Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

Tree Frog Forestry News has always been a bit of a different creature

Sandy, Kelly & Heidi
Tree Frog Forestry News
March 30, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

It’s not behind a paywall. It doesn’t chase clicks. And it doesn’t try to be everything to everyone. Instead, it’s quietly become a daily habit for thousands across the forest sector—industry, government, First Nations, researchers, students, and retirees alike—all looking for a simple way to stay informed. What started as a small idea has grown into something much bigger than we imagined. Today, Tree Frog directly reaches more than 100,000 readers across BC, Canada, the US and beyond, with thousands more picking it up through company circulations, association newsletters, and even university classrooms. In many ways, it has become shared infrastructure for the sector—a common starting point for understanding what’s happening and why it matters.

But like many things that are widely used, it can be easy to assume it will always just be there. Tree Frog has remained free and open-access by design. We’ve always believed the sector is better off when information flows easily—when a student can access the same news as a CEO, and when smaller operators have the same visibility as larger ones. That only works, however, because a portion of the organizations and individuals who rely on it choose to support it. And in a year when the forest sector is facing real challenges, that support matters more than ever. To those organizations already supporting Tree Frog—thank you.

If Tree Frog is something you or your organization rely on, we’d encourage you to consider being part of that support—whether as a sponsor, a Friend of the Frog, or simply by spreading the word. Even small steps help ensure we can continue delivering this service in its current form. Either way, we’re grateful you’re here and part of the community.

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Business & Politics

Clarity in Canadian law of Aboriginal title is not optional

By Joesph Roberson, retired judge of the New Brunswick Court of Appeal
The Globe and Mail
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

The BC Supreme Court’s decision in Cowichan v. Canada has drawn national attention. For the first time, a Canadian court has granted a declaration of Aboriginal title over privately owned lands. …But at the same time, the New Brunswick Court of Appeal in J.D. Irving v. Wolastoqey Nation ruled that the private lands held by timber companies were not subject to declarations of Aboriginal title. …We need to understand each ruling to understand the trajectory of Canadian law’s engagement with reconciliation. It’s clear that the rulings in fact point in just one direction, because Cowichan can be sustained only by rewriting the Supreme Court’s settled doctrine of Aboriginal title, while Wolastoqey, with one severable modification, remains faithful to it. Of the two decisions, only Wolastoqey offers an approach that is legally sound and clear in its application. …Wolastoqey demonstrates that proven wrongs can be addressed through compensation and negotiation without unsettling land titles or distorting the doctrine of Aboriginal title; Cowichan does the opposite. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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B.C. pushes for ‘long-term softwood lumber deal’ as U.S. group praises tariffs

CBC News
March 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

B.C. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar is in Ottawa pushing the federal government to prioritize a softwood lumber deal with the US. That’s as a US lumber lobby group praises the Trump administration for reducing ‘harmful’ Canadian imports with the use of tariffs.

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Meggin Messenger has been appointed chair of BC Forest Practices Board

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
March 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Meggin Messenger

Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests, has appointed Meggin Messenger as chair of the independent forest auditing and investigating body for a three-year term, effective Tuesday, April 7, 2026. Messenger is a registered professional forester with an undergraduate degree in forestry and a master’s degree in public administration. Before being appointed to this new role, Messenger worked as an executive director in the BC Public Service and has led work on forestry, land use, resource stewardship, community development, climate change and sustainability. …The Forest Practices Board is B.C.’s independent watchdog for sound forest and range practices, reporting its findings and recommendations directly to the public and government. The board audits forest and range practices and appropriateness of government enforcement on public lands, investigates public complaints and current forestry issues, participates in administrative appeals and makes recommendations for improvement to practices and legislation.

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Ottawa to supply $15.6M to tariff-impacted Saskatchewan workers and employers

The Canadian Press in Global News
March 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Buckley Belanger

The federal government says it’s funding a $15.6-million program that supports Saskatchewan workers and employers affected by tariffs. Ottawa says the three-year program is available to those in the steel and softwood lumber industries, along with other sectors affected by foreign duties. It says the funding would support up to 1,800 workers in Saskatchewan who may face unemployment and require new skills to keep their jobs. The government says supports will be delivered through SaskJobs. Buckley Belanger, Canada’s secretary of state for rural development, says the funding gives workers a fair shot when tariffs hit their industries hard. Canadian businesses slapped with targeted US levies have said they’re struggling. …Saskatchewan Career Training Minister Eric Schmalz said his province’s diverse economy has allowed it to lessen the brunt of tariffs.

