President Trump that they do not support the tariff regime that he has made the centerpiece of his second term. Six Republicans joined with Democrats in the vote to effectively repeal the president’s tariffs on Canada, the culmination of months of consternation in the GOP over the president’s trade war that has quietly rattled even some of his staunchest loyalists in Congress. …The Senate has already passed a similar measure to cancel Trump’s tariffs on Canada, which — unlike most measures — can be passed with a simple majority rather than 60 votes. But even if the Senate does agree to this same House measure, Trump would still have the power to veto it. The House did not secure enough votes to protect a veto override.

In related coverage: 

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Why This Mill Survives When Others Don’t

By Forestnet
You Tube
February 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

‘Making forestry sexy again’ That’s the bold mission Bhavjit Thandi is on as the new face of Richmond Plywood. Most CFOs stay in the boardroom, but 38-year old Bhavjit Thandi hit the mill floor on day one to understand the 70-year-old employee-owned co-op where workers take out mortgages just to get in. We dive into how this “shareholders on the floor” co-op model powers a zero-waste juggernaut that invests millions in automation and hiring more workers while other mills go dark. Expect hot takes on the dangerous “gray market” imports threatening Canadian construction and the brutal reality of battling the world’s most expensive fiber costs. Bhavjit pulls no punches on government red tape, the Trump factor, and why Richply refuses to shut down even when demand tanks.

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Truck loggers feeling the effects of a lagging B.C. forest industry, critic says

By Brendan Shykora
Nanaimo Bulletin
February 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ward Stamer

As BC’s forestry industry licks its wounds following a series of recent mill closures, BC’s forest critic says truck loggers are hurting, too. Kamloops-North Thompson MLA Ward Stamer attended the TLA’s convention last month, and came away with a dire picture of how these BC workers are feeling in terms of their job security. …Stamer lamented the closing of the Atli Chip mill near Port McNeill, announced last month. He said the closure was unexpected, but not altogether unsurprising given the domino effect set in motion by a previous Crofton pulp mill closure on Vancouver Island. He said “we never heard a peep” about the Atli Chip mill closure in the week before it happened, “but that’s what happens when you get something like a pulp mill that goes down, it can drag anywhere between four to six solid mills with it.” 

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Collapse of NDP-Green pact gives Eby one more excuse to call early election

By Rob Shaw
Business in Vancouver
February 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The only thing more surprising than the collapse of the co-operation agreement between the BC Greens and NDP would have been if the two sides had agreed on a new deal. …The Co-Operation and Responsible Government Accord (CARGA)… didn’t seem to be meeting anyone’s needs. For the NDP, the deal was supposed to act as a safety net for a slim one-seat majority. …It worked for last year’s budget. But outside of that, the Greens refused to back the NDP on three other confidence matters. And for that, the government agreed to advance the Green causes… [including] an early review of CleanBC and another review of the forestry system. For the Greens …it was a mixed bag, at best. The NDP did launch reviews of CleanBC and forestry, but then didn’t accept the resulting recommendations. The documents seem destined for that dusty shelf in the legislature library where unwanted reports go to die.

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Several Local Leaders in Forestry recognized by Forest Nova Scotia

989 XFM
February 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

At the recent Forest Nova Scotia AGM, Antigonish County’s Ralph Stewart of RES Sustainable Forestry received a Forest Stewardship Certificate. A post on Forest Nova Scotia’s Facebook Page states the event help recognize the year’s leaders in safety and stewardship across the forestry industry. When asked why he made a career of forestry, Stewart said it stems for his childhood, working on the family farm and out in the woods with his parents and siblings. When working on the wood lot, he said they were always taught to think about what’s next for the lot and how to sustain it. Stewart said he feels the forestry industry is going in the right direction and working towards implementing the Lahey Forestry Report, which includes a number of forestry objectives.

