Region Archives: Canada

Opinion / EdiTOADial

This is the moment for forestry to step up as Canada’s leading environmental voice

By Tony Kryzanowski
Forestnet Magazine
June 30, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada

Tony Kryzanowski

Canadians faced with escalating fuel costs, crushing grocery bills and higher rent are understandably less concerned about the environment these days, according to the latest public opinion polls. And predictably, politicians eager for re-election are following the polls in terms of their own priorities. But the numbers don’t lie. The world is becoming warmer and climate change is real. The consequences go far beyond the recent ferocity of repeated massive forest fires right across Canada. Given what appears to be a more muted voice in environmental advocacy these days, this is the forestry sector’s moment to present itself as Canada’s strongest champion for the environment because we undeniably have a great story to tell. …A good starting point for industry to develop its environmental advocacy strategy is to take stock.

We should revisit past important research and development initiatives as it relates to wood fibre as the feedstock. This includes further commercialization of bio-based nanotechnology from cellulose, expanding the market for mass timber products, exploring afforestation potentially with fast-growing wood species to grow the wood basket while also expanding the forest footprint to achieve greater carbon sequestration, substituting wood pellets for diesel to provide power to northern communities, and rehabilitating landscapes marred by industrial activity. …It’s astounding to think of how many billions of dollars of investment are being considered for such unproven practices as carbon dioxide sequestration from Canada’s oil and gas industry, when trees represent the largest, single natural carbon sequestration tool on the planet—and Canada has the second largest landmass in the world. …The field is now so much more wide open and desperately looking for a champion to remind us that climate change is here to stay—unless we take action and that forestry can and should be a much bigger part of the solution.

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The forest crisis British Columbia built for itself

By Stuart Muir, CEO
Resource Works
July 15, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, Canada West

Stuart Muir

Six weeks before Northwood, on June 3, the Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force—a panel appointed by the Government of Canada, not an industry lobby—released its final report. Its verdict was not the one the political class in Victoria has spent a decade rehearsing. The crisis, the task force concluded, is not primarily the product of tariffs, markets or natural disaster. In its own words, “the most fundamental challenges facing the forest sector are homegrown: lack of access to cost-competitive fibre, underinvestment, inadequate domestic construction … a crisis of confidence by our workforce and the communities in which we operate.”

…Here is where I land, and where the task force lands with me: this is a policy-made crisis, which means it has a policy solution. Three conditions, and none of them require a single British Columbian to choose between a healthy forest and a working one. First, stabilize fibre with long-term commitments tied to specific mills—the task force recommends a shift toward area-based tenure on leases of twenty-five years or longer. …Second, work with Ottawa on single-window approvals that recognize provincial equivalency: one application, one decision, one set of conditions. …Third, increase active management—more harvesting, more thinning, more silviculture—not as a favour to industry but as the most effective wildfire policy available to us, and the only way to rebuild the fibre base. The province controls the land, the tenure, the rules and the permits. It also means the province owns the results—the $17.4 billion, the hundred thousand jobs, the eight million hectares, and now the shuttered gates at Northwood. Ottawa has finally said the word out loud. Homegrown. The only question left is whether Victoria will admit it grew this, too, and start growing something better.

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Business & Politics

FPInnovations appoints Mathieu Blouin President and CEO

FPInnovations
July 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Mathieu Blouin

FPInnovations announces the appointment of Mathieu Blouin as President and CEO effective as of July 13, 2026, as part of a planned transition. He brings over 20 years of experience in applied forest research, fostering industry partnerships, and organizational leadership; most recently serving as Vice President. “Industrial research and innovation have never been more important. I am pleased to continue this work with our employees and partners to strengthen our sector competitiveness and support its transformation,” said Mathieu Blouin. FPInnovations’ team extends gratitude to Stephane Renou, who set the organization firmly on a path defined by impact, value, and rigour. Under his leadership, FPInnovations has moved to a more adaptive and agile model built to respond to the evolving needs of the industry, maximize the value of harvested wood, and serve as a trusted, honest broker of science and data for Canada’s forest sector.

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Assembly of First Nations calls for support for First Nation in Ontario after wildfire

By Jackie McKay
CBC News
July 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

©Assembly of First Nations FB

Chiefs at the Assembly of First Nations meeting in Ottawa passed an emergency resolution Thursday calling on the federal government to provide immediate support to Namaygoosisagagun First Nation, and commitments to rebuild homes and infrastructure. Members of Namaygoosisagagun First Nation, also known as Collins First Nation, about 250 kilometers north of Thunder Bay, fled in boats as a wildfire engulfed the community Monday. According to the resolution, the federal and provincial governments are failing northern Ontario First Nations who are self-evacuating due to a lack of communication and evacuation support from emergency management organizations. …The resolution said despite commitments from Ontario and Canada, the only support and contact the community has yet received is from the Anishinabek Nation, which represents 39 First Nations in Ontario. …Many First Nations chiefs gave emotional statements in support of the resolution, many whose own communities have also had to evacuate due to wildfires. 

