Region Archives: Canada

Breaking News

New President and CEO of the BC Council of Forest Industries

By Greg Stewart, Chair, COFI
Council of Forest Industries
December 19, 2024
Category: Breaking News
Region: Canada, Canada West

On behalf of the Board of Directors of the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI), I am pleased to announce the appointment of Kim Haakstad as the new President and Chief Executive Officer of COFI. Kim Haakstad brings a wealth of experience and expertise to COFI, with over two decades of leadership in executive roles across government, industry, and stakeholder relations. A seasoned strategist and relationship builder, Kim has consistently demonstrated her ability to navigate complex policy landscapes and forge strong partnerships that drive shared success. She has served as Deputy Chief of Staff to the BC Premier and Chief of Staff to Cabinet Ministers. Her deep understanding of governmental processes, coupled with her strong connections across sectors, positions her as a uniquely qualified leader to guide COFI and the forest sector through the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead.

As we welcome Kim to COFI, I would also like to take this opportunity to extend our appreciation to Linda Coady for her leadership and service as President and CEO. Linda’s work underscored the forest sector’s role in Indigenous reconciliation and supporting the diverse values BC’s forests provide — community well-being, environmental resilience, and economic prosperity.

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Opinion / EdiTOADial

CODE RED Not Orange & Green For BC Forestry

By David Elstone, Managing Director
The Spar Tree Group
December 18, 2024
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, Canada West

As most may have heard by now, Premier Eby has announced an agreement in principle between the BC NDP and Greens. …Of key significance to the forest sector, the agreement commits “to undertake a review of BC forests with First Nations, workers, unions, business and community to address concerns about sustainability, jobs, environmental protection and the future of the industry.” Such broad encompassing reviews typically take several months, if not over a year to complete and even longer before acting on recommendations. To propose such a review now is a prime example of just how forestry in British Columbia has truly become all about politics and not common sense. The two parties in their wisdom, have agreed to a review while the BC forest industry is literally in its death throes.

People, please we are in a CODE RED situation when it comes to solutions and immediate action for the survival of BC forestry. Trump’s proposed 25% tariff on Canadian goods and the US softwood lumber duties of 14.4%, which are expected to double mid-next year will bring the BC forest sector to a stop. …One of the most painful aspects of this proposed review is that it implies more uncertainty as the outcome(s) of a review are awaited. If there is one thing the BC forest sector most definitely does not need is more uncertainty, in fact, it is the absolute worst idea at this moment in time. …Putting aside my grumblings about this pending review, and in support of Minister Parmar’s “getting to work” attitude, the following ideas are suggested for the Minister to explore as solutions in anticipation of tough times ahead in 2025. …I agree with Minister Parmar on getting to work because it is immediate action that is needed now.

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Business & Politics

Tariff threats cast a shadow over US reliance on Canada for the majority of its oil imports

By Damian Troise
The Associated Press
December 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

NEW YORK — The U.S. increasingly relies on Canadian crude oil to meet domestic demand and that relationship faces potential strain amid the threat of tariffs from President-elect Trump. More than 50% of crude oil imported to the U.S. comes from Canada, up from 33% in 2013. The increase follows a jump in production from Canada’s western provinces and growing pipeline capacity to its southern neighbor. Trump has threatened blanket tariffs of up to 25% on products from both Canada and Mexico. That has raised concerns about higher energy costs trickling through the entire U.S. economy. “All three countries remain heavily reliant on each other economically, and hefty taxes on key U.S. imports like crude oil or softwood lumber risk exacerbating U.S. consumer inflation,” said the Americas for UBS Financial Services. …Canada, with its proximity to the U.S., is also the nation’s biggest trading partner. 

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Trudeau to unveil eight new ministers in cabinet shuffle after chaotic week

By Antoine Trépanier and Catherine Lévesque
National Post
December 20, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Justin Trudeau

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will announce 12 changes to his cabinet Friday morning, bringing in eight new ministers in one of his biggest cabinet shuffles since he was elected nine years ago. The National Post obtained the list from multiple sources with direct knowledge of the changes. Trudeau had been considering changes for some time, but the blockbuster resignation of his deputy prime minister and finance minister Chrystia Freeland on Monday forced him to act quickly. New Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc will keep his new portfolio but will no longer be minister of public safety and democratic institutions. Longtime Ottawa MP David McGuinty will be the new minister of Public Safety. …This year alone, nine cabinet ministers have resigned, announced they would not run for re-election or been fired. The new cabinet will not include a single Alberta representative. Meanwhile, Quebec will now have 11 ministers, including the prime minister.