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Ottawa is changing—what does it mean for forestry?

Council of Forest Industries
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Council of Forest Industries 2026 conventions welcomes veteran strategist Bruce Anderson as a luncheon keynote. Anderson brings more than three decades of insight into public opinion and Canadian politics to a timely luncheon keynote. One of Canada’s most respected market and opinion researchers, Anderson has advised major corporations and organizations—from Royal Bank of Canada and TELUS to Enbridge and Teck Resources—as well as numerous industry groups and NGOs. Formerly Chairman of Abacus Data, he is a familiar voice on Canadian media, including CBC News At Issue panel, the Good Talk podcast with Peter Mansbridge & Chantal Hebert, and is a contributor to publications such as The Globe and Mail and Maclean’s. Drawing on current research, Anderson will explore how Ottawa’s evolving agenda is reshaping trade, investment, and resource development—and what it will take to ensure forestry remains central to Canada’s economic future. A must-attend session for anyone watching the intersection of politics, public opinion, and the forest sector.

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Alberta moves to ease trade rules on consumer goods coming from other provinces

By Jack Farrell
CBC News
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Alberta’s government has tabled legislation to ease regulations and barriers to more easily enable the sale of some goods from other provinces. It’s part of a commitment Alberta made with its provincial and federal counterparts in signing an interprovincial free trade pact in November. That trade accord, which is supposed to take effect this summer, would see provinces recognize each other’s regulations for most consumer and capital products to avoid duplicative inspections and requirements. …Government officials told reporters before the bill was tabled that manufacturers in industries such as oil and gas, lumber and logging and fertilizer producers will likely see the most positive impact once the pact takes effect.

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Canada built its forest industry for one customer. B.C. is now paying the price

By Jordan Solomon, president and CEO, Ecostrat
Vancouver Sun
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

B.C.’s latest budget confirmed: One of the province’s foundational industries has lost more than half its public revenue base in a single economic cycle. Forestry revenues are projected at $521 million, down from $1.3 billion just a few years ago. …It is a structural failure. For decades, Canada built its forest economy around a single export market and a narrow set of commodity products. That strategy has now been exposed as dangerously fragile. …The issue is not a lack of fibre, skills, infrastructure or industrial heritage. …The issue is the absence of investment-grade data and intelligence that allow global firms to move quickly from site selection to financing and construction. …Canada already has a strong global investment attraction network through Invest in Canada and the trade commissioner service… What is missing is nationally consistent, standardized data sets on forest biomass availability, infrastructure capacity, workforce readiness, and permitting pathways that allow those teams to respond immediately when firms begin evaluating locations.

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BC Forests Minister Parmar to speak at COFI 2026 convention

BC Council of Forest Industries
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

With just 13 days to go, anticipation is building for the COFI Convention 2026, taking place April 8–10 at the JW Marriott Parq in Vancouver—bringing together more than 600 leaders from industry, government, First Nations, and communities under the theme Forestry is a Solution. A featured session, The Path Forward: Building Resiliency for the Future, will see the Hon. Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests and Makenzie Leine, Deputy Minister of Forests in conversation with COFI President and CEO Kim Haakstad. Against a backdrop of fibre supply pressures and shifting global markets, the discussion will explore both immediate actions and long-term strategies to restore predictability, strengthen competitiveness, and position BC as a global leader in sustainable forestry. With keynotes, panels, and networking opportunities across the supply chain, registration remains open for what is set to be Western Canada’s largest forest sector gathering.

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Rethinking Forest Management: A Conversation on the Future of Forestry in B.C. with Shannon Janzen

By Rez Dog Walkers
YouTube
March 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Join Dallas Smith in this episode of the Rez Dog Walkers Podcast as he sits down with Shannon Janzen, former Vice President at Western Forest Products and a key contributor to the recent independent report, From Conflict to Care: BC’s Forest Future, for a thoughtful conversation on the challenges and future of British Columbia’s forestry sector. Shannon shares her perspective on the structural barriers impacting the industry today. She also explores lessons learned from her work as a consultant supporting Indigenous communities in business development, highlighting the growing importance of collaboration between Nations and the opportunity to rethink forest management with respect to the unique challenges faced by different regions across B.C. Dallas and Shannon also explore the background and some of the key findings of the recent report, highlighting the need to find opportunities amidst the challenges and the importance of building trusting relationships as a prerequisite for certainty and sustainability.