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Finance & Economics

In defence of hewers of wood and drawers of water

By The Editorial Board
The Globe and Mail
February 15, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

It’s been nearly a century since political economist Harold Innis popularized the phrase “hewers of wood and drawers of water” in decrying Canada’s dependence on natural resources. …Underpinning that cry is the (wrongheaded) assumption that natural resources such as mining, agriculture and energy are second-grade economic activity, less desirable than manufacturing. …That mistake is the foundation for many public policy blunders over many decades. The numbers demolish that myth, and tell a very different story, one in which energy, mining and other natural resources sectors create enormous economic value and are globally competitive. …The federal government needs to get itself out of the way of some of the strongest parts of the Canadian economy. Stop subsidizing inefficient sectors. Stop raising protective tariffs that harm other parts of the economy. Focus on rolling back unjustified regulatory barriers that harm the ability of the entire economy, particularly globally exposed natural resources sectors, to compete. And, most of all, stop the undervaluing Canada’s great natural advantage in natural resources. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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CMHC reports further slowing of housing starts with no turnaround in sight

The Canadian Press in CP24 News
February 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The pace of homebuilding in Canada continues to slow with no near-term signs of a turnaround, said Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. on Monday. The national housing agency said the seasonally-adjusted annual pace of housing starts declined 15% in January. Housing starts can vary considerably month-to-month as big projects get started, but the agency’s six-month moving average for annual starts also showed a 3.5% decline. “The six-month trend has decreased for the fourth consecutive month,” said CMHC deputy chief economist Tania Bourassa-Ochoa in a news release. “We expect new construction to continue trending lower going forward as trade and geopolitical uncertainty, high construction costs, weaker demand, and rising inventories continue to constrain developer activity.” She said a near-term turnaround is looking unlikely, and reflects what the agency has been hearing from developers over recent months. The pullback comes amid a variety of pressures, including lower immigration numbers and US trade policy.

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Canada’s annual inflation rate edged down to 2.3% in January with decline in gas prices

By Jenna Benchetrit
CBC News
February 17, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Canada’s annual inflation rate edged down to 2.3% in January, Statistics Canada said on Tuesday, driven downward by a decline in the cost of gasoline. Economists were largely expecting the rate to remain unchanged from December’s 2.4%. Pump prices put pressure on the headline rate, having fallen 16.7% in January compared to the same period last year. With gas excluded, January’s inflation rate came in at 3%. The Bank of Canada’s preferred measures of core inflation, which strip away volatility from one-time tax changes and gas prices, all ticked down in January — bringing those rates closer to the central bank’s two per cent inflation target. “Overall, this is an encouraging result for the Bank of Canada, with inflation finally nearing the [2%] target on a broader basis,” wrote Douglas Porter, chief economist at Bank of Montreal. ›

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Interfor reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $104.6 million

Interfor Corporation
February 12, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

BURNABY, BC — Interfor recorded a net loss in Q4, 2025 of $104.6 million, compared to a net loss of $215.8 million in Q3’25 and a net loss of $49.9 million in Q4’24. Adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $29.2 million on sales of $600.6 million in Q4’25 versus an Adjusted EBITDA loss of $183.8 million on sales of $689.3 million in Q3’25 and Adjusted EBITDA of $80.4 million on sales of $746.5 million in Q4’24. …During and subsequent to Q4’25, Interfor completed a series of financing transactions. Taken together, these transactions significantly enhance Interfor’s financial flexibility, bolster liquidity and provide meaningful additional runway as the Company continues to navigate volatile lumber market conditions. …Lumber production of 753 million board feet was down 159 million board feet versus the preceding quarter. …Interfor’s strategy of maintaining a diversified portfolio of operations in multiple regions allows the Company to both reduce risk and maximize returns on capital over the business cycle.