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New President and CEO of the BC Council of Forest Industries

By Greg Stewart, Chair, COFI
Council of Forest Industries
December 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kim Haakstad

On behalf of the Board of Directors of the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI), I am pleased to announce the appointment of Kim Haakstad as the new President and Chief Executive Officer of COFI. Kim Haakstad brings a wealth of experience and expertise to COFI, with over two decades of leadership in executive roles across government, industry, and stakeholder relations. A seasoned strategist and relationship builder, Kim has demonstrated her ability to navigate complex policy landscapes and forge strong partnerships that drive shared success. She has served as Deputy Chief of Staff to the BC Premier and Chief of Staff to Cabinet Ministers. Her deep understanding of governmental processes, coupled with her strong connections across sectors, positions her as a uniquely qualified leader to guide COFI and the forest sector through the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead. I would also like to take extend our appreciation to Linda Coady for her leadership and service as President and CEO. 

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San Group’s creditor protection extended, monitor given more powers

By Carla Wilson
The Times Colonist
December 20, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The monitor for the San Group of companies has been granted broader powers by the Supreme Court of B.C. to manage and make decisions about the financially troubled forestry company, which has operations in Port Alberni. The San Group’s protection from creditors was extended at a court hearing in Vancouver on Thursday. The next hearing is set for Jan. 16. Expanded powers granted to Deloitte include the ability to administer the company’s restructuring and any winding down of the business, plus liquidating property and disposing of assets. The monitor is permitted to continue running the business, and said it anticipates working with current management. The various parties are expected to be back in court to ask for approval for a sale and investment solicitation process. …The court agreed the company can increase its borrowing limit to $1 million — up by $400,000 — to keep operations going.

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Arbitrator determines Cariboo Pulp and Paper worker not entitled to full compensation

By Bob Mackin
The Prince George Citizen
December 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

An arbitrator with the BC Labour Relations Board ordered Cariboo Pulp and Paper to pay a Unifor Local 1115 member $5,750 in damages in a long-running grievance. …The grievor worked in the mill since 1988 with a clear disciplinary record. …But trouble began on Feb. 26, 2020, when the worker failed to respond to 17 alarms in the control room.” …The company became concerned about potential cognitive impairment due to a stroke he had in 2017. “The employer opted to investigate whether a potential medical issue was a causal factor,” the decision said. “This triggered a lengthy series of contentious interactions with the union.” …Peltz concluded the company, in general, “proceeded reasonably expeditiously,” and is not responsible for the grievor’s loss of full wages during the return to work period. Peltz denied the union’s claim, “except for two months of wages and benefits for undue delay by the company” in retaining an occupational therapist.

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5 Questions: New forests minister Ravi Parmar on helping the struggling sector, incoming tariffs and being mentored by John Horgan

By Nathan Caddell
BC Business Magazine
December 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar

Ravi Parmar was named B.C.’s minister of forests three days after his 30th birthday. He’s the youngest MLA in the legislature and holds one of its most important titles. Parmar, the MLA for Langford-Highlands, is a career politician. … the forestry industry is in some peril of late, and Parmar’s performance in the role will likely be a major factor in whether the NDP are successful over the next four years. We took some time to talk to him about the massive job that lies ahead of him.

  1. You’ve … spent your working life in government. …How have you risen so quickly up the ranks?
  2. Some were concerned about electing an MLA who had no experience outside of politics. How do you respond?
  3. A lot of people in those areas didn’t vote for your party. How are those conversations going?
  4. COFI has been very vocal about what they’d like to see. Have you met with them? 
  5. Government is intent on restricting carbon footprints as well as supporting industry. Is balancing those two things going to be critical for you?

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Cutting edge prairie sawmill

By Tony Kryzanowski
The Logging and Sawmill Journal
December 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Installation of the final few pieces of equipment at the Edgewood Forest Products stud mill in Carrot River, Saskatchewan marks the end of a three-year journey, with a more than $240 million investment by Dunkley Lumber that has resulted in a significant achievement for the company. The new state-of-the-art, two-line stud mill owned by the Strathnaver, B.C.-based company leverages some of today’s most advanced digital and artificial intelligence (AI) technologies for sawmills, and the mill is now capable of producing 70 per cent more lumber on a two-shift basis than what they were able to produce previously with three shifts on a single line. Truly, a big win, production-wise. The company still employs roughly the same number of workers, as with this production uplift and investment in new technology they were able to reassign some staff and add a third shift at their planer mill. They have 171 employees.