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Carrier Forest Products to indefinitely curtail operations at Big River sawmill

Prince Albert NOW
July 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

SASKATCHEWAN — Carrier Forest Products has announced it will indefinitely curtail production at its Big River sawmill beginning Oct. 16, 2026, a decision expected to impact approximately 117 employees. The company management said the decision was difficult but necessary given a combination of ongoing challenges facing the forestry sector and the Big River operation specifically. …Despite the indefinite shutdown, the company emphasized it has not determined that the Big River facility will be permanently closed. …Carrier Forest Products cited persistent weak market conditions as a major factor behind the decision. The company also pointed to the recent decline of the Canadian dollar. …In addition, management said the long-term effects of last year’s wildfires have reduced the timber volumes available. …Jeff Bromley, chair of the United Steelworkers Wood Council said that the collective agreement offers the workers some help. “It is certainly devastating, but hopefully it is a temporary curtailment,” Bromley said.

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The BC Truck Loggers Association is hiring a Director of Communications

BC Truck Loggers Association
July 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Truck Loggers Association is hiring a Director of Communications. This is a key leadership position within the TLA organization. The incumbent is an experienced communications professional who works closely with the TLA Executive and Executive Director to develop and guide the organization’s internal and external communications strategy and activities. The position is responsible for TLA’s communication activities including publication of TLA’s quarterly Truck LoggerBC magazine, member/stakeholder communications, website and social media. The Director works with media to field enquiries, write media releases, pitch stories, coordinate interviews and facilitate op-eds. The TLA is an influential, member-supported industry association that represents the interests of British Columbia’s independent timber harvesting contractors, industry suppliers and forest resource dependent communities. On behalf of their members, the TLA is a strong and unifying voice for BC’s working forest community, and advocates for the success and long- term viability of TLA member companies, their employees and forestry dependant communities.

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Mayor, MLAs respond to Northwood Pulp closure

By Colin Slark
Prince George Citizen
July 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Prince George’s mayor would like to see the provincial and federal governments provide financial assistance to the city if the financial impact of Northwood Pulp Mill turns out to be severe. On July 14, Canfor announced that the pulp mill will be permanently closed by the end of 2026 after previously curtailing some activities at the facility. Mayor Simon Yu said it hurt to hear the news, having [worked] at the mill prior to entering politics and having connections to people who work there. …At the beginning of July Premier David Eby and Prime Minister Mark Carney announced the “Canada-British Columbia co-operative prosperity agreement.” …Yu said he wanted to see the federal government develop a national forestry strategy to ensure the sector’s survival and find new value-added opportunities for Canadian wood. …In a July 15 release, the Conservative Party of BC tied the closure to government policies it said has made it harder to keep mills open.

Related coverage in CKPG Today, by Cheryl Jahn: Northwood closure has far-reaching impacts

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Union says B.C. mill closure leaves workers ‘reeling,’ as industry woes persist

By Ashley Joannou
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
July 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The latest blow to BC’s battered forestry sector has prompted industry, union and local officials to call for immediate support. The push comes after Canfor announced the impending closure of its Northwood pulp mill near Prince George, BC. …COFI president Kim Haakstad likened the situation to a medical emergency. “The patient (is) on the operating table, it’s not the time to think about lifestyle changes,” she said. …Forests Minister Ravi Parmar, meanwhile, said he expects to roll out plans for the province’s permitting system “imminently.” …Canfor said that additional pulp production capacity had come online globally, pushing prices down. …Gavin McGarrigle, Unifor’s western regional director, said the loss of so many jobs in a community the size of Prince George can have cascading social and economic impacts. “The pulp mills are fed by sawmills, so there’s jobs that will be lost in the sawmills. Then you have all of the contractors”.

In related coverage by:

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The Truck Loggers Association Statement on Canfor’s Northwood Pulp Mill Closure

The Truck Loggers Association
July 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Truck Loggers Association (TLA) is deeply saddened by today’s announcement that Canfor’s Northwood Pulp Mill in Prince George will permanently close. …This closure is another stark reminder that BC’s forest sector remains in crisis. …For years, industry has raised concerns about the growing challenges facing BC’s forest sector… While these issues have been well understood, meaningful action to address them has not kept pace with the urgency of the situation. The continued loss of manufacturing capacity threatens the entire forestry supply chain. Independent contractors who harvest and deliver fibre, businesses that support mill operations, and the communities that rely on forestry employment will all feel the effects of this closure. The TLA continues to call on government to take decisive action to improve access to economically viable fibre, address BC’s high-cost operating environment, and implement measures that help sustain forestry jobs and the rural communities that depend on them.