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B.C. mulls plan to weaken DRIPA, in secret document shared with First Nations leaders

By Alessia Passafiume
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
March 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

OTTAWA — BC Premier David Eby is considering amendments that would weaken the province’s Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, after two recent court decisions siding with First Nations under the law’s current wording. Amendments proposed in a confidential letter and document sent to some First Nations leaders in BC on Monday say the government is looking to change the wording to promise “ongoing processes” to align “select” legislation with the bill, known as DRIPA. The current wording of the “Purpose of the Act” section says it is “to affirm the application of the Declaration to the laws of British Columbia.” First Nations leaders, along with more than 130 civil society organizations including the B.C. Federation of Labour, have called on Eby to leave the bill alone. …The province is hosting a briefing about the proposed changes with First Nations leaders on Wednesday, asking for feedback by 4 p.m. Friday.

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Inside New Brunswick’s Forest Economy: A Conversation with JD Irving’s Jason Limongelli

By David Campbell and Don Mills
Yopur Greater Moncton
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jason Limongelli

Our guest on this episode of the Insights Podcast is Jason Limongelli, Vice President, Woodlands Division with JD Irving, Limited. The forest products industry is the most important driver of economic activity in New Brunswick, generating nearly a billion dollars in tax and royalty revenue in 2024 and supporting one out of every 17 jobs in the province. Despite its importance, most people don’t really understand how it works. How many trees get cut down every year? How long does it take for a tree to reach full maturity? How many trees are planted each year? What does it mean to manage a Crown Land license? Jason answers all these questions and more. He also tells us about JDI. [podcast is 1h 7min long

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Ontario’s 2026 budget sees deficit hit $13.8B amid looming global instability

By Adam Carter
CBC News
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Peter Bethlenfalvy

The spectre of worldwide instability looms large in Ontario’s 2026 budget, which includes a small business income tax cut alongside a temporary reprieve on HST for buyers of new homes — but also pushes back a balanced budget for yet another year with a higher-than projected deficit. The $244-billion spending plan is replete with phrases like “uncertainty” and “heightened trade tensions,” and includes an increase in reserve spending from $1.5 billion in 2026-27 to $2.5 billion in 2028-29. …Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy said “Geopolitical forces that may have once felt distant have now reached our shores,” he said. “Global economic and trade tensions, supply chain disruptions, shifting markets — simply put, the world has changed, and we must change with it.” …The province’s recently announced plan to temporarily remove HST for buyers of new homes remains, with plans in place for the full 13% tax to be removed for new homes valued up to $1 million.

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Northwestern Ontario Innovation Centre kicks off program support for startup companies in forestry sector

Northern Ontario Business
March 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

The Northwestern Ontario Innovation Centre (NOIC), in partnership with the Thunder Bay Community Economic Development Commission (CEDC) and the Centre for Research and Innovation in the Bio-Economy (CRIBE), is pleased to announce the launch of its first accelerator program under The Boreal Springboard. This initiative, inaugurated in fall 2025, is designed to strengthen and diversify northwestern Ontario’s forestry sector by supporting the commercialization of innovative forest-based solutions. The accelerator is a 12-week, intensive program that delivers targeted investment of resources and supports into innovative early-stage companies. Participating companies are advancing new forest-based products and technologies that add value to the region’s abundant and sustainably managed forest resources. This value creation may be achieved through improved efficiencies for the operations of established incumbents in the sector, or through the development of new products, markets, and applications that build out around our core capacities, regional fibre supply, and residual streams.

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Finance & Economics

Canada’s Trucking Industry Faces a Double Crisis: Prolonged Freight Slowdown Followed by Rising Diesel Costs

By Canada Truck Operators Association
Cision Newswire
March 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

MISSISSAUGA, ON – The Canadian Truck Operators Association (CTOA) is raising concerns over rising diesel prices, warning that increasing fuel costs are placing renewed pressure on a trucking industry that is still in the early stages of recovery following a prolonged slowdown from 2022 through 2025. Recent increases in global oil prices, driven by escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East affecting key energy supply routes, are beginning to translate into higher diesel costs across Canada. For the trucking sector, where fuel remains one of the largest operating expenses, this trend is creating immediate financial strain, particularly for small and mid-sized carriers. Diesel prices in major markets have recently exceeded $2.39 per litre, levels not seen since 2022. For many, this represents a significant increase in day-to-day operating costs. …CTOA emphasizes that the industry is not seeking long-term subsidies, but targeted, short-term support to help stabilize an essential sector during a period of exceptional cost volatility.