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Mercer reports Q4, 2025 net loss of 308.7 million

Mercer International Inc.
February 12, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

NEW YORK, New York — Mercer International reported fourth quarter 2025 Operating EBITDA of negative $20.1 million compared to positive $99.2 million in the same quarter of 2024 and negative $28.1 million in the third quarter of 2025. In the fourth quarter of 2025, net loss was $308.7 million compared to net income of $16.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and a net loss of $80.8 million in the third quarter of 2025. The net loss in the fourth quarter of 2025 included total non-cash impairments of $238.7 million. This included non-cash impairments of $203.5 million recognized against long-lived assets at our Peace River mill due to the continued down-cycle environment of hardwood pulp markets, $12.2 million against certain obsolete equipment and $23.0 million against pulp inventory due to low prices and high fiber costs. …Mr. Juan Carlos Bueno, CEO: “We continue to prioritize improving liquidity and working capital, committing to rebalancing our asset portfolio and maintaining operating discipline.”

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West Fraser reports Q4, 2025 loss of $751 million

West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd.
February 11, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

VANCOUVER, BC — West Fraser Timber reported their fourth quarter results of 2025. Fourth quarter sales were $1.165 billion, compared to $1.307 billion in Q3, 2025. Fourth quarter earnings were $(751) million, compared to earnings of $(204) million in Q3, 2025. Fourth quarter Adjusted EBITDA was $(79) million compared to $(144) million in Q3, 2025. Full year sales were $5.462 billion, compared to $6.174 billion in 2024. Full year earnings were $(937) million, compared to earnings of $(5) million. Full year Adjusted EBITDA was $56 million compared to $673 million in 2024. …”The fourth quarter of 2025 was another challenging period for West Fraser, marked by elevated softwood lumber duties and tariffs, southern yellow pine lumber and OSB oversupply, and tempered demand for many of our wood-based building products, much of which can be attributed to housing affordability constraints that have continued into early 2026. Notwithstanding this environment, we made great advances with some of our major capital investments,” said Sean McLaren, President and CEO. 

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Value of Canadian building permits increased 6.8% in December

Statistics Canada
February 11, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

In December, the total value of building permits issued in Canada increased $821.3 million (+6.8%) to $12.8 billion. The increase was led by the residential sector (+$533.5 million) and supported by the non-residential sector (+$287.8 million). On a constant dollar basis (2023=100), the total value of building permits issued in December grew 6.6% from the previous month and was down 6.3% on a year-over-year basis. …On an annual basis — weak single family and industrial construction intentions drive declines in residential and non-residential permit values. …The residential sector decreased $1.0 billion to $86.6 billion in 2025. This decline was driven by single-family construction intentions, falling 7.0% to $29.6 billion, the lowest annual level in the series. Conversely, the multi-family component increased $1.2 billion to $57.0 billion in 2025, the second-highest level in the series.

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B.C. outperforms Canada on exports despite tariffs and weak hiring

By Bryan Yu, chief economist of Central 1
Business in Vancouver
February 11, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s export performance moved against the national pattern in November. Domestic exports to international markets rose 7.6 per cent year over year to $4.59 billion, whereas exports nationally declined by about four per cent on a customs basis. This contrast partly reflects differences in the types of goods each region exports. Nevertheless, provincial export trends remain soft, reflecting U.S. tariffs on key products like lumber, and end of de minimis treatment of low value exports. Year-to-date, B.C. exports slipped a mild 0.1 per cent from same-period 2024, which was slightly stronger than the national reading. …That said, a declining trend continued in the battered forestry sector (-13.7 per cent year over year), where tariffs have compounded weakness from timber supply constraints and other duties already imposed by the U.S.