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Canfor announces permanent closure of Northwood Pulp Mill

CKPG Today
July 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Canfor has announced it will permanently close its Northwood pulp mill in Prince George, a decision that will directly affect 300 employees and mark another significant blow to the city’s forestry sector. The company cited ongoing financial losses, a global oversupply of pulp, and continuing challenges securing fibre needed to operate the mill sustainably. The closure will reduce Canfor’s annual production of Northern Bleached Softwood Kraft pulp by 300,000 tonnes. The Northwood facility is expected to undergo an orderly wind-down process before shutting down permanently in late 2026. Canfor CEO Susan Yurkovich said the decision was a difficult one but necessary given current market conditions. …The global pulp industry continues to face major challenges as significant new production capacity has come online around the world. …The company also pointed to long-standing fibre supply issues in BC. …Those conditions have led to a prolonged period of unsustainable losses for its pulp division.

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Finance & Economics

‘Long road ahead’ in Canada’s housing market recovery

By Jordan Fleguel
Bloomberg Real Estate
July 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Canada’s housing market took a “small step” toward recovery last month, according to a RBC report, but a sustained rebound is yet to be seen. July’s Monthly Housing Market Update, published by RBC Economics, suggested that the Canadian real estate market remains in the midst of a modest recovery that “appears to be holding — albeit just barely.” “A 0.5% rise in home resales in June from May extended the winning streak to three months, but marks a sharp deceleration from the robust 5.5% advance the previous month,” RBC’s Robert Hogue wrote in the report. When seasonally adjusted and annualized, total transactions across Canada last month were 12 per cent below the 10-year average. …Regardless of regional trends, many prospective homebuyers across the country remain “hesitant” to enter the market, the report noted, with challenges such as weakened economic confidence, uncertain job prospects and affordability concerns top of mind.

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Canadian housing starts in June down 6% from May

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation
July 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — The six-month trend in housing starts was down in June compared to May, with a decrease of 2.8% to 248,123 units. …The total monthly SAAR of housing starts for all areas in Canada decreased 6% in June (238,971 units) compared to May (253,083 units). …”Through the first six months of the year, the rate of housing starts in Canada is lower than last year’s rate, in line with our baseline forecast published in February. There is little doubt that the slowdown reflects rising uncertainty, higher development costs, weaker demand and more unsold homes. Looking forward, we expect that this environment will continue to hold back new housing construction in Canada over the short-to-medium term and drive 2026 actual housing starts below last year’s levels,” said Kevin Hughes, Deputy Chief Economist with CMHC.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Premier David Eby advances B.C.–China co-operation on sustainable wood construction

By Canada Wood Group
LinkedIn
July 15, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

Premier David Eby’s visit to China formed part of British Columbia’s broader mission to diversify and strengthen markets for B.C. forest products and sustainable building solutions. Through engagements in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangdong, the mission reinforced co-operation across the wood value chain—from policy development and industry adoption to commercial applications and market opportunities. The mission began in Beijing with a meeting between Premier Eby and Deputy Minister Song Youchun, China’s Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development (MOHURD). The discussions built on the Memorandum of Understanding on Modern Wood Construction Co-operation, signed earlier this year during Prime Minister Mark Carney’s visit to China. As a key signatory to the agreement, British Columbia continues to play a central role in supporting co-operation on modern wood construction between Canada and China. 

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Wood Connections – News from BC Wood Specialties Group

BC Wood Specialties Group
July 17, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

In this edition of Wood Connections, you’ll find these stories and more:

  • BC Wood announces the 2026 Annual General Meeting to take place concurrent with the Global Buyers Mission in Whistler, BC this September. And, speaking of the GBM, time is running out to register, 80% of booth space is sold. 
  • New Women’s Networking Event announced at the GBM in partnership with Women of Lumber & Forestry.
  • Jim Ivanoff provides updates on BC Wood Japan activities.
  • Tecno Mueble Internacional is taking place August 19–22, 2026, in Guadalajara, Mexico. BC Wood invites you to join their pavilion. 
  • The BC Wood Korean Office partnered with the Canadian Embassy in Seoul this year to deliver a high-profile GBM launch event. 