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Lumber Futures Retreat on Lackluster Demand

Trading Economics
March 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures retreated toward $590 per thousand board feet as the cooling of the North American residential construction sector eroded the demand floor that had supported the market since January. The primary downward pressure stems from a slowdown in housing activity where single-family starts plunged 14.2% in March and building permits fell 5.4% signaling a sharp reduction in seasonal requirements. This demand destruction was catalyzed by a 11 basis point surge in mortgage rates to 6.45% following the Federal Reserve decision to hold interest rates steady alongside global inflationary spikes. While geopolitical tensions in the Strait of Hormuz initially pushed energy costs higher, the resulting increase in financing costs and a 10% drop in US housing starts outweighed the potential for supply chain disruptions. Furthermore a 2.4% increase in unsold builder inventory forced price cuts.

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GreenFirst reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $32.8 million

By GreenFirst Forest Products
Businesswire
March 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — GreenFirst Forest Products announced results for the fourth quarter of 2025. The Q4 2025 net loss from continuing operations was $32.8 million, compared to net loss of $57.4 million in Q3 2025. Adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations for Q4 2025 was negative $21.7 million compared to negative $47.2 million in Q3 2025. Benchmark prices saw decreases during the quarter which resulted in an average realized lumber prices of $654/mfbm for Q4 2025 which was lower than the $695/mfbm pricing realized in Q3 2025. Net sales were $76.9 million in Q4 2025, an increase of approximately 10% compared to Q3 2025. The increase in net sales was primarily driven by higher shipments, partially offset by lower realized pricing during the quarter. …The installation of the new large log line at our Chapleau mill temporarily impacted production volumes. 

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Ford government planning to waive HST on new homes for 1 year

By Colin D’Mello & Isaac Callan
Global News
March 25, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — Potential buyers across Ontario are poised to receive a significant tax discount on newly-built homes, but only for a limited time, as the Ford government looks to boost a sector struggling with a slump in sales. As part of his spring budget, Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy is expected to announce that the provincial portion of the harmonized sales tax will be removed for anyone buying a newly-constructed home, rewriting a policy the government introduced just months ago. …Ontario’s pledge to waive its portion of the HST came shortly after a similar announcement by the federal government — allowing first-time homebuyers to save up to $130,000 on a new home under $1 million, and lower rebates for homes costing up to $1.5 million. But the offer failed to ignite the market, forcing the government to take a second pass at the policy, and offer the discount to a wider swath of purchasers. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Wood Connections – News for BC’s Wood Products Industry

The BC Wood Specialties Group
March 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The latest Wood Connections from BC Wood highlights a busy spring season of market development, training, and international outreach for BC’s value-added wood sector. Alongside updates on trade missions and global market engagement, the association is also entering a period of transition, with a search underway for a new CEO to help guide BC Wood’s next chapter and continued growth. This issue also encourages members to save the date for the upcoming Global Buyers Mission, the sector’s flagship international event connecting BC manufacturers with buyers from around the world and showcasing the province’s innovation in wood design and construction. Additional highlights include workforce development initiatives and specialized training programs aimed at strengthening manufacturing capacity, as well as member updates that showcase leadership and success across the value-added sector. Together, these efforts reinforce BC Wood’s focus on market diversification, skills development, and building a strong, competitive industry in British Columbia.

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Why B.C.’s wood opportunity in Vietnam lies beyond Asia

By Daisy Xiong
Business in Vancouver
March 25, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West, International

Inside a factory on the outskirts of Ho Chi Minh City, workers assemble a sample chest of drawers for an upcoming trade show. The Canadian material is different from what they normally use. In a sector dominated by domestic plantation species, processed wood and imported hardwoods such as oak and walnut, the use of B.C.’s western hemlock and Douglas fir is an outlier, according to Nguyen Trong Hieu, group CEO of Truong Thanh Furniture Corp. The company, one of Vietnam’s largest furniture manufacturers, is working with B.C. Crown corporation Forestry Innovation Investment (FII) to develop its first trial products using Canadian wood for prospective buyers. …The sector is eyeing Vietnam as an emerging market, according to FII, which opened a Ho Chi Minh City office in 2022. “Vietnam is a growing market. There’s more production happening here. There’s more demand,” FII president and CEO Michael Loseth said in January.