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Western Forest Products reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $17.5 million

Western Forest Products Inc.
February 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER – Western Forest Products reported adjusted EBITDA of negative $6.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. In comparison, the Company reported Adjusted EBITDA of $14.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and Adjusted EBITDA of negative $65.9 million in the third quarter of 2025, which included a non-cash export tax expense of $59.5 million related to the determination of final duty rates from the sixth Administrative Review. Net loss was $17.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2025, as compared to a net loss of $1.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2024, and net loss of $61.3 million in the third quarter of 2025. …For the full year 2025, the net loss was $82.4 million compared to to a net loss of $34.5 million in 2024. …“Despite more challenging markets and higher softwood lumber duties and tariffs in 2025, we enter 2026 with a significantly improved balance sheet to navigate the expected near-term market uncertainty,” said Steven Hofer, President and CEO of Western Forest Products.

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Acadian Timber reports Q4, 2026 adjusted net income of $5.2 million

Acadian Timber Corp.
February 11, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

EDMUNDSTON, New Brunswick – Acadian Timber reported financial and operating results for the three months ended December 31, 2025 as well as for the full 2025 fiscal year. “While 2025 brought a multitude of challenges, Acadian delivered steady operational performance in New Brunswick, helping to offset weather-related challenges, trucking constraints, and productivity issues in Maine,” said Adam Sheparski, President and Chief Executive Officer. …During the fourth quarter, Acadian generated sales of $22.0 million compared to $20.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. Acadian generated $5.2 million of Adjusted EBITDA and declared dividends of $5.3 million. During 2025, Acadian generated revenue from timber sales and services of $87.0 million, compared to $91.6 million in the prior year. The sale of 752,100 voluntary carbon credits contributed an additional $24.6 million to total sales in 2024 while no sales of carbon credits occurred in 2025. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Embodied Carbon—Regulating to Reduce

By Aurélia Crémoux
Canadian Architect
February 16, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

As Denmark has recently tightened its standards for new construction with the aim of reducing embodied carbon, what lessons can Canada draw from this experience? In 2023, the Danish Building Code made life-cycle assessment (LCA) mandatory for all new buildings over their first fifty years. …The government also mandated researchers to provide practitioners with a list of generic material data for cases where an Environmental Product Declaration (EPD)—required to perform an LCA. When the regulation came into force in 2023, the entire construction industry was opposed to it, recalls Thomas Graabaek. “ And then slowly there was a movement within architects and engineers that actually we need to have even stricter demands.” …“Unfortunately, in Canada, [architects] have been educated only around operations, [not on its entire life cycle],” explains Kelly Alvarez Doran. He advocates for the establishment of embodied-carbon targets at different regulatory scales. 

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Stelumar and CRIBE Host First North American Hackathon Advancing Forestry-Based Housing Innovation

By Stelumar Advanced Manufacturing Inc.
Cision Newswire
February 17, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

TORONTO – Stelumar Advanced Manufacturing Inc. has successfully completed the first-of-its-kind North American BioBoosters Hackathon. The Hackathon addressed two urgent and interconnected challenges facing Canada: the need to accelerate housing supply through innovation in construction and the opportunity to unlock new value for Ontario’s forestry sector through advanced building products. In partnership with the Centre for Research & Innovation in the Bio-Economy (CRIBE) and the Interreg Norway Sweden project Circular Bioeconomy Arena, Stelumar brought together seven teams from Canada, Norway, Sweden and Finland, industry experts and innovation leaders to explore scalable, sustainable building solutions that could be implemented directly in Stelumar’s manufacturing operations. …Throughout the two-day event, participating teams presented concepts ranging from advanced wood-based chemicals, materials and solutions supporting circular material approaches, and low-carbon manufacturing processes, with an emphasis on scalability, performance and alignment with Ontario’s forestry resources.

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New National Platform Connects Education and Industry to Advance Construction Training: MMC Edu

By Modern Methods of Construction Education
British Columbia Institute of Technology
February 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Modern Methods of Construction Education (MMC Edu) is a national platform that connects education and industry to advance construction training in Canada. It is a key outcome of the Mass Timber Training Network: Advancing Trades for a Sustainable Future (MTAT) project, which brings together a national network to advance wood as a low-carbon building material by addressing major barriers to mass timber adoption across the country. Led by the British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) in partnership with Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) through the Green Construction Through Wood Program (GC Wood), the MTAT project focuses on education and training as a key vehicle for reducing barriers and preparing the next generation of the workforce. MMC Edu serves as a shared platform where network members, industry partners, and educators can exchange knowledge and access resources that support innovation, sustainability, and workforce readiness across Canada.

