Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

International Pulp Week: Carbon Capture in Pulp & Paper: Monetizing Biogenic CO2

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 11, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Jouni Martiskainen, Project Development Manager with Svante — a Vancouver-based carbon capture technology company with approximately 270 employees and nearly 20 years of development history — presented on the commercial case for carbon capture at pulp mills, covering the financial mechanisms available to support it, the technology the company has developed, and the specific projects underway in the forest products sector. …A central point in Martiskainen’s presentation was why pulp mills are particularly well positioned for carbon capture. The kraft pulping process produces black liquor, which is combusted in the recovery boiler — generating the white plume of steam visible at any kraft mill.

Jouni Martiskainen

That stack gas contains CO2 at a concentration of approximately 15%, compared to roughly 400 parts per million in ambient air. That concentration is a byproduct of the process rather than any deliberate design, but it makes pulp mills among the most efficient biogenic CO2 concentrators in the industrial landscape, significantly reducing the energy and capital required to capture and purify that CO2 to near 100% concentration for storage or utilization downstream.

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International Pulp Week: Specialty Cellulose: Market Dynamics and Outlook

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 11, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Christian Chavassieu, Managing Partner of CelCo, presented on the dissolving wood pulp market — a sector representing approximately 10% of total pulp production, with supply dynamics, competitive structures, and end-use markets that differ significantly from standard market pulp.

Christian Chavassieu

His presentation covered supply, demand, pricing, and competitive structure across the sector’s main sub-segments, with particular focus on the diverging fortunes of commodity textile grades versus specialty grades, the growing role of alternative fibres, and a live anti-dumping trade case at the US Department of Commerce whose outcome could materially reshape sourcing patterns in the US market within days of the conference.

On supply, Chavassieu noted that dissolving wood pulp capacity has grown at roughly 4.1% annually over the past decade, though that pace has slowed recently with the closure of two facilities — a GP mill in the US and the Tembec mill in Temiscaming — and only modest new capacity coming online, primarily from Brazil and a new mill in Portugal.

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International Pulp Week: Northern Softwood in TAD Tissue: Performance That Drives Product Quality

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 12, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Ismo Nousiainen, CEO of Metsä Fibre, the world’s leading bleached softwood market pulp supplier, presented research and mill trial results making the case that northern bleached softwood kraft pulp — NBSK — remains an essential and performance-critical component in through-air-dried, or TAD,

Ismo Nousiainen

tissue production. TAD is the manufacturing technology behind premium tissue products — high-end bath tissue and kitchen towels — in which hot air rather than mechanical pressure dries the tissue web, producing significantly higher bulk, softness, and absorbency than conventional wet-pressed grades. It is the most demanding end use remaining for softwood pulp as hardwood substitution continues across other grades, and the segment where softwood’s functional properties are most clearly differentiated.

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International Pulp Week: Global Trends in Bleaching & Pulping Chemicals

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 12, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Craig Murphy, Director and Global Service Lead for Bleaching Chemicals at Chemical Market Analytics by OPIS, framed his presentation around four regional stories — Latin America growing, China increasingly self-sufficient, North America in managed decline, and Europe under pressure — and traced how those trends are reshaping demand for the chemicals that pulp mills depend on to cook and bleach wood fibre.

Craig Murphy

Running through all of it is the Strait of Hormuz closure, which has created supply disruptions and cost pressures now working their way through chemical markets in ways the industry is still absorbing. …In the Q&A, Kelly McNamara asked which chemical market carries the greatest risk of supply disruption or price volatility for pulp producers. Murphy’s answer was sulfur — a core input to the kraft pulping process. It is a market already under structural pressure before the Hormuz closure, and one the closure is now compounding.

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International Pulp Week 2026 — The Shifting Landscape

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 11, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

International Pulp Week opened Monday morning in Vancouver with Tim Brown, vice president with PPPC, welcoming delegates to the 21st edition of the conference. …Brown acknowledged the conference’s platinum sponsor, the Shanghai Port Authorities, and gold sponsors Suzano, UPM, and Svante, before outlining the program built around a central theme of fibre selection. He then handed the session over to Kevin Mason, Managing Director of ERA Forest Products Research, who served as both opening speaker and moderator for the day.