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Forests minister promises to help build strong, sustainable industry while touring North Island

By Robin Grant
Campbell River Mirror
December 17, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar, right

B.C.’s new minister of Forests toured the North Island last week to gain insight into the region’s forestry industry and engage with workers. During a stop at the Campbell River Mirror office on Dec. 13, Ravi Parmar acknowledged this riding did not re-elect the NDP candidate in the October provincial election. “It’s important for me to get back on the ground in these communities and to let you know we hear you,” he said. ….In 2025, Parvar said he will launch a review of B.C. timber sales. “We’re looking at transforming B.C. timber sales in a way to ensure that it delivers for British Columbians, and that it delivers, most importantly, for workers,” he said. An additional focus is to double the size of community forests, which are forestry operations managed by a local government, First Nation, or community-held organization for the benefit of the entire community.

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CHAR Technologies Announces $2.5M from Québec for Saint-Félicien Biocarbon and Green Hydrogen Project

By CHAR Technologies Ltd.
GlobeNewswire
December 18, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — CHAR Technologies announced that the Government of Québec, through the Programme Innovation Bois, has announced the approval of $2.5M to CHAR Tech to support the advancement of the previously announced build, own, operate project to convert wood wastes and residuals into both biocarbon for metallurgical coal replacement, as well as green hydrogen. The non-repayable grant funding will be disbursed on predetermined project milestones. Also announced was a $1M contribution from the Programme Innovation Bois to la Société de cogénération de Saint-Félicien towards the centre de valorisation de la biomasse, which is co-located with the CHAR Tech project, and includes a waste heat recovery dryer to pre-process biomass, which will be used by the CHAR Tech project. SCSF operates a 25 MW cogeneration facility, converting approximately 260,000 green metric tonnes per year of wood waste biomass into renewable energy, with the electricity sold to Hydro-Québec.

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GreenFirst Forest Products to Sell Softwood Lumber Duty Refund Rights for $17.5M

By GreenFirst Forest Products Inc.
Businesswire
December 17, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — GreenFirst Forest Products announced a strategic agreement with Mahogany Investors regarding the sale of its entitlements to refunds related to duties imposed on softwood lumber exported from Canada to the US during the specified period 2021 and 2022. The agreed sale price for these entitlements is $17,500,000 USD, with the potential for additional proceeds based on the timing and resolution of the ongoing trade dispute. …Joel Fournier, GreenFirst’s CEO said… “the recent rights offering, combined with today’s transaction, will provide enough liquidity to execute Phase I of our strategic expenditures plan to become the largest sawyer in Ontario.” The duties pertain to deposits totaling ~$60,000,000 USD, made during the Company’s ownership of six softwood lumber mills in Ontario and Quebec. Although the Quebec assets were divested in 2023, the Company retained the rights and obligations associated with the duties deposits.

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Finance & Economics

Lumber Rebounds Driven by Strong Demand

Trading Economics
December 19, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber prices have rebounded to around $560 per thousand board feet, up from a seven-week low of $531 on December 16th, driven by strong demand and supply constraints. U.S. existing home sales rose by 4.8% in November, the highest in eight months, reflecting growing momentum in the housing market, with more buyers entering as job growth continues, housing inventory rises, and consumers adjust to mortgage rates between 6% and 7%. Additionally, building permits surged by 6.1% in November, the highest level since February 2024, signaling strong future construction activity. On the supply side, production cuts and mill closures are restricting lumber availability as Western Forest Products reduced output by 30 million board feet, and Canfor Corp. shut two mills, cutting annual production by 670 million board feet. These supply limitations, coupled with U.S. tariffs on Canadian softwood lumber and rising import tariffs amid the China trade dispute, are pushing prices higher. [END]

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Tariffs could reshape North American supply chains for autos, lumber, agrifoods

By Noi Mahoney
FreightWaves
December 20, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Automotive companies on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border could feel the most pain if President-elect Trump moves forward with his proposed 25% tariffs on all imports from Canada and Mexico. A 25% tariff would “break the entire system” of the North American automotive supply chain, said John Lash. …Other cross-border industries that could be affected by Trump’s proposed tariffs are lumber producers and oil and gas suppliers. “Tariffs have some really important uses. … The ones that really come top of mind is to protect against unfair trade practices,” Lash said. “When you think of the lumber side of things, Canada and the U.S. have been in a trade war essentially since the 1980s.” …“The NAHB said this is really going to kill affordability,” Lash said. “If tariffs go up by 25%, that’s not good for affordability.”