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Vancouver mass timber tower pushes clean building boundaries

By Evan Duggan
Sustainable Biz Canada
March 24, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

A 17-storey mass timber-Passive House tower under construction in downtown Vancouver will help push forward clean, tall timber construction techniques, the company building the mixed-use structure at 981 Davie St. says. The builders, Kindred Construction, with developers Community Land Trust (CLT), hosted a tour of the building on March 13. The tower will have 154 homes, including 123 co-op homes operated by CLT and 31 homes operated by McLaren Housing Society; two storeys of retail; and a new QMUNITY centre serving Vancouver’s 2SLGBTQIA+ community.Kenny Dempsey, project director at Kindred Construction, led the tour. He said the building is unique as it blends a concrete core atop two levels of concrete podium. The 15 levels above are designed and built with mass timber reinforced by steel. The mass timber panels were produced by Castlegar, B.C.-based Kalesnikoff.

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Forestry

Canada’s pollution levels exceed the US due to brutal 2025 wildfire season

By Cheryl Santa Maria
The Weather Network
March 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

2025 was Canada’s second-worst wildfire season on record. Canada’s air quality was worse than the United States in 2025, thanks to a record-breaking wildfire season last summer, according to a new report by IQAir. Canada doesn’t have the worst air quality in North America: That designation goes to Mexico, which landed at 50 on IQAir’s 2025 list of most polluted countries and regions. Wildfires pushed Canada to 117 in 2025, with the United States taking the 120th spot. These wildfires not only made Canada more polluted than the United States, but they were also large enough to affect air quality in Europe as smoke crossed the Atlantic Ocean. Between May 2025 and November 2025, Canada experienced its second-worst wildfire season ever, with over 6,000 wildfires and 8.3 million hectares burnt across the country. …Health Canada estimates that air pollution contributes to 15,300 premature deaths each year in Canada. 

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The Bulkley Valley Research Centre is hiring a Manager, Research Development & Partnerships

Bulkley Valley Research Centre
March 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Bulkley Valley Research Centre (BVRC) is seeking a Manager, Research Development & Partnerships to help expand our research programs by building partnerships, identifying funding opportunities, and developing collaborative research initiatives. This role is ideal for an early- to mid-career professional who enjoys connecting people, ideas, and funding opportunities to support meaningful environmental research. Working closely with BVRC leadership, researchers, community partners, and First Nations, you will help develop new research initiatives that address natural resource challenges across British Columbia. If you enjoy building relationships and turning ideas into funded projects, this role offers the opportunity to grow your career while contributing to research that has real-world impact. The Bulkley Valley Research Centre (BVRC) is an independent nonprofit research organization based in Smithers, BC, on Gitdumden Clan territory of the Wet’suwet’en Nation. Based in Smithers, BC, this is a full-time, 2-year term with possibility of renewal, hybrid/remote options considered. Closing Date: April 7, 2026, or until filled.

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Murray Wilson’s “BC is Burning” wins best documentary

Okanagan Screen Awards
March 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Okanagan Screen Awards, a two-day celebration of film, creativity, and community, took place March 28–29, 2026 in the sunny paradise of Kelowna, BC. The Okanagan Screen Awards are proudly presented by the Okanagan Society of Independent Filmmaking (OSIF), a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting, educating, and advocating for independent filmmakers in the Okanagan region. Congratulations to “BC is Burning” for winning 1st Place in the Feature Docs category! 

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Fuel reduction work coming to Lytton, Hat Creek areas

By Barbara Roden
The Ashcroft-Cache Creek Journal
March 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The BC Wildfire Service (BCWS) will be jointly working on two fuel reduction measures near Lytton, one in Botanie Valley and the other near Highway 1 north of the town, and one in the Hat Creek Valley. The Hat Creek cultural burn will cover an area of up to 40 hectares, approximately 15 kilometres west of Cache Creek in the Upper Hat Creek Valley. The project, known as the Harry Lake Grasslands cultural burn, is in partnership with the Thompson Rivers Natural Resource District and Bonaparte First Nation. The burn is part of a multi-year project meant to introduce fire into the Upper Hat Creek Valley. Key goals of the burn include revitalization of cultural burning practices by St’uxwtéws (Bonaparte) First Nation; reintroduction of fire to a fire deficit ecosystem; and ecological maintenance and improvement of grasslands. It is also part of a research initiative being undertaken by the University of British Columbia into prescribed fire in the area.