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International Pulp Week – Only 48 hours left to lock in Early Bird rates

International Pulp Week
February 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

International Pulp Week (IPW) is the premier annual gathering for the global market pulp sector, organized by the Pulp and Paper Products Council (PPPC). Set for May 10–12, 2026 at the Sutton Place Hotel in Vancouver, BC, the three-day conference brings together producers, customers, logistics providers, analysts and other key stakeholders from around the world to share market intelligence, expert insights and strategic dialogue on trends shaping the future of pulp markets. Through keynote presentations, expert panels and extensive networking opportunities, IPW offers decision-makers high-value analysis, opportunities for business development, and collaboration across the pulp supply chain. The event has become a must-attend forum for those involved in international pulp production, trade and investment, with participants from more than 40 countries expected to attend.

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Concrete’s competitor climbs nine storeys in Toronto

By Cloe Logan
National Observer
February 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

©WindmillDevGroup

The tallest residential mass timber building in Ontario is reaching completion. Soon, 60 apartments will be ready, surrounded by walls and framing free from emissions-intensive concrete. Large panels made of wood were shipped from the West Coast to construct the nine-storey Etobicoke build, which is heated and cooled with geothermal energy. In 2024, the Ontario government updated its building code to allow for mass timber buildings of up to 18 storeys, opening up a new market for tall wooden buildings. The pre-fabrication aspect is what makes buildings of this kind viable, said Stephen Savell of Windmill Development Group, which is leading the project, called Hälsa. Instead of the building being constructed completely on site, a British Columbia-based start-up got the timber panels ready to install: they arrived complete with windows, cladding and more. Once the pieces reached the site, they were hefted up by cranes and attached to the building frame, which was also constructed with timber.

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Forestry

Tree Canada Launches New Online Platform to Strengthen Urban Forestry Across Canada

By Robert Henri
Tree Canada
February 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Ottawa, ON — Urban trees and forests play a vital role in climate resilience, public health, and community well-being. Supporting urban forests requires stronger coordination, knowledge sharing, and capacity building among professionals working in this sector. To meet this need, Tree Canada is proud to announce the recent launch of the Canadian Urban Forest Network (CUFN) Exchange, a new online hub connecting urban forestry professionals across the country. The CUFN Exchange, which now hosts over 300 members from every province in Canada, was created to convene urban forestry practitioners, researchers, educators, consultants and non-profit leaders in a shared space for knowledge exchange, professional connection, and collective problem-solving.

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Women in Forestry Virtual Summit

Women in Forestry Virtual Summit
February 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Creating a more diverse workforce is a critical challenge for forestry companies across Canada. Addressing this will require rethinking how we recruit, train, and retain employees, while fostering an industry culture that welcomes women and people of all backgrounds. This year, we align with the International Women’s Day 2026 theme, #GivetoGain for gender equality, to drive these conversations forward. On March 5, 2026, Canadian Forest IndustriesPulp & Paper CanadaCanadian Biomass, and Opérations Forestières et de Scierie will host the Women in Forestry Virtual Summit. Co-hosted by Christine Leduc, VP, Communications & Government Relations at the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, this free, national event will bring together industry professionals for a meaningful discussion on gender and diversity in the forest sector.

Svetlana Kayumova

Jenna Phillips

Featured Q&A Stories associated with this year’s event include: Svetlana Kayumova, Vice-President of Corporate Communications & Government Relations at Interfor and Jenna Phillips, Senior Policy Advisor at the Forest Products Association of Canada. 