 

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Logging revenue falls following two years of growth

By Statistics Canada
Government of Canada
December 18, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Total revenue in the logging industry declined by 4.9% from 2022 to $11.7 billion in 2023. The shares of total revenue were split equally between the contract logging Canadian industry and the logging (except contract) Canadian industry. Revenue from logging activities—which excludes revenue from other sources, such as secondary business activities—fell by 4.4% from 2022 to $10.9 billion in 2023. Contributing to this decline in revenues was a 16.2% decrease in the average annual price for logs, pulpwood and other forestry products, as measured by the Raw Materials Price Index. Total expenses from logging activities declined by $624.3 million year over year to $11.1 billion in 2023. …In 2023, the top five logging provinces accounted for 96.4% of Canada’s revenue from logging activities. Despite three of the top five provinces recording increases in revenue from logging activities, the most notable change was in British Columbia (-$714.2 million to $4.7 billion). 

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Canadian Investment in building construction decreased 1.1% in October

Statistics Canada
December 18, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Overall, investment in building construction decreased 1.1% (-$243.3 million) to $21.4 billion in October, after a 2.6% increase in September. Year over year, investment in building construction grew 3.4% in October. In October, investment in the residential building construction sector decreased by $312.3 million to $14.9 billion, while investment in the non-residential sector rose by $69.0 million to $6.5 billion. Investment in multi-unit construction was the only component to post a decrease (-5.1%; -$423.2 million) in October, dragging down gains posted in the other components. On a constant dollar basis (2017=100), investment in building construction decreased 1.1% compared with the previous month to $12.9 billion in October, but was up 0.3% year over year.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canada pushes net-zero electricity target to 2050 as Alberta vows legal challenge

By Nick Murray
The Canadian Press in BNN Bloomberg
December 18, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

The federal government has pushed its target to achieve a net-zero electricity grid back 15 years to 2050 as part of new clean electricity regulations announced Tuesday — though officials maintain that target date was always the goal. Canada had previously signalled an aim to fully decarbonize electricity grids by 2035. But some provinces, namely Alberta and Saskatchewan, said that was simply not doable. Alberta Premier Danielle Smith swiftly responded to Ottawa’s plan by saying her province would immediately mount a legal challenge because the regulations wade into provincial jurisdiction. …The country’s electricity grid is already substantially green, with 85% of Canada’s power supply coming from non-emitting sources. But four provinces — Alberta, Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick — still rely on coal and natural gas. Committing to a net-zero electricity grid is an easy move for the other six provinces, which are already more than 90 per cent of the way there.

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Forestry

Christmas tree industry desperate for new blood as farmers age

By Andrew Rankin
Financial Post
December 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Lloyd Smith

Lloyd Smith, 64, has been in the business of growing Christmas trees in New Germany, N.S. for the past five decades. …So far this year, he’s sold about 1,300 trees, a third more than last year. He chalks this up to the city’s population boom, but he also sees something else: there are fewer farmers around. …two farmers who set up nearby Christmas tree stands died in the past five years. Other farms have been abandoned and grown over. …the industry needs new blood. The total area of Christmas tree farms shrunk by nearly 20,000 acres between 2011 and 2021, according to Statistics Canada. Shirley Brennan, executive director of the Canadian Christmas Trees Association, said the average age of a Christmas tree farmer is now between 65 and 85. …“The younger generation isn’t interested,” Smith said. …Revenue has grown to more than $100 million from $55 million in 2015 and Canada is exporting 2.3 million trees a year to the United States.

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How carbon finance is seeding new hope for northern forests

By Angeli Mehta
Thomson Reuters – Ethical Corporation Magazine
December 20, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Toilet paper and biomass pellets are emblematic of the fight to save northern forests – and prevent some the planet’s more important biodiversity from going down the toilet (or up in smoke). While much of the focus on deforestation is on the world’s tropical forests, the degradation of boreal and temperate forests continues apace, threatening their ability to store carbon and destroying ecosystems.