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Approximately 600 trees replanted at Mission’s annual ‘CutBlock Party’

By Dillon White
The Mission Record
March 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mission’s forestry department hosted its annual ‘CutBlock Party’ last Saturday (March 21). The approximately 150 people in attendance planted 600 trees near Hunter Logging Road at the end of Sabo Street in northern Mission. The newly-planted trees are part of the effort to reforest a recently logged cutblock. They are among the estimated 100,000 trees the forestry department is planting this spring as part of its annual silviculture and reforestation program. Bari Hanus, forestry technician with the City of Mission, said the species that are being planted are mainly Douglas fir, western red cedar and white pine. “We plant really high quality seedlings that are well-suited to Mission’s climate. Those species are all selected for their climate adaptability, their role as a native species, and their ability to thrive in local forest ecosystem,” Hanus said.

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The Sustainable Forestry Initiative Releases New Spotlight Video Featuring Tsuut’ina Nation

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
March 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) is proud to release a new Indigenous Rights and Relationship Building Spotlight video featuring the Tsuut’ina Nation. The video highlights the Nation’s leadership in land stewardship, including wildfire resilience and community-based forest management, and in strengthening capacity, engaging youth, and advancing long-term sustainability rooted in the cultural values and self-determined priorities. It also shares how the SFI Forest Management Standard supports the implementation of many of these priorities and values, such as mitigating undesirable impacts of wildfire. …For many years, Tsuut’ina Nation has worked closely with SFI-certified organization West Fraser Cochrane, formerly Spray Lakes Sawmills, on land management consultation within its Traditional Territories and land management planning as the Nation advances toward SFI certification. One of their priorities has been wildfire mitigation efforts to reduce the risk near the community. 

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Recovery of errant log bundles continues in Parksville area

Parksville Qualicum Beach News
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Recovery operations are ongoing after 19 log bundles ended up on beaches in the PQB area after rough weather caused a log boom to break open at Mosaic Forest Management’s Northwest Bay waterfront facility two weekends ago. Mosaic said more than half of the bundles have been retrieved, but crews need favourable tides and calm weather to safely recover the remaining logs. “We’re hoping to have suitable conditions in the next few days to complete the recovery as quickly and safely as possible,” Mosaic told the PQB News on March 24. Mosaic notified the provincial regulator and is in direct contact with Rathtrevor Provincial Park representatives about its plans and timeline. The province has declared the area where the logs went astray as a “closed area in so far as the marine salvage of logs is concerned”. END

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Salmon Arm council supports keeping focus on forest fuel mitigation

By Lachlan Labere
The Salmon Arm Observer
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Wildfire fuel mitigation will remain a priority for the city, despite the B.C. government’s plans to stem the flow of FireSmart funding. At its March 23 meeting, city council received a presentation by Assistant Fire Chief Carmen Guidos, who was seeking direction on a couple of matters. One had to do with the Community Wildfire Resiliency Plan (CWRP) currently under development. The other was in regard of fuel mitigation work already planned for Coyote Park, South Canoe, and a small treatment area on Mt. Ida. The connecting thread prompting Guidos’ presentation was recent changes by the BC government to how it funds community FireSmart initiatives. The province introduced the FireSmart Community Funding and Supports (FSCFS) programs in 2018, providing approximately $175 million since then for communities to hire coordinators, conduct education campaigns and pay for fuel management efforts.

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New website, film launched to highlight Logan Lake Community Forest

By Kristen Holliday
Castanet
March 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A new website and film showcasing wildfire mitigation efforts have been launched by the Logan Lake Community Forest. New branding has been launched alongside the release of a movie that delves into the community forest and its role in wildfire risk reduction and recreation. In a news release, Randy Spyksma, general manager for Logan Lake Community Forest, said the new, refreshed branding “better reflects who we are today and where we are going.” “It is a visual highlight of our commitment to responsible forest stewardship while supporting the long-term sustainability of our community.” …“Our film speaks to the heart of what we do as a community forest and allows us to share this work through storytelling,” Spyksma said.