Kevin Mason

Mason opened with a framing device drawn from classical history. The post-1945 international order, he argued, can be understood as a Pax Americana — a system analogous to the Roman Empire’s Pax Romana, in which the dominant power’s global projection underwrote open trade flows, resource access, and the primacy of the US dollar in international commerce. That system, he said, is now over. In its place, he described a retreat toward hemispheric consolidation, which commentators have dubbed the Donroe Doctrine, or the Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine. Whether by design or otherwise, the Trump administration’s actions represent a fundamental break from the institutions and norms established after 1945, with the UN, international courts, and a range of multilateral frameworks all, in Mason’s words, under attack. The operating logic, he suggested, is straightforward: the strong do what they want, and the weak suffer what they must.

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International Pulp Week 2026: A Macro View on Tariffs and Global Markets

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 11, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Joaquín Kritz Lara, Chief Economist and Strategist with Numera Analytics, opened by noting that each year he focuses on a specific macro theme — tariffs the year prior, geopolitical risk the year before that. This year, he said, the answer was obvious: the conflict in the Middle East and its economic consequences, approached through two lenses — what it means for oil and gas markets, and how the broader economic fallout maps against the closest historical comparable, the stagflation episodes of the 1970s.

Joaquin Kritz Lara

On oil, Kritz Lara said the current situation is the worst energy crisis on record. He walked through the evolution of global oil production during previous major disruptions …before turning to the present. The current supply shortfall, depending on the estimates used, is running between 12% and 14% of global production. The only remotely comparable instance was the OPEC embargo of 1973, and even then it took close to two years for production to drop 10%. From a demand destruction perspective, he said, the current situation is comparable to COVID — and by his measure worse.

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International Pulp Week 2026: Optimizing Fibre, Elevating Performance: How Hardwood Is Helping Customers Compete

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 11, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

Rodrigo Marchi, Managing Director for the Americas at Suzano, framed his presentation around a central commercial argument: that eucalyptus-based hardwood pulp has moved well beyond its historical role as a cost-reduction tool and is now a performance fibre capable of helping customers compete on product quality.

Rodrigo Marchi

The presentation drew on Suzano’s experience working across tissue, packaging, and printing and writing grades, with a particular focus on substitution opportunities, the structural shift away from softwood, and what Marchi described as a deintegration strategy that is reshaping how some mills approach their fibre furnish. Marchi opened with the demand picture for hardwood pulp, noting the sustained growth trajectory that has characterized the segment over the past two decades, driven primarily by China.

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Business & Politics

U.S. Trade Law Enforcement and Section 232 Tariffs Boost Domestic Production and Cut Unfair Trade

By US Lumber Coalition
PR Newswire
May 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON — US trade law enforcement coupled with President Trump’s Section 232 tariff measures have forced a reduction in Canada’s US market share to more natural levels not seen in half a century – currently at 19%, down from 34% in 2016. Simultaneously, ample softwood lumber supply for the US market has been sustained as the US softwood lumber industry responded by making investments to add 8.6 billion board feet of softwood lumber production capacity since 2016. Through these investments, U.S. lumber manufacturing facilities have produced an additional 36 billion board feet of lumber since 2016. That is more U.S. lumber produced by U.S. workers to build U.S. homes while supporting 1.3 million U.S. jobs. …Since August 2025, Canada announced an estimated C$2.1 billion in forestry-specific subsidies designed to counter and undermine U.S. trade law enforcement. In total, Canada’s forest industry has access to new or augmented government support programs amounting to more than C$9.9 billion dollars.

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Controlling What We Can Control

Forest Products Association of Canada
May 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Building Canada Strong with Canadian Forestry. If Canada is going to capitalize on this moment to build a stronger, more resilient economy, we need to ACT NOW, controlling what we can control and empowering the Canadian sectors that will allow us to shape our own economic destiny. …And as a globally-recognized leader in how we manage our forests, we have a lot to offer the world. But we’re currently weathering a perfect storm — a 45% wall of U.S. tariffs on top of duplicative regulatory inefficiencies here at home. While we have no control over the former, we can control the latter. And government can help. They’ve already identified the known friction points in their “Comprehensive Red Tape Review”. Now we need them to act. By fixing these Made-In Canada Barriers, they can empower sectors like forestry to fortify and diversify our country’s economy while maintaining the high environmental standards that help keep our forests as forests forever. You can EMAIL YOUR MP and call on them to ensure the findings of their Red Tape Review are actioned. 