Summary

  • Boreal forests risk becoming carbon sources; Canada alone clearcuts 1 million acres a year
  • U.S. investment of $1.5bln projects combining carbon sequestration with sustainable timber
  • In Canada, Indigenous-led efforts link forest stewardship with community development
  • In British Columbia emitters to pay C$80 per tonne or offset emissions from 2025
  • Blue carbon potential emerges as First Nations explore kelp farming and seabed sequestration

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The Law Society Takes Conflicts of Interest Seriously: Knocking on Wood

By Noel Semple
Slaw Magazine
December 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

For several years, McMillan LLP has been a go-to law firm for the Paper Excellence corporation. This large Canadian forestry company has been represented by McMillan on transactions worth over $6 billion. The ethical problem arose when McMillan took on a new retainer, for the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). That client’s main work is administering the “FSC” certification, which you may have seen stamped on some wood products… One of FSC’s rules is that, in order to remain certified, a company must not only avoid destructive forest practices, but must also not be “indirectly involved” with companies that do so… In November 2023, Greenpeace alleged that Paper Excellence was effectively a corporate sibling of Asia Pulp & Paper, insofar as both were controlled by Indonesian forestry company Sinar Mas. That allegation was contested by Paper Excellence, and so the FSC sought corporate law expertise to conduct a review. The firm that FSC hired was none other than McMillan LLP.

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Procter & Gamble Commits to Enhanced Disclosures Regarding Sourcing from Boreal Forests in Canada

By Andrew Shalit
Green Century Fund
December 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

BOSTON — Procter & Gamble has agreed to provide additional information regarding its practices related to sourcing wood pulp from the boreal forests of Canada. The updates will reiterate the company’s aim to eliminate sourcing from intact forest landscapes and to protect primary forests. …The agreement came after discussions earlier this year with investment firms Green Century Capital Management, AXA Investment Managers, BNP Paribas Asset Management, and Robeco. In exchange, these investors agreed to withdraw a shareholder proposal asking the company to enhance its disclosures in relation to its existing efforts to mitigate risks to biodiversity and forest resilience. “These disclosures will help investors better understand how P&G is managing the risks associated with sourcing from such an ecologically important area,” said Leslie Samuelrich, President of Green Century Funds. …In addition, P&G will renew its investment in the development of alternative fibers.

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Exclusive-Procter & Gamble to disclose more details about wood-pulp audits, investors say

By Jessica DiNapoli
Reuters in StreetInsider.com
December 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

NEW YORK – Procter & Gamble has promised a group of shareholders it will disclose more details about how it audits wood-pulp suppliers after shareholders pushed the maker of Charmin toilet paper for years to source forest products more sustainably. P&G has previously said it performs audits but provided little information about them. Logging’s impact on the environment has raised scrutiny of P&G and other major pulp users. The next step is for P&G and the investors to discuss specifics of what the company will now disclose, said Andrew Shalit at Green Century. …The company said it guards details of its global supply chain for competitive reasons. Green Century wants clarity on P&G’s supply chain to set an example for other companies that rely on Canadian pulp, such as Home Depot. …The company relies on third-party certifiers, such as the nonprofit Forest Stewardship Council, to ensure its wood pulp is sourced sustainably.

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Why this company says thousands of trees must be removed from Stanley Park

By Simon LIttle and Alissa Thibault
Global News
December 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The consulting company that recommended the removal of thousands of trees from Stanley Park is sharing its perspective on a project that’s spurred considerable local controversy. The Vancouver Park Board began removing trees from the park after it revealed in November 2023 that up to 160,000 of them had been killed by a hemlock looper moth infestation and had become unsafe. The report that led to the removal was authored by B.A. Blackwell and Associates, which also worked to restore the Stanley Park forest after a damaging windstorm in 2006. “I felt this was an opportunity to provide an education moment because there’s a lot to learn about this issue, it’s complicated,” Bruce Blackwell, the company’s principal, told Global News during a tour of the affected areas of the park on Thursday. Blackwell was emphatic that the only purpose of the tree removal in the park is public safety.

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BC Forest Enhancement Society Projects Update

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
December 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

With the winter chill in the air, it seems like a good time to reflect on the role that wood plays in keeping us warm. According to Natural Resources Canada, in 2023, there were 646 bioheat systems in Canada. Wood chips and wood pellets are the most common fuel types.  Quebec is leading the way with 221 systems, the Northwest Territories is a distant second with 96 systems and B.C. is a close third with 81. There are 105 community-owned systems across Canada and 40% are in Indigenous communities. This is a good start, but we have a long way to go to catch up to some of our boreal peers. …FESBC programs are helping to ensure that wood fibre harvested for timber, to reduce wildfire risk or to salvage stands damaged by fire or insects that don’t make their way into sawmills, and which would otherwise be burned to reduce wildfire risk, is instead being used to generate heat and energy. 