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The BC NDP promised to phase out glyphosate. Forestry companies are still spraying

By Ainslie Cruickshank
The Narwhal
February 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia’s three major political parties found rare common ground in the last provincial election on the forestry sector’s use of glyphosate….During the 2024 campaign, the BC Greens promised to ban the use of all chemical herbicides in forestry. The BC Conservatives committed to stop all aerial spraying of glyphosate. And the BC NDP, which was re-elected with a slim majority that October, promised to phase out the sector’s use of glyphosate altogether. Despite those commitments, chemical herbicides were sprayed across hundreds of hectares of forests in 2025, mostly in the area northeast of Prince George, B.C. …The area forestry companies reported spraying with herbicides each year in B.C. has declined since 1989, when it peaked at about 40,000 hectares, according to a 2019 report by FPInnovations, which describes itself as a private non-profit focused on research and development in the forestry sector.

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Museum Musings: Whistler’s remaining old-growth forests

By Kristina Swerhun
Pique News Magazine
February 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Whistler is fortunate to be surrounded by temperate rainforest, which is essential to the resort’s appeal as a tourist destination. Forests have also proven to be highly beneficial for human mental and physical health. …Old-growth forests, defined as undisturbed for at least 250 years, are vital to addressing the interconnected biodiversity and climate crises. …On the climate side, old-growth forests store vast amounts of carbon in living trees, dead wood, and undisturbed soil. …Since the early 1900s, Whistler’s forests have been logged extensively, and low-elevation old-growth forests that once covered the valley are now found only in limited areas. Commercial logging and thinning have continued by the Cheakamus Community Forest (CCF) since 2009, though old-growth logging was deferred in 2021. …Given that old-growth forests thrive on stability, attempting to manage them doesn’t make ecological sense, especially since they are already among the most climate-resilient ecosystems on Earth.

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Timber technology to get a $5.9M upgrade

University of Alberta – Folio
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Robert Froese

Essential scientific tools used to balance timber harvesting with environmental sustainability are getting a significant update, powered by a $5.9-million investment in University of Alberta research. Forest growth and yield models … are being redeveloped in an eight-year project led by professor Robert Froese, supported with funding from the Forest Resource Improvement Association of Alberta, Alberta Forestry and Parks and the Saskatchewan Ministry of Environment. The work will create a new generation of models … and will provide capabilities specific to Western Canada’s boreal and Rocky Mountain forests that foresters and land managers are asking for, says Froese, Endowed Chair in Forest Growth & Yield in the Faculty of Agricultural, Life & Environmental Sciences. The project will modernize tools used in forest management, for tasks such as timber supply analysis, and for forecasts of how forests will respond to thinning, reforestation activities, tree genetic improvement, innovative silviculture, conservation and climate change.

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Peers honor John Walker as a Distinguished Forest Professional

By Pat Matthews
My Cariboo Now
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A Williams Lake man was of three people to be recognized by Forest Professional British Columbia (FPBC). At the 78th annual forestry conference on February 5, John Walker was honored as a Distinguished Forest Professional. …“John is a respected collaborator and mentor across BC, particularly in the Cariboo region, where he builds strong connections between forestry practices, First Nations stewardship and research,” Forest Professionals BC Board Chair Dave Clarke said. “I’ve been in Williams Lake since 1996 starting in consulting making decisions on a block by block level. Now working with Williams Lake First Nation it’s more landscape level working towards different policies and then also being operational. A lot of the Fire Mitigation work around town we’ve been a part of and helped push for,” Walker said. He has also collaborated with the BC Wildfire Service to develop thinning methods for prescribed burns, reducing wildfire risk, restoring culturally important plants, and enhancing operational efficiency.