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Lower Mainland to Vancouver Island: Seamless Back-Haul Barge & Trucking Logistics

By Doug Pauze
Coastland Wood Industries Ltd. in Wood Connections
July 17, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Coastland Wood Industries has partnered with Sarlequun Transport Inc. to launch a new integrated back-haul barge and trucking service connecting the Lower Mainland to Vancouver Island, starting July 13, 2026. The service offers a streamlined process for shipping lumber and other approved cargo from Annacis Island Marine Terminal to Duke Point Marine Terminal, including seamless “final mile” delivery anywhere on Vancouver Island. The partnership builds on Coastland’s more than 30-year relationship with Snuneymuxw First Nation (SFN). Operating within SFN’s unceded traditional territory, the collaboration is designed to create meaningful employment and economic opportunities for Nation members while offering customers a cost-effective, reliable shipping alternative.

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Forestry

Careful commercial thinning do-able in B.C.

By Paul MacDonald
Forestnet Magazine
June 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia may be known for clearcuts when it comes to harvesting operations, but Integrated Operations Group (IOG) is now proving that commercial thinning is do-able—and can be financially feasible with careful planning and selecting the right stand—in BC. And the commercial thinning is delivering benefits, such as reduced wildfire risk and improved forest health, yield and wildlife habitat. IOG, based in Campbell River, has operations both on the Coast and Interior of BC, and was initially formed to fill a need for specialized full-phase heli-logging services in the forest industry. Since then, it has utilized the company’s combined production forestry skillsets to expand into a variety of services and sectors. …Quentin Stefani, a Managing Partner at IOG, recently hosted Forestnet Magazine at a commercial thinning operation in BC’s Southern Interior, near Summerland, for Gorman Bros, based in Kelowna.

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Old growth advocates call for protection of at-risk Vancouver Island forest

By Curtis Blandy
Victoria Buzz
July 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) are calling for the protection of an at-risk forest on Vancouver Island known as the “Jewel of the Tahsish.” According to the old growth advocates, this stand is nationally significant and one of the largest remaining unprotected old-growth karst forests in BC. Karst forests are located in areas where trees grow atop limestone,and are among the rarest, most productive and sensitive old-growth ecosystems in Canada.  The karst forest the AFA are referring to with this call to action is around 235 hectares in size and is located in the upper watershed of the Tahsish River near Cross Lake on northwestern Vancouver Island, within the territories of the Kyuquot/Checleseht and Quatsino First Nations.

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Expert questions whether Lower Mainland’s forest-edge towns are ready as fire nears Pemberton

By Oksana Shtohryn
Vancouver Sun
July 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Robert Gray

As a fast-growing fire near Pemberton forced an evacuation order and alerts Thursday, a veteran fire ecologist questioned whether the region’s forest-edge communities are as ready as officials say. …Robert Gray, a Chilliwack-based fire ecologist with four decades in the field, said that preparation often falls short because it’s done at too small a scale. Municipalities point to FireSmart programs — assessments that urge homeowners to clear brush, screen vents and strip flammable material from around a house to create “defensible space” — and to fuel treatments, the thinning of dense stands of trees and removal of dead wood that can carry a fire. Gray said both work only when carried out across whole neighbourhoods and the land around them. “You can do everything that’s required and you can still lose your home,” he said, if neighbouring properties and the forest beyond go untreated.

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CCIB names Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. as inaugural Indigenous Small Business of the Year Award recipient

Canadian Council for Indigenous Business
July 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Canadian Council for Indigenous Business (CCIB) is proud to announce that Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. (CCR) is the inaugural recipient of the Indigenous Small Business of the Year Award, in recognition of its work creating economic opportunities through Indigenous-led forestry, wildfire rehabilitation and environmental stewardship. CCR is an Indigenous-owned forestry organization representing the communities of Tŝideldel, Tl’etinqox, and Yunesit’in in the Chilcotin region of British Columbia. Established to restore and protect traditional territories while creating sustainable prosperity for Nations, CCR has become a recognized leader in Indigenous-led forestry and land stewardship. “Today, we are demonstrating that Indigenous-led forestry can create jobs, restore forests, help reduce wildfire risk, support economic independence and deliver lasting benefits for communities,” said Percy Guichon, CEO of CCR. “This award reinforces the importance of Indigenous leadership and collaboration in shaping the future of forestry in British Columbia and across Canada.”

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Saskatoon Forestry Farm Park & Zoo celebrates birth of baby caribou

City of Saskatoon
July 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Saskatoon Forestry Farm Park & Zoo is celebrating the birth of a baby caribou… The male calf was born on June 25, 2026, to mother Mira. He weighed 9.4 kilograms at birth and has since grown to 12.8 kilograms. Mom and baby are currently receiving care behind the scenes while the Zoo’s Animal Care Specialists closely monitor their progress and support this important early bonding period. …“Our Animal Care Specialists are providing Mira and her calf with the time, space and support they need during these important early days,” said Jeff Mitchell, Zoo Manager, Saskatoon Forestry Farm Park & Zoo. “It is especially meaningful to name this calf Lyall Petrie in honour of Dr. Petrie, whose guidance, generosity and dedication left a lasting mark on so many in the veterinary community.” …The Saskatoon Forestry Farm Park & Zoo is proud to support the Caribou Conservation Alliance