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Skeena region Christmas tree farm owner scales back business

By Harvin Bhathal
The Caledonia Courier
December 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Don Coburn

Don Coburn, owner of Skeena Valley Christmas Tree Farm, is scaling down the business after years of supplying the region and province. “[In 2020], I had around 2,000 trees coming in a year and I had customers,” he said. “But then the price of trees went way up four years ago because of a shortage in North America and the world basically, so I began shipping them out to places like Vancouver, Victoria and Squamish.” In 2021, his farm expanded to around 4,200 trees. The following year he had around 3,700, around 2,600 the year after, and this year, he is down to around 1,500. “I was growing too many trees and for a few years, I had too many trees and no customers,” he said, speaking about how, when prices plateaued, he was left with overstocked inventory.  Coburn is unsure how long he will stay in the business. 

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BC’s forestry practices are antiquated

Letter by Mike P. Robinson
The Powell River Peak
December 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Walking through the clear-cuts north of Lund, I’ve noticed they’re not terrible by typical standards … the real problem lies in what comes next: replanting. Replanted areas aren’t forests; they’re fiber-farms—dense monocultures devoid of biodiversity. There are no birds, deer, or diverse plant life, just crowded trees competing for scarce nutrients. If we had to live off these lands, we’d starve. Replanting is a public relations greenwash, creating biological deserts instead of ecosystems. Naturally regenerating forests, by contrast, begins with nitrogen-fixing alders, enriched soils and balanced biodiversity. …Yet British Columbia clings to outdated forestry models focused on short-term profit. …Why not replant one clear-cut while letting others regenerate naturally? We could compare outcomes and learn something valuable. …We could listen to professional foresters and scientists rather than corporate lobbyists. BC could lead the world in forestry innovation, but only if we upgrade our economic belief systems. 

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One little sawmill, one big legacy

By James Steidle, Stop the Spray
The Prince George Citizen
December 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE — Pete Stoner’s small sawmill operation received a lot of attention over the years, and rightly so. There’s a plaque on the wall celebrating two million board feet of production. “It’s three million board feet now,” a pretty wild achievement with a one- or two-person sawmill. Nevertheless, it’s been easy for government policy makers to ignore operations like Pete and Maggie’s. In their nearly three decades of sawmilling Pete and Maggie put out as much production as the big Polar supermill at Bear Lake, now closed, would put out in less than three shifts. …However, the BC Liberals changed all that. …Before the government did the majors a solid and squeezed the little guys off the land, there were around 30 small sawmills between Quesnel and Prince George turning out value-added wood products, much of it based on birch and aspen.

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The Canoe in the Forest

By Joshua Hunt
Hakai Magazine – Coastal Science and Societies
December 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

For decades, much of Sealaska’s revenue has been tied to the extraction of resources from its significant landholdings, including the patch of old-growth forest where the canoe was found. The scout who discovered the site was far from the waterline, high up in the kind of steep terrain considered ideal for helicopter logging, when he noticed an unusual number of stumps for a site where cutting had not yet begun. Then he noticed that many of the fallen logs next to those stumps were missing sections of their trunks up to 10 meters long. Only after finding a single canoe that had been carved but not hauled away did he realize where the missing sections had gone.

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Halalt First Nation sues North Cowichan, forestry firm over logging practices

By Larry Pynn
The Tyee
December 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Halalt First Nation in the Cowichan Valley has launched a class-action lawsuit against private forest giant Mosaic Forest Management and three levels of government for damages related to flooding on the band’s reserve on the lower Chemainus River. The B.C. Supreme Court action names several “forestry defendants,” and the Municipality of North Cowichan for logging that contributed to downstream flooding. …The suit alleges the forestry defendants “conducted their forestry operations in a careless and reckless manner” by overharvesting and failing to manage and clear harmful logging debris. It also says logging caused increased surface runoff, sedimentation and riverbank erosion in the Chemainus River watershed. …The suit also names the federal and provincial governments, Island Corridor Foundation and Managed Forest Council, which is an independent provincial agency. All three levels of government also declined to comment on the legal action. …Halalt Chief James Thomas declined to comment at this time.