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FireSmart funding changes raises concerns

By Dean Stoltz
Chek News
February 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Fire departments across BC are concerned about changes to the FireSmart program and how funding is provided to communities as they plan for wildfires. The Ministry of Forests says it’s moving to a more “holistic approach” based on where risk is the highest but the fire chief who was at the centre of the Wesley Ridge wildfire on Vancouver Island last summer says the program is too important to change. Nick Acciavatti says funding from the provincial FireSmart program was instrumental in saving numerous homes in the Wesley Ridge fire. …The program provides funding to local fire departments that then go into local neighbourhoods to educate and undertake fire prevention work like brush clearing and cleaning properties of combustible materials. But that money may no longer be available to any fire department that applies for it is something Acciavatti is concerned about, considering the changing wildfire conditions here on Vancouver Island.

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Next Woodlot Talk | Fisher Workshops | Silviculture Learning Opportunities | Planting Program

Woodlots BC
February 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The latest Woodlots Weekly delivers a comprehensive update for woodlot licence holders and forest professionals across British Columbia. This issue highlights an upcoming Woodlot Talk on February 19 featuring Gord Chipman, Woodlots BC Executive Director, offering insights from recent forestry conferences and a 2026 outlook. Free in-person Fisher habitat workshops are being offered in Smithers, Prince George, Dawson Creek and Williams Lake to support effective forest planning. There’s also a final reminder to register for regional silviculture workshops in Nanaimo, Prince George and Kelowna, with virtual options available. Support for wildfire risk reduction is showcased through details on the Wildfire Reduction Equipment Support Trust (WREST), designed to assist contractors in acquiring essential equipment. Forest Canada tree planting programs are also listed, offering financial support for restoration efforts following disturbances. Finally, the issue includes a robust Events Calendar with AGMs, conferences and workshops across the province.

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Motion to ban raw log exports pulled at Regional District of Nanaimo board meeting

By Maryse Zeidler
CBC News
February 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Doug Pauze

The Regional District of Nanaimo (RDN) board has reneged on a decision to advocate for a ban on raw log exports following feedback from wood manufacturing companies that said such a ban would put them out of business. RDN board members reviewed correspondence from the Coastal Forest Policy Coalition, Harmac and Coastland Wood Industries imploring them to rescind their recent decision to put forward a resolution to ban raw log exports at the upcoming Association of Vancouver Island and Coastal Communities meeting. The resolution called on governments to ban exports to encourage manufacturing in B.C. and support employment in B.C.’s forest industry. …”If B.C. bans log exports, manufacturing on the coast will shrink,” said Coastland Wood Industries president Doug Pauze. “Instead of protecting jobs, a ban would trigger widespread curtailments, put contractors out of business and strip millions in provincial revenue out of the economy.” Pauze said the idea that banning raw log exports would “magically redirect” wood fibre to domestic mills is “simply not true.”

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Yukon offers financial support to commercial wood harvesters

By Chris MacIntyre
CBC News
February 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

@Wikipedia

Yukon’s commercial wood harvesters could get a bit of financial relief, after a rough start to the winter season for some of them. The territorial government has created a multi-year “forestry sector fund” intended to help strengthen and support the Yukon forestry industry by reimbursing operators for some business costs. Michelle Sicotte, director of the territory’s forest management branch, said the program has three funding streams commercial harvesters can apply to. The capacity support stream helps businesses with planning, training, equipment, and operational costs. Another stream encourages harvesting and sorting of logs for home builders. There’s also a funding stream for “liquidity support,” intended to provide short-term emergency financial assistance to “harvesters who might be facing unexpected issues that affect wood supply,” Sicotte said.

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Environmental groups sue Ottawa over decade-long failure to map B.C. caribou habitat

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Three environmental groups have sued the federal government for allegedly failing to map out critical habitat for B.C.’s threatened caribou. The request for judicial review was filed in the Vancouver Federal Court Monday, Feb. 9 by Wildsight, Stand.earth and Wilderness Committee. …Southern mountain caribou were listed under SARA in 2003. The legislation requires Ottawa to identify what critical habitat a species needs, so it can implement a plan for it to survive and recover. …After a previous round of litigation in 2014, Ottawa said it would finish by the end of the year. More than a decade later, that still hasn’t happened. …By delaying 11 years, the three groups claim Ottawa’s unlawful and unreasonable failure to produce the maps has caused further harm to the threatened caribou herds. …Fully protecting southern mountain caribou could involve curbing logging activity in large swaths of B.C.—something that has worried the province’s forest industry.