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‘It’s been hard’: Island communities reeling after helicopter crash kills two

By Julie Chadwick
Victoria Times Colonist
July 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Riley Browne ©WCH

West Coast Helicopters general manager Sean Smyth was in his hangar at the company’s ­headquarters in Port McNeill on Tuesday ­morning, about to make his morning coffee, when his cellphone rang. On the other end of the line was West Coast Helicopters’ dispatch. One of the company’s helicopters had crashed in rugged terrain in the remote Loughborough Inlet area, between Knight Inlet and Bute Inlet, which is steep and heavily forested. It was 6:20 a.m. and the crash had taken place just minutes earlier, at about 6:13 a.m. Three men were onboard the Hughes 500 helicopter when it went down: a pilot from West Coast Helicopters named Riley Browne and two forestry engineers from Campbell River-based Crowhurst Forest Management Group. Smyth was told that two of the people involved in the crash were unresponsive. The survivor had radioed the information to the logging camp where the men were based, who then called dispatch.

Also covered in Chek News by Liz Brown: ‘It’s gutting’: North Island community mourns the loss of one of their own following Tuesday’s helicopter crash

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Teamwork with First Nation, company, B.C. gov’t helps forest business grow

By Karl Yu
Cowichan Valley Citizen
July 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Teamwork was key for bolstering an Indigenous forestry operation in central B.C., stakeholders stated at a business conference in Nanaimo. Lake Babine Nation was front and centre at the Seeing the Forest and the Trees panel discussion June 4 at the Indigenous Resource Opportunities Conference in Nanaimo, with Duane Crouse, Lake Babine Nation Forestry operations manager; Jeff Mycock, vice-president of Canadian Woodlands for West Fraser Timber Co.; Mike Beck, operations manager of Capacity Forest Management and Mike Hykaway, B.C. Ministry of Forests’ assistant deputy minister of regional operations for the north area, providing insight. A collaborative effort between Lake Babine, West Fraser and the B.C. government, was announced in July 2025, which saw the First Nation’s woodland licence grow by over 120,400 hectares, to 126,000 ha, after a transfer from West Fraser with the harvestable land northeast of Smithers, B.C., according to a B.C. government press release.

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Threat of lightning could change Northern B.C. fire season

By Nick Dube
CKPG News
July 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

BCWildfireService

PRINCE GEORGE – Although Northern British Columbia has avoided the widespread wildfire activity seen in recent years, provincial officials are warning that the next several days could mark a turning point as lightning, wind and dry conditions increase the risk of new fire starts across the province. The warning comes as crews continue battling the Brunswick Wildfire Complex near Boston Bar, where evacuation orders and alerts remain in effect and hundreds of residents have been forced from their homes. Speaking during a provincial wildfire and drought update, Emergency Management and Climate Readiness Minister Kelly Greene said the fires near Boston Bar continue to have significant impacts on local residents. …As of the latest update, there were 23 active wildfires burning across British Columbia. Five new fires had been discovered in the previous 24 hours while eight others had been declared out.

Related coverage:

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Forest Seeding by Drone: FPInnovations Paves the Way for a New Approach to Reforestation

By Anne LeBrun Ruff, Senior Researcher
FPInnovations
July 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

In the wake of wildfires, bringing affected areas back into production poses a major challenge, particularly in remote or hard-to-reach areas. In Canada, wildfires affect an average of 2.8 million hectares of forest each year, underscoring the importance of exploring innovative solutions to support restoration efforts. With financial support from the Quebec Ministry of Natural Resources and Forests (MRNF), FPInnovations is evaluating the potential of aerial seeding using drones as a complement to traditional reforestation methods. In the spring of 2026, field trials were conducted to test various drone systems and validate several aspects of this approach: their operational capability, the accuracy of remote sensing technologies in targeting the most suitable sites, and the germination performance of different seed capsules and seeds. The goal is to assess not only the technical feasibility of this technology but also its economic viability and the contexts in which it could offer the greatest benefits. 