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Federal court strikes down Trump’s 10% global tariff — what it means for brokers

By Max Sexton
The Mortgage Professional America
May 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Russ Taylor

A federal court dealt another blow to the Trump administration’s tariff agenda, ruling that the 10% global tariffs the president imposed earlier this year are illegal. …Kenneth Katkin, law professor at Northern Kentucky University, said the statutes that authorize tariffs simply do not authorize global tariffs. An appeal is expected. …This development is just one thread in a much larger story that continues to weigh on the housing market. Russ Taylor said the lumber market is getting hit from multiple directions at once, and no single factor is solely to blame. …”With the Iranian war, constricted trade flows, high oil prices, inflation, everyone’s being more conservative,” he said. “That keeps prices at bay.” …A lumber inclusion in the USMCA would ease some of the cost pressure but Taylor pointed out that the US domestic industry has done very well under the current tariff structure and has every reason to resist a deal that changes it.

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Make More in B.C. project will protect, create forestry jobs

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
May 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A $2-million grant from the Province to FPInnovations will lay the groundwork to help support the development of economic hubs intended to support and grow the forestry sector. The Make More in B.C. project will support B.C.’s wood products. …Economic hubs are at the heart of the Make More in B.C initiative, fostering regional collaboration, connecting local manufacturers with local contractors and First Nations partners, unlocking fibre and forging new opportunities. …Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests said “The Make More in B.C. project is about building a stronger, more resilient forest sector that is never again dependent on a single trading partner like the US.” Nick Arkle, CEO of Gorman Group, recently found success with this innovative concept. …The groundwork Arkle has laid through his Merritt-based working group, sets the foundation for BC’s first official economic hub in the Merritt Timber Supply Area.

Additional coverage in:

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The return of B.C. First Nations’ territory: Despite recent gains, less than 1 per cent is in their hands

By Gordon Hoekstra
Vancouver Sun
May 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

In 2008, the B.C. government agreed to provide the Musqueam First Nation with land and money to settle a dispute over the prospective sale of the University of B.C. golf course lands. …As part of a deal valued at $250 million, which involved several parcels of land, including the golf course, and cash, the Musqueam received nearly 14 hectares adjacent to their community south of Marine Drive along the north arm of the Fraser River. …The Musqueam have been in discussions with the province about adding more land, possibly from Pacific Spirit Regional Park, show communications disclosed through a freedom of information request. …Many First Nations in the Metro Vancouver-Fraser Valley-Squamish-Sunshine Coast region are using their existing and newly obtained land holdings for economic development, which can also provide economic benefits outside their communities. …The Squamish Nation has plans for 11 towers and 6,000 units on the portion of lands returned from those taken away from them at False Creek in 1913, called Sen̓áḵw. 

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Energy And Resources Minister Visits Carrot River Lumber Mill

Government of Saskatchewan
May 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

On Friday, Energy and Resources Minister Chris Beaudry visited Dunkley Lumber’s Carrot River sawmill, a key facility in Saskatchewan’s forestry industry. Minister Beaudry held discussions with senior officials from the company. “Saskatchewan’s forestry industry is a cornerstone of economic activity in the north, generating thousands of jobs and contributing to strong, vibrant communities,” Energy and Resources Minister Chris Beaudry said. “The Government of Saskatchewan is committed to working with industry partners to strengthen the forestry industry and grow the responsible development of our natural resources.” Dunkley’s Carrot River facility is the largest sawmill in the province, with the company employing more than 400 people combined… In 2024, Dunkley completed a $220 million expansion to the Carrot River sawmill, which increased the facility’s capacity by 75 per cent. “Saskatchewan continues to distinguish itself as one of the most attractive jurisdictions in North America for lumber manufacturing,” Dunkley Lumber Fibre and Sustainability Vice President Dyon Armstrong said. 

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B.C. has lost 40,000 jobs so far this year, says StatsCan

By Emma Crawford
Canadian Press in CityNews Vancouver
May 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Statistics Canada says B.C. lost more than 40,000 jobs over the first four months of the year, and more than 11,000 full-time positions last month alone. Premier David Eby says this comes as little surprise, and the explanation is obvious, with a major pillar of the province’s economy continuing to take a beating from a major trade war with the U.S. “Our softwood lumber sector is under huge pressure,” he said. “The tariffs we face are higher than those faced by Russia and Europe when they import wood to the United States. And as a result, Russia and Europe are exporting more wood to the United States than they ever have.” As well, exports from B.C. to the U.S. are down, which is affecting all provinces, Eby says.