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Islands Trust has lost sight of its original purpose

By Priya Puri, Shauna Doll and Chris Genovali
Victoria Times Colonist
March 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A commentary by two forest ecologists who lead Raincoast Conservation Foundation’s ­Forest Conservation Program, and Raincoast’s executive director, who is a Southern Gulf Islands resident. The Islands Trust recently invited public input to help update its Trust Policy Statement, a document that guides how land-use decisions are made across the Trust Area in the Salish Sea. While the draft includes some overdue updates, it drifts from its mandate of environmental protection and fails to connect words in a policy document to decisions on the ground. To work properly, the Trust Policy Statement must clearly show how the Islands Trust will carry out its environmental protection mandate. The Islands Trust is a unique form of government. When it was established 50 years ago, its role was clear: to prevent unrestrained growth and development in the Trust Area of the Gulf Islands. The legislation recognized that the islands’ natural environment and rural character were fragile and irreplaceable.

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As public blasts ‘weakened’ land protection laws, Nova Scotia government says tweaks coming

By Taryn Grant
CBC News
March 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

NOVA SCOTIA — Last month, Finance Minister John Lohr tabled the Financial Measures Act, an omnibus bill that amends 20 pieces of legislation. Among them are amendments to the Community Easements Act and Conservation Easements Act, creating two ways for property owners to undo easements on their land. Two weeks after tabling the bill, Lohr told reporters the government is working on adjustments to the easements clauses. …After criticism that new legislation weakens land protection laws, the provincial government says it will make revisions, but it’s not detailing what the changes will look like. …Woodlot owner Ron Melchiore called the bill’s amendments “an abomination” that would destroy his vision for his land. Melchiore also took issue with changes to the Forests Act that would remove a tax break for woodlands if they’re being used as a registered carbon sink and not for active forestry.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Advancing Safety in Biomass Storage: Key Insights from the Safe Wood Pellet Storage Workshop in Japan

By Fahimeh Yazdan Panah
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
March 26, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

On March 12, 2026, industry leaders and technical experts from across the global biomass sector gathered in Tokyo, Japan, for the Safe Wood Pellet Storage: Preventing, Detecting, and Managing Self‑Heating Incidents workshop. Organized by the Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC) in collaboration with Ørsted, FutureMetrics, Firefly and Hanwa, the one‑day event focused on addressing safety challenges facing large‑scale wood pellet storage: self‑heating and its potential to escalate into fires or explosions. The workshop brought together over 30 producers, utilities, terminal operators, engineers and fire‑safety professionals to examine the causes of self‑heating in stored wood pellets, explore emerging detection technologies, and discuss effective prevention and response strategies. Delivered in both English and Japanese, the program combined technical presentations with real‑world case studies, creating an opportunity for knowledge exchange and industry collaboration.

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Glacier retreat visible, says B.C. scientist on research expedition to Antarctica

By Tiffany Crawford
Vancouver Sun
March 26, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

For more than a decade scientists have documented how Antarctic sea ice has been retreating because of human-caused climate change. Now a team of Canadian and Chilean scientists is returning to Punta Arenas, Chile from a 14-day expedition on an icebreaker with data that will contribute to understanding how the continent’s ice, oceans and ecosystems are changing and how much glacier melt is accelerating. …Understanding climate change in Antarctica is important because it holds about 90 per cent of the world’s glacier ice, so what happens here will have major effects on the rest of the world, said B.C. scientist Thomas James. He’s the chief scientist of the expedition with the Geological Survey of Canada. …With this data, scientists can begin to understand how much human-caused global warming is changing the environment over time.

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Why Humans Still Burn Logs for Power

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
March 26, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

Drax, the U.K. company that operates the world’s largest wood-fired power plant, recently made headlines when it said that it will stop using trees cut down in Canada as part of its feedstock. But the move, which has been hailed by some in the environmental community as a huge milestone, won’t make an iota of difference on the ground in Canada — or anywhere else for that matter. That’s because Drax is both a major consumer and producer of wood pellets, which are burned like coal, natural gas and oil in thermal power plants around the world to produce electricity. …The company will shift to sourcing those pellets from elsewhere. …One consequential but almost completely ignored aspect of the Drax story is that “switching” from coal to wood hasn’t made so much as a dent in global demand for coal — or greenhouse gas emissions. In fact, worldwide use of both wood and coal continues to rise.