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Mackenzie Region wins Forest Capital of Canada title two years in a row

By Ethan Montague
My Grande Prairie Now
December 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Mackenzie Region of Alberta has been named the Forest Capital of Canada for the second year in a row. The FCC designation has been a tradition across the country every year since 1979 and is awarded by the Canadian Institute of Forestry. The award aims to celebrate communities or regions for their connection to the forest, and Alberta Minister of Forestry and Parks Todd Loewen says his riding, Grande Prairie-Mackenzie, continues to embrace the natural beauty in its own backyard. “Congratulations to the Mackenzie Region for being recognized as the Forest Capital of Canada for the second consecutive year,” he says. “This title reflects the region’s connection to our natural environment and its commitment to forestry education and responsible stewardship.”

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Dead and dying trees important to B.C. ecosystems, says biologist

By Jessica Durling
Nanaimo News Bulletin
December 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Dead or dying trees, also called snags, are sometimes viewed as an eyesore, but a B.C. scientist is warning that if they don’t present a safety hazard, it’s important to leave them be… Among B.C. bats, 14 of 15 species roost in trees, 11 roost in dead trees and eight of them roost exclusively in dead trees… Other species, like chickadees and nuthatches, require trees that were dead for even longer, so their beak can penetrate the ‘spongy’ wood… A solution was the wildlife danger tree assessor’s course, developed as a partnership between the B.C. government and the University of Northern B.C., which teaches professionals to identify the differences between a safe snag and a dangerous one. These factors include the tree’s root system and the direction the tree may fall.

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Back to the future: Re-establishing a historic forest landscape in B.C.

By Jim Stirling
The Logging and Sawmill Journal
December 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

benchland overlooking B.C.’s Chilcotin River is an ideal location to recreate an historic forest landscape from the region’s past. It was an ecosystem of grasslands interspersed with groups of trees and it reflected how much of the region once appeared. A group of First Nations forest companies are working to re-establish the diversity of yesterday’s landscape while making the forest better equipped to survive the more devastating wildfires predicted, as global warming conditions intensify. …The forest fire season of 2017 won’t soon be forgotten in the Cariboo-Chilcotin. …The decision was taken to replant the burned area near the Chilcotin River in 2021. But the elements hadn’t finished creating their havoc. “That was the heat dome year,” reminds Daniel Persson, forestry superintendent with Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd (CCR) based in Williams Lake. The heat dome wiped out about 95 per cent of the newly planted seedlings, continues Persson.

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BC Forest Practices Board audit of Valemount forestry operation finds issues

BC Forest Practices Board
December 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VALEMOUNT – A forestry audit of the Valemount Community Forest Company Ltd. (VCF) reveals that bridge construction and maintenance continue to be a pervasive issue in B.C. forestry. The Forest Practices Board audited all activities carried out by the VCF between July 1, 2021, and July 28, 2023. While the licensee complied with most requirements, the report identifies five significant non compliances, two of which are related to bridge construction and maintenance. Auditors had no safety concerns with the bridges installed during the audit period. However, the licensee did not have any of the legally required documents outlining how it would ensure these bridges were safe and structurally sound for industrial use. “We continue to see licensees fall short of practice requirements for their bridges,” said Keith Atkinson, chair of the board. “This can put the safety of truck drivers and other industrial road users at risk.” …The report also identifies two significant non-compliances related to wildfire protection. 

Additional coverage in Business in Vancouver by Nelson Bennett: Loggers warned to take more care with fire prevention

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B.C. tree planting to plummet 23% amid wildfire boom

By Stefan Labbé
North Shore News
December 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia’s government expects to plant nearly 60 million fewer trees next year — a 23 per cent drop from this year’s planting season at a time the province has seen a major spike in wildfire activity. The projections come from presentation slides obtained by Glacier Media and shown to industry in September, less than 10 days before the B.C.’s provincial election campaign kicked off. During the campaign, the BC NDP promised to plant 300 million trees annually across the province to “help increase forest resilience.” That promise came off the back of two of the most destructive wildfire seasons in B.C.’s history. In 2023 alone, more than 6,000 fires torched 15 million hectares of land, an area larger than England, according to Natural Resources Canada. But according to the province’s own projections, the government expects the number of trees planted to sink to 233 million in 2025, down from 291 million in 2024 and far short of its election promise.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Canada sees decline in greenhouse gas emissions, but missing target