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Ontario Investing $10 Million to Modernize Georgia-Pacific North Woods Facility

By Ministry of Natural Resources
The Government of Ontario
May 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ENGLEHART, Ontario — The Ontario government is investing $10 million in Georgia-Pacific North Woods to advance a major $191 million upgrade to its OSB plant. The project will support the increased production of Ontario-made wood products and protect more than 220 jobs and hundreds of indirect jobs in the region. …The province is making strategic investments to help forest sector businesses adapt, compete and grow to stay resilient in the face of US tariffs. …The government’s investment under the Forest Biomass Program will support Georgia-Pacific’s $191 million project, helping modernize and expand operations at its Englehart facility. The project includes upgrades to log processing operations, construction of new facilities, expansion of on-site storage and modern equipment. Once completed, these improvements will increase production by 14%, strengthening a key anchor facility in the northeast. Georgia-Pacific will also acquire a thermal energy system to use wood by-products for heat and power, supporting sustainable forest management by maximizing fibre value.

Additional coverage in Northern Ontario Business: Province chips in with biomass funding for Englehart OSB mill

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Kruger invests $333 million to enter the wide nonwovens sector

Kruger Inc.
May 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TROIS-RIVIÈRES, Quebec — Kruger announced a $333 million investment marking its entry into the nonwovens sector. This new division will focus on manufacturing some of the industry’s most sustainable materials for a broad range of wipe applications. Central to this major project is the installation of the first production line of its kind in Canada, to be built on Île-de-la-Potherie in Trois-Rivières, adjacent to Kruger’s Wayagamack paper mill, with commissioning scheduled for 2028. …This project was made possible with a $35 million contribution from the Government of Canada through the Strategic Response Fund, as well as a $35 million loan from Investissement Québec, along with a $5 million equity investment in Kruger Pulp and Paper Limited Partnership Holding. Investissement Québec is also investing an additional $25 million from its own funds. The project will result in the creation of 56 new permanent jobs, bringing total employment at the Île-de-la-Potherie site to over 340 employees.

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In Memoriam

Jim Rustad dies at 88

The Prince George Citizen
May 11, 2026
Category: In Memoriam
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jim Rustad

The world has lost a great man, a pillar of the Prince George community, as well as, a wonderful husband, father, grandfather, and great-grandfather. James “Jim” Murray Rustad passed away on May 4, 2026, at the age of 88. He was born in 1937. Jim is lovingly remembered by his wife of nearly 67 years, Noreen Rustad. …The Rustad family came to Prince George from Saskatchewan in the mid 1940’s, and Jim grew up as part of the family that built and ran the Rustad Bros. sawmill and planer mill which became an important part of the region’s economy. Jim took on increasing responsibilities until he was President in the early 1970’s. Jim played a leading role in the forest industry of BC including chairing the Council of Forest Industries and other provincial boards. The forest industry recognized his contribution with the Paul Bunyan Award in 1992. Northwood bought the mill in 1991, and Jim worked for 3 more years and then retired. 

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Finance & Economics

Doman Building Materials Group reports Q1, 2026 net earnings of $23.9 million

Doman Building Materials Group Ltd.
May 8, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER – Doman Building Materials announced its first quarter 2026 financial results for the period ended March 31, 2026. For the three-month period ended March 31, 2026, consolidated revenues totaled $762.0 million, compared to $793.2 million in 2025, largely due to the impact of decreases in pricing on a year-over-year basis across certain construction materials categories. …EBITDA amounted to $68.1 million, compared to EBITDA of $70.0 million. Net earnings for the three-month period were $23.9 million versus $23.6 million in the comparative period in 2025. The Company declared a $0.14 per share dividend, which was paid on April 15, 2026. Amar S. Doman, Chairman of the Board… “While we saw some stability in pricing in the US in the first quarter, the overall picture driven by macro trends remains volatile, and uncertainty exists moving forward into 2026.”