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Teamsters call on CN to ‘stop running trains through active wildfire zones’

Northern Ontario Business
July 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Teamsters Canada, the union representing Canadian National Railway (CN) engineers and conductors, wants North America’s largest railroader to stop running freight trains through wild fires. The Laval-based union was responding to a dramatic video, taken from the cab of CN train near Armstrong, in northwestern Ontario, showing the train surrounded by flames from a series of rapidly spreading fires in the region. …The train appeared to be parked on a siding while another freight train was moving on the CN line in the opposite direction through the intense fire scene. …“The union is calling on CN to stop running trains through active wildfire zones and to put the safety of workers and communities first,” Teamster Canada said in a July 15 news release. …Gauthier added CN needs to improve their monitoring procedures in determining whether it’s safe to send trains though active fire zones.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

El Niño is here, and it’s already looking like it could be ‘mind-blowing’

By Nicole Mortillaro
CBC News
July 17, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, United States, International

The long-anticipated El Niño is here. …In its monthly update in June, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), issued an El Niño advisory, confirming that the warmer conditions had developed in the specific part of the Pacific Ocean known as Niño 3.4. In order to be considered an El Niño, temperatures need to be 0.5 C above the average. Ocean temperatures are now close to 2 C above average. …The strongest El Niño in recent years was the one in 2015-2016, where the ocean temperature anomaly was roughly 2.75 C. ….Nat Johnson, a meteorologist at NOAA’s geophysical fluid dynamics laboratory, said the transition from a La Niña to El Niño has been very quick. …Meanwhile, in Canada, the effects will be seen in the winter months, bringing milder temperatures, but also drier conditions, something that is of great concern for wildfire development in the spring in Western Canada.

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How Ottawa can protect Canadians from extreme weather while saving billions

By Ryan Ness
Canadian Climate Institue
July 16, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Canada’s climate future continues to arrive faster than its defences. A scorching heat wave is bearing down on much of the country, with warnings from the Prairies through Ontario into Quebec. It follows another that gripped Eastern Canada just two weeks ago. …Across Toronto, trains and subways were slowed or cancelled as the heat threatened to warp the rails. Nearly 40 people ended up in Toronto emergency rooms with heat-related illness, a tally public health officials say understates the real toll. The financial cost of extreme weather keeps climbing. Canadian Climate Institute found that, without adaptation, worsening heat and intense rainfall could add $14 billion per year to the cost of maintaining public infrastructure by the 2050s. Wildfire smoke is now linked to thousands of premature deaths annually and costs billions. Each of the past five years ranked among the top 10 costliest for extreme weather insurance claims, with 2024 the worst on record at $9.1 billion. 

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Health & Safety

Wildfire smoke is driving terrible air quality in major cities as new plumes arrive from Canada

By Dakota Smith and Brandon Miller
CNN Weather
July 17, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, United States

Thick, choking plumes of smoke from Canadian wildfires are pouring into major cities across the Great Lakes, Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, bringing dangerous air quality to more than 100 million people. The polluted air will last through at least Saturday in some areas as new waves of smoke waft south. …More than 100 million people in 18 states are under air quality alerts, many of which note that the air pollution is so high, even healthy adults will be affected. “The risk of health effects is increased for everyone,” the DC, air quality council said. …The smoke is being carried south from Canada in the wind. On Friday, the plume pushed farther south, making the DC area the new East Coast-epicenter of air pollution. Relief is coming as the wind pushes the smoke back into the Northeast and rain and storms are in the forecast

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‘Our patience has run out’: Bergman, lawmakers call for Canada to prevent wildfires

By Alexandria Bournonville
My Up Now
July 16, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, United States

Jack Bergman

MARQUETTE, Mich. – Amid another round of hazardous air quality due to Canadian fires, state Rep. Jack Bergman (R-Watersmeet) has joined another coalition urging Canadian officials to take action on their wildfires. His previous letter in August 2025 was addressed to Canadian Sen. Michael MacDonald. This year, he joined Reps. John James, Lisa C. McClain, and John R. Moolenaar in writing to the Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. “We were told last year that this would be treated with urgency,” read the letter. “It was not.” The congresspeople are asking for improved forest management and briefly mention getting directly involved in “cross-border fuel reduction and firefighting capacity.” “We are done accepting apologies in place of action,” read the letter. They continue to ask for funded, measurable steps the government has taken since last summer to reduce fuel loads and wildfire risk in their provinces as well as accountability for provincial leaders who “treat this as someone else’s problem.”

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Health and Safety News from WorkSafeBC

WorkSafeBC
July 16, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

In this latest newsletter from WorkSafeBC, you’ll find these stories and more:

  • The WorkSafeBC interactive Heat Stress Screening Tool helps you and your team plan ahead for hot work conditions.
  • Updated resources are available on our website including a new first aid procedures with a fillable template for small, class 1 workplaces, an updated web book for Small Business and WorkSafeBC and Safe Work Practices for Custodians. 
  • Learn about new requirements for combustible dusts in the workplace. Changes to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation related to combustible dust will take effect on January 4, 2027.  They apply to any workplace where dust may accumulate and create a fire or explosion risk.
  • Finally – highlights from the 2026 Summer WorkSafeBC Magazine, including how to manage risk with a key risk inventory and understanding personal coverage for home sharing providers. 