By Nick Murray
Global News
December 19, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

For the first time since the pandemic, Canada had a year-over-year decline in its greenhouse gas emissions — though it is still a long way off its 2030 target. A preliminary emissions report from the federal government shows greenhouse gases emitted in 2023 fell by six million tonnes compared to 2022, the equivalent to what about 1.4 million passenger vehicles emit over the course of a year. Under the Paris climate agreement, Canada committed to reducing its emissions by 2030 to 40% to 45% less than what they were in 2005. The latest figures show as of 2023 they were down 8.5%. …The report is a snapshot of a country’s annual GHG emissions which Canada normally publishes in April when it has to submit it to the United Nations. The report showed a small increase in emissions in 2023 from transportation sources, offset by decreases in the oil and gas sector, agriculture and emissions from buildings.

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Canadian carbon removal company scores US$40M grant from fund backed by Bill Gates

by Amanda Stephenson
Victoria Times Colonist
December 18, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Canadian Press

A Canadian company that has received a US$40-million grant from Bill Gates’ climate solutions venture firm says its Alberta test site will be removing carbon directly from the atmosphere as early as this spring. Montreal-based startup Deep Sky announced Wednesday it was awarded funding from the Gates-founded Breakthrough Energy Catalyst to help finance what it calls its Deep Sky Alpha project. Construction work at the project site, located north of Calgary in the town of Innisfail, is already under way… It is the first Canadian company to receive an investment from Breakthrough Energy Catalyst, which funds commercial projects for emerging climate technologies in an effort to accelerate their adoption and reduce their costs.

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Health & Safety

Towing effort during icy conditions turns fatal Monday near Logan Lake

RADIO NL 610
December 19, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

While details are minimal to this point, the BC Forest Safety Council is reporting a logging truck driver was killed outside of Logan Lake sometime Monday. According to the Safety Council’s bulletin issued Wednesday, the person was killed December 16th while attempting to “tow a log truck that had spun out on an icy road.” The details on a specific location, as well as the circumstances surrounding the person’s death, have not been detailed. …A separate bulletin issued by the BC Forest Safety Council this week also highlights the dangers that forestry workers face while on the front-lines of felling operations. It points to two separate, non-fatal incidents involving heavy machinery being used in different operations in the Southern Interior this fall, including one near Scotch Creek in the Shuswap. Both involve harvesting in steep-sloped areas.

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Study links wildfire smoke and dementia risk. What does it mean for the North?

By Talar Stockton
Yukon News
December 19, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Wildfire smoke in the air has become a signature of summer in the North. While rarely welcome, smoky days are growing less rare every year as climate change continues to create the ideal conditions for wildfires – and wildfire smoke. It’s common knowledge that wildfire smoke can cause a range of short-term health issues, like headaches and a runny nose. However, like other forms of pollution, wildfire smoke can have long-term effects – like dementia, as a recent study has found. The Yukon health authorities don’t feel the need to wait for research specific to the territory before recommending action. Researchers showed wildfire smoke was associated with an increase in risk of dementia diagnosis – especially for marginalized people. While the study population was located in California, health officials in the Yukon and Northwest Territories say there are things to be done to mitigate the health effects of smoke here, too.  

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Logging truck driver killed in incident near Logan Lake, forestry safety council says

BC Forest Safety Council
December 16, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

On December 16th, a log truck driver was fatally injured during an attempt to tow a log truck that had spun out on an icy road. This incident occurred in an area near Logan Lake, BC. WorkSafeBC and the Coroners Service are investigating this incident. We extend our condolences to the family and friends of the deceased and our sympathies to all those affected by this incident. This is the second harvesting fatality of 2024… We extend our condolences to the family and friends of the deceased and our sympathies to all those affected by this incident.

Additional coverage in Castanet by Kristen Holliday: Logging truck driver killed in incident near Logan Lake, forestry safety council says

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Board of Directors approves amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation

By Lori Guiton, Director, Policy, Regulation and Research Department
WorkSafeBC
December 19, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

At its November 2024 meeting, WorkSafeBC’s Board of Directors approved amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation. These amendments will become effective on March 31, 2025. Strikethrough versions of the amendments with explanatory notes can be accessed below. Deletions in the regulatory amendments are identified with a strikethrough and additions are in bold text and highlighted in yellow.

The above amendments were posted online for feedback during the public hearing process. Stakeholder feedback received is available for review.

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