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Taiga Building Products reports Q1, 2026 net earning of $9.0 million

By Taiga Building Products Ltd.
PR Newswire
May 8, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

BURNABY, BC — Taiga Building Products reported its financial results for the three months ended March 31, 2026. The Company’s consolidated net sales for the quarter ended March 31, 2026 were $349 million compared to $400 million over the same period last year. The decrease in sales of $51 million or 13% was due to an overall reduction in sales volume amongst all product groups. …Net earnings for the quarter ended March 31, 2026 decreased to $9.0 million from $9.8 million over the same period last year, primarily due to higher finance expenses and a slight increase in income tax expense. EBITDA for the quarter ended March 31, 2026 was $17.1 million compared to $16.7 million for the same period last year.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Forging powerful partnerships to compete in global markets

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
May 11, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia is growing stronger roots in global wood markets, investing more than $12 million to expand demand for made-in-BC forest products, support workers, and open new opportunities for communities throughout the province. …Through Forestry Innovation Investment (FII), this funding will support projects that diversify markets and increase the use of BC wood, to help maintain competitiveness in the global wood economy. The program includes two streams: market development, and wood first initiatives. …Expanding global demand for BC wood: FII will invest more than $9 million into market development initiatives, leveraged by more than $3 million form industry partners. These projects focus on growing international demand and tearing down barriers to market access. …Building more with wood at home: FII is investing $2.6 million into its Wood First initiative, with an additional $1.5 million from partners, to increase wood use throughout BC. These projects focus on advancing mass timber and prefabricated wood construction.

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Alberta’s Value-Added Wood Products Round Table

WoodWorks Alberta
May 12, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

WoodWorks Alberta is reaching out to Alberta’s wood industry with an invitation to participate at an upcoming round table series focused on strengthening the province’s Value-Added Wood Products sector. Alberta is home to more than 500 value-added wood product manufacturers, most of which are small and mid-sized enterprises located around key urban centres. …The sector plays an important role in supporting jobs and contributing to economic diversification across the province. The industry continues to navigate evolving market conditions, supply chain pressures, labour shortages, and global competition, while also seeing strong opportunities in low-carbon construction, modularization, and increased provincial demand. This round table series will bring together industry stakeholders to discuss opportunities and challenges facing the sector, and explore practical ways to strengthen Alberta’s value-added wood manufacturing ecosystem.

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Diamond Schmitt designs mass timber Marpole Community Centre as a “civic living room” in Vancouver Park

Diamond Schmitt
May 6, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Vancouver, BC – The new Marpole Community Centre, designed by Diamond Schmitt for the City of Vancouver and the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation, sets a new benchmark for low-carbon civic infrastructure in Canada. Realized with an exposed mass timber structure and targeting Passive House and LEED Gold certification, the project reimagines the role of the community centre as both environmental infrastructure and social anchor within the rapidly intensifying Marpole neighbourhood. …As part of B.C.’s Mass Timber Demonstration Program, a defining feature of the building is the exposed mass timber structure which shapes the interior character of the facility while significantly reducing embodied carbon. Enabled through an alternate building code approach, the extensive use of mass timber contributes to the building’s overall 41% embodied carbon reduction while creating a warm, tactile, and human-scale environment that reflects the natural context of Oak Park.

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YouTube video series captures Archimarathon’s roadtrip of B.C.

naturally:wood
May 11, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

In a new four‑part video series, the design‑obsessed duo behind Archimarathon, Kevin Hüi and Andrew Maynard, travelled across British Columbia to find out what it takes to turn a tree into a world class building. The adventure involves, winding through old‑growth forests, seed labs, Indigenous‑led forestry operations, fabrication shops and some of the most striking mass timber buildings in Canada. Along the way, they uncover the science, craft and carbon‑smart thinking that make B.C. a global leader in wood construction. Kevin and Andrew connect with the people shaping the future of building with timber and step inside projects that prove wood can be bold, beautiful and technically breathtaking. If you care about architecture, sustainability, or where the built environment is headed next, this is a journey worth taking.