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BC Cuts Climate Agency, Sends Some Staff to Work on Pipelines

By Zoe Yunker
The Tyee
March 25, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC has quietly eliminated its Climate Action Secretariat, the long-running agency that produced and implemented climate policy across government ministries. In an email to staff, Peter Pokorny, deputy minister of energy and climate solutions, said that “to align with key priorities” some secretariat staff would move to new subject matter, including supporting LNG, pipelines and gas fracking. …Other staff will be moved to a newly formed “climate solutions” division, which will also bring in staff from the now-folded “energy decarbonization division.” The new division will focus on some of the secretariat’s previous responsibilities, including emissions accounting and efforts to reduce emissions in sectors like buildings, transportation and industry. …Stand.earth, described the move as part of the “slow-motion death” of the province’s climate plan, CleanBC. …The Ministry of Energy and Climate Solutions pushed back on the idea that it had eliminated the secretariat, instead referring to the cuts as a “reconfiguration.”

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Mission to Nordic nations could bring bio-economy investments to Thunder Bay

By Gary Rinne
Thunder Bay News Watch
March 23, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada East

©CEDC LinkedIn

THUNDER BAY — It was a low-key visit that escaped media coverage but one that may some day pay off in the form of investments in the bioeconomy sector in the Thunder Bay region. The Community Economic Development Commission (CEDC) partnered last fall with the Centre for Research and Innovation in the Bioeconomy (CRIBE) to organize a trade mission to three Nordic nations. Representatives were joined by Northwestern Ontario Innovation Centre, Thunder Bay Pulp & Paper, Domtar, Dryden Fibre and Lake Nipigon Forest Management Inc… “We had been working on a strategy to attract companies to Thunder Bay in the bioeconomy space,” CEO Jamie Taylor of the CEDC said. “We have an abundance of hardwood fiber, over a million cubic meters, which is a lot. How we came to that was in discussion with our major employers, both Domtar and Thunder Bay Pulp & Paper, about what their needs were.”

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Health & Safety

Rotary Drum Dryer Safety: Habits That Prevent Fires Before They Start

By Fahimeh Yazdan Panah
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
March 27, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

Rotary drum dryers remain the most common—and most practical—drying technology in Canadian pellet plants. They are robust, heat-efficient and responsive to changes in feed moisture. At the same time, incident history across the sector shows a recurring reality: when a dryer incident occurs, it rarely involves only the drum. It can involve the entire integrated line, from the furnace and dilution duct to the drum and cyclones and through the induced-draft fan and quench interface. To help the industry reduce fires and explosions in rotary drum dryers, the Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC) has released a Safer Operations of Rotary Drum Dryers report. The report was developed by a multi-stakeholder Rotary Drum Dryer Working Group tasked with consolidating lessons from incident reviews and bowtie analysis into practical expectations for safer, verifiable operation—what “good” looks like when the process is under stress, not just when it is steady.

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Lack of air quality monitoring in rural B.C. raises concerns as wildfire smoke risks grow

By Camille Vernet and Shaurya Kshatri
CBC News
March 28, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Health officials and advocates are raising concerns about gaps in air quality monitoring across rural BC, saying some communities may be exposed to dangerous wildfire smoke levels if they don’t have access to accurate local data. It comes as the health impacts of wildfire smoke are becoming clearer, and as new monitoring stations are being installed in parts of the province to address the gaps. Air quality is typically monitored by federal and provincial governments and according to Environment Canada, 286 sites across every province and territory make up the National Air Pollution Surveillance program. “Even with nearly 300 sites, there are enormous gaps in geography — often at the expense of rural and remote communities,” said Christopher Lam, of the BC Lung Foundation. …Smoke from the record-breaking Canadian wildfires in 2023 caused an estimated 5,400 acute deaths and about 82,100 premature deaths worldwide.

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Paul Harris Jones passed away peacefully at 97

The Sunshine Coast Reporter
March 26, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Paul Jones

Paul Harris Jones passed away peacefully at home on February 28th, 2026 at age 97. …He emigrated to Canada in 1948. He attended UBC in Vancouver, completing a BSc in Forestry and meeting Mavis Ruth Jones of Cranberry Lake, who he married. They subsequently went to live in England where Paul completed a Graduate Diploma in Forestry Economics at Oxford. …In 1967, Paul left work in the Canadian Forestry sector and accepted an overseas posting with the Food and Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations. He lived with his family in Turkey for five years and completed an assignment as assistant director, then opened his own consulting firm and worked around the globe as a forestry economist until his retirement in 1989. 

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