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Cedar Hedges ‘Go Up Like a Roman Candle’ During Wildfires

By Andrea Bennett
The Tyee
July 15, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

The FireSmart BC program website shows a moderately large single-family home through the eyes of a wildfire. As you move your cursor around, fire follows: flaming debris on the unkempt asphalt roof; blazing patio furniture leaning against the garage; potted cedars scorching the siding. Cedars have been a popular landscape plant in B.C. yards for decades, says Lori Daniels, a professor in the department of forest and conservation sciences at the University of BC, and the Koerner chair in wildfire coexistence. Unfortunately, she says, they “go up like a Roman candle.” As B.C.’s wildfires become more frequent and intense, resulting in evacuations, the loss of homes and businesses, and deaths, experts are encouraging homeowners and developers to remove cedars and junipers, or not plant them at all. “Cedars are highly flammable when they are dry,” Daniels says. “They retain dead foliage.”

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Forest Fires

Northwest Territories officials warn of ‘extreme fire weather conditions’ amid heat wave

CBC News
July 16, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©NWT Fire

Northwest Territories officials are warning of “extreme fire weather conditions” across much of the territory on Thursday, with hot and dry weather expected to continue in the coming days. Fire information officer Mike Westwick said there were 10 new fires in the territory on Thursday, all triggered by lightning. …Westwick said a fire 35 kilometres west of the community of Gamètì, between Great Slave and Great Bear Lakes, has grown significantly. He said there is currently no danger to the community even though residents may see smoke. Another fire near Wrigley has moved a little closer to the hamlet. While moist air and a cold front are helping firefighters there, Westwick said the wind has pushed the flames about a kilometre closer. It’s now about 11 kilometres from the community. Officials say there’s no imminent threat to any homes or structures.

NWT Fire Facebook Update: Fire Weather Warning

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Evacuation alert issued for parts of Pemberton, B.C., due to Signal Hill wildfire

CBC News
July 16, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

Parts of Pemberton, B.C., are under an evacuation alert due to the Signal Hill wildfire. The Village of Pemberton issued the alert, which covers 1,377 properties, late Wednesday. The Squamish-Lillooet Regional District also issued an alert at that time for all properties in Area C on Collins Road to One Mile Lake to the Lillooet River. Residents are asked to prepare for to evacuate at a moment’s notice. Pemberton Mayor Mike Richman said these alerts were issued to prepare those affected should the fire move toward the community. Richman said fire crews were happy with the work they had done Thursday, but faced challenges as wind picked up into the evening. He said the fire was being pushed to the east, away from power lines and away from the village. An evacuation order is also in place for One Mile Lake Park. …The B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS) says the wildfire was discovered on Wednesday, about five kilometres from Highway 99.

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Erratic winds, threat of lightning make Boston Bar firefighting efforts challenging, wildfire service says

By Karin Larsen
CBC News
July 16, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

Hot, windy weather and the threat of dry lightning have made firefighting efforts near Boston Bar in B.C.’s Fraser Canyon more dangerous, the wildfire service says. B.C. Wildfire Service said challenging weather conditions are increasing the risk to those working on both the Brunswick Creek and Ainslie Creek wildfires. known together as the Brunswick complex. “Right now, for the safety of our crews, we are going to switch our tactics for the next 24 to 48 hours and focus primarily on structure defence and protection,” said BCWS. “So, moving away from the flanks of the fires that are active for the safety of our crews.” Environment Canada’s website showed Boston Bar sitting at 38 C on Thursday afternoon, with a chance of lightning in the evening. …An evacuation order was issued Thursday morning for the Boston Bar townsite after fires in the area grew more aggressive overnight. …An area motel owner said the smoke is so thick around Boston Bar that, at times, it’s impossible to breathe.

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As Fire Looms, the View from Inside a Tiny Town

By Tyler Olsen
The Tyee
July 16, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BC Wildfire Service

The aircraft churned through the Fraser Canyon night like an alien spectre, twin spotlights illuminating its surroundings but leaving its own bulk obscured. Only when the spectre drifted in front of a wall of orange did the oblongated form of a helicopter reveal itself. That helicopter, dropping water on the blazing hillside, offered a spark of hope for the small Fraser Canyon community of Boston Bar. Ten hours later, Boston Bar would be evacuated as crews braced for a potentially terrible day of fire weather and assessed the changing dynamics from the overnight growth of the blaze. When I stopped briefly in Boston Bar Wednesday evening around 11 p.m., a future evacuation order seemed almost inevitable. Two weeks earlier, the Brunswick Creek fire had broken out on the western side of the river and forced the evacuation of hundreds of rural and First Nation residents, including those in the small community of North Bend.