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The Wildfire Act needs your input

BC First Nations Forestry Council
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

On behalf of the BC Wildfire Service, we are pleased to share this opportunity with First Nations communities. The BC Wildfire Service is in the early stages of policy development to address issues with the Wildfire Act and Regulation that are affecting wildfire operations and public safety in the province. Following the Interim Approach to Implementing the Requirements of Section 3 of the Declaration Act, the BC Wildfire Service is inviting First Nations to join us in dialogue that will shape the outcome of this policy development. We will be hosting three virtual sessions with the intention of hearing your feedback, perspectives, and suggestions for addressing issues with the Wildfire Act. The webinars will be February 10, 12 and 18. For more information, or to request other opportunities to participate such as Government-to-Government discussions, please email BCWS.Engagement@gov.bc.ca.

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Robin Hood-style activist group strikes again — this time in a forest

By Michelle Lalonde
Montreal Gazette
February 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Montreal — An activist group calling itself Les Robins des ruelles has followed its recent Robin Hood-style grocery store heists in Montreal with a claim to have sabotaged planned logging operations in a forest in the Mauricie region. …Translated as the Robins of the Alleyways, the group’s name is intended to evoke the legendary English folk hero who robbed from the rich to give to the poor. The group says on social media that although it delivered the booty to community kitchens and low-cost housing complexes, the grocery heists were political statements against the current economic order. …The latest such move by the group seems to be an action intended to discourage logging in some old-growth forests of Mékinac, in the Mauricie region. In a statement … the Robins say they have “armed the forest by driving steel bars through the trees on the site.” …The president of Forex Langlois Inc., said he is taking the sabotage claims “very seriously” 

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Indigenous communities look to ‘rekindle’ traditional practice of controlled burns

By Lindsay Kelly
Northern Ontario Business
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Elder Edward Perley recalled, as a boy, watching the people of his community conducting controlled burns to keep their forested land healthy. …“If they noticed that there was a piece of the forest somewhere that was diseased, they would go and they would burn that area,” said Perley, a Wolastoqey knowledge keeper and fire keeper from Nekotkuk in New Brunswick. …As climate change warms up the planet, and we experience hotter, more intense fires, Perley and others believe that fire isn’t always something to be feared. It can also be used as a tool to prevent those blazes from causing wider devastation. …Jonathon Cote, a land guardian with Kitigan Zibi Anishinābeg in Quebec, is actively working to bring back the practice to his community and others. …Provincial regulations limiting prescibed burns make it more challenging to be able to use fire in traditional ways, Cote said.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Boreal forest tree-planting efforts would pay big dividends, new research finds

By Thomas Kent
The Fort Frances Times
February 12, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada East

Strategically planting trees along the northern edge of Canada’s boreal forest could remove multiple gigatonnes of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by the end of the century, according to a new study led by researchers at the University of Waterloo. The research, published in Communications Earth & Environment, provides one of the most detailed estimates to date of the carbon that could realistically be sequestered through reforestation and afforestation in northern Canada, accounting for fire, climate, vegetation loss, and land suitability. Using satellite data and probabilistic modelling, the researchers found that planting trees on approximately 6.4 million hectares of land along the boreal–taiga boundary could remove roughly 3.9 gigatonnes of CO₂ by 2100. Expanding planting to all highly suitable areas increased the estimated removal potential to around 19 gigatonnes. Canada currently emits just under 0.7 gigatonnes of CO₂ per year, meaning even the lower-end estimate represents several times the country’s annual emissions.

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