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Evacuation alert issued for parts of Pemberton due to Signal Hill wildfire

CBC News
July 16, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

Parts of Pemberton, B.C., are under an evacuation alert due to the Signal Hill wildfire. The Village of Pemberton issued an alert at around 11:30 p.m. PT Wednesday. The Squamish-Lillooet Regional District (SLRD) also issued an alert at that time for all properties in Area C on Collins Road to One Mile Lake to the Lillooet River. It tells residents to prepare for evacuation if necessary “because of the potential danger to life and health.” An evacuation order is also in place for One Mile Lake Park to “provide safe working space to crews supporting fire operations.” The village said on its website early Thursday morning that the wildfire was discovered about five kilometres from Highway 99. As of midnight Thursday, the fire was 0.1 square kilometres (10 hectares) in size, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS). …On social media, the wildfire service said skimmers are working out of Green Lake, northeast of Whistler. 

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Saskatchewan reports 46 active wildfires, crews continue containment efforts

Prince Albert NOW
July 15, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

The Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency (SPSA) reported 46 active wildfires across the province as of 11 a.m. Wednesday, with firefighting crews continuing suppression and containment efforts on several significant fires. According to the SPSA, four fires are currently classified as contained, eight are not contained, 26 remain under ongoing assessment, and eight are in the protecting values stage. Among the province’s active wildfires, the BUDD fire, located east of Lac La Ronge, remains uncontained and has grown to 2,971 hectares. Fire crews are conducting planned burn-out operations, intentionally igniting forest fuels between a controlled line and the wildfire to help slow its spread. Officials said residents and land users may see smoke or flames on the north and northeast sides of the fire as the operation proceeds. The SPSA emphasized that ignition operations are carefully planned by wildfire specialists, taking into account weather conditions, available resources and public safety.

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Northern Ontario wildfires destroy homes in First Nation, prompt large evacuations

Canadian Press in APTN National News
July 15, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

©Sol Mamakwa

Forest fires in northwestern Ontario have devastated several communities, forcing widespread evacuations and destroying homes and buildings in one First Nation as harrowing wildfire videos and images emerge on social media. The fires have prompted evacuation orders for several communities, including Armstrong, Lac La Croix First Nation, Collins First Nation, Whitesand First Nation, Gull Bay First Nation and Lac des Mille Lacs First Nation. Anishinabek Nation Grand Council Chief Linda Debassige said a fast-moving wildfire has advanced toward Namaygoosisagagun First Nation, also known as Collins First Nation. The fire has caused extensive damage and destruction to homes and buildings, Debassige said. …In the town of Armstrong …a CN Rail crew had to be evacuated after their train was surrounded by fire. “Northern Ontario is burning, and we’re not hearing anything from the prime minister [or] the premier,” Sol Mamakwa, an NDP member of provincial parliament who represents the northern Ontario riding of Kiiwetinoong said.

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Ontario Forest Fires says 44 active wildland fires now burning in northeast

By Rick Wyman
CTV News
July 16, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

The total number of active wildland fires continues to rise in northeast Ontario with 8 new fires confirmed by the Ministry of Natural Resources in their daily update they evening of July 15. Of the 44 active wildland fires in the northeast region, 9 are not under control, 3 are being held, 4 are under control and 28 are being observed. Ontario Green Party leader Mike Schreiner toured the Carling Fire department Wednesday to see firsthand the wildland firefighting equipment and to discuss how local fire stations are dealing with more forest fires. “Every year when the Ontario budget comes out in the spring, including this year, you see a cut in the budget for wildland firefighting,” Schreiner told CTV News Wednesday. “We need to have fully funded crews.” …NDP Leader Marit Stiles said the wildfire scenes are “terrifying” and she has been talking to MPPs in the area, including Sol Mamakwa who is in Thunder Bay.

Related coverage by Canadian Press in CBC News: As northern Ontario communities prepare for possible wildfire evacuations, province asks Ottawa for help 

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Forest History & Archives

Seedy Business Stories: Sitka Spruce Collections in Haida Gwaii

By Don Pigott
The Tree Frog Forestry News
July 16, 2026
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada West

Forestry veteran Don Pigott continues his memoir series with an engaging account of a Sitka spruce cone collection on Haida Gwaii in the fall of 1983. What began as a routine assignment to collect seed from higher-elevation stands soon became a memorable journey marked by relentless rain, challenging field conditions, colourful characters, and the camaraderie that defines life in the woods. Along the way, Don reflects on visits to the legendary Golden Spruce and the small communities that supported the work, capturing a time when resourcefulness, hard work, and good humour were essential tools of the trade. Rich in historical detail and personal insight, this latest installment offers an authentic glimpse into an era of British Columbia forestry that is rapidly passing into history.

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