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Forestry

‘It’s a matter of respect’: forest and wildland firefighters battling Ottawa over silviculture classification ‘insult’

By Stuart Benson
The Hill Times
May 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

©BCWildfireService

As Canada prepares for another “challenging” fire season, provincial wildland and forest firefighters are intensifying their push for federal recognition and respect for the public safety work they already perform. “We know we’re heading into another very dangerous wildfire season, and these firefighters need to head into it knowing that we’ve got their back,” said NDP MP Gord Johns, his party’s emergency preparedness critic. On May 7, Johns tabled his private member’s motion calling for provincial wildland/forest firefighters (WLFF) to be formally recognized as firefighters under Canada’s National Occupational Classification (NOC), instead of their current designation as silviculture workers. Johns’ motion argues that WLFFs already perform the same dangerous frontline duties as other firefighters. …The classification that denies forest firefighters the same protections and pension benefits as their urban counterparts will be reviewed, but the focus must stay on preparing for the upcoming fire season, says Emergency Management Minister Eleanor Olszewski.

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Firefighting crews deployed to Northwest for potentially busy summer

By Rod Link
The Northern View
May 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

The BC Wildfire Service has once again positioned its crews across the Northwest in readiness for summer firefighting. Crews within the region are based in Burns Lake, Houston, Telkwa, Hazelton and Smithers – ready to respond throughout the Northwest Fire Centre. The BC Wildfire Service is divided into six regions with the Northwest Fire Centre running from the Yukon border in the north to Tweedsmuir Provincial Park in the south, and from the west coast to just west of Endako. The regional office is in Smithers. The Northwest will have the same number of crews as it did last year, said Morgan Blois, Northwest Fire Centre communications officer. There will be one unit crew and five initial attack crews divided between Burns Lake and Houston, two unit crews and four initial attack crews divided between Telkwa and Hazelton and one unit crew and four initial attack crews in Terrace.

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A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature

Environment and Climate Change Canada
May 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA, BC — The Honourable Nathalie Provost, Secretary of State (Nature), highlighted 16 projects across BC. These projects represent a $272 million investment to plant over 95 million trees, helping to protect nature and biodiversity in Canada by restoring critical habitats for species at risk and wildfire-affected areas, as well as supporting Indigenous-led reforestation efforts through tree planting. … Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature is based on three pillars for action to harmonize nature protection and economic growth: Protecting Nature in Canada, Building Canada Well, and Valuing Nature and Mobilizing Capital. Key components of the strategy include increasing our protected areas network on land and water. Elements to do this will include expanding our parks network and restoring critical habitats for species at risk, as well as recognizing and expanding on working landscapes or other effective conservation measures.

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Forest Practices Board audit finds BC Timber Sales generally compliant, flags reforestation concerns

BC Forest Practices Board
May 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

MERRITT – BC Timber Sales generally complied with forestry and wildfire requirements in the Cascades Natural Resource District, but some decisions to declare reforestation obligations complete were based on outdated information or made despite forest-health concerns, according to a Forest Practices Board audit. The audit examined BC Timber Sales operations in the Merritt Field Unit between July 1, 2024, and July 25, 2025. It found two non-compliances and two unsound practices related to free-growing declarations. BC Timber Sales makes a free-growing declaration to indicate a harvested area has been reforested and to relieve itself of any further obligations. “Free-growing declarations need to be based on current and accurate information,” said Gerry Grant, vicechair, Forest Practices Board. “That is especially important when there are known forest-health concerns that could affect the growth and survival of the young trees over time.” …After the audit, BC Timber Sales amended its stocking standards and subsequently met the minimum free-growing requirements for that cutblock.

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New carbon pricing fuels 600% revenue surge for B.C. community forest

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
May 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

…In 2009, the Lil’wat and Squamish nations entered into a formal 25-year agreement with the Resort Municipality of Whistler to create the Cheakamus Community Forest—a more than 33,000-hectare patchwork of forested Crown land… Today, the group has protected nearly half of the forest from logging… [While it] prioritizes the forest ecosystem’s overall health over timber volume alone, said Heather Beresford, executive director of Cheakamus Community Forest. …It’s a path several B.C. community forests have turned to as they attempt to balance … logging, conservation, tourism and protection from wildfire. …B.C. allows emitters to cover up to 30 per cent of their bill by purchasing offsets from the BC Carbon Registry. …The system has proven to be a windfall for the Cheakamus Community Forest. …“What Saudi Arabia is to oil, B.C. is to carbon,” said Beresford, noting the province’s potential. “I still don’t understand why we are the only community forest in B.C. doing it.”

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Ravi Parmar: Forestry, pipelines, Carney, China

By The Really Big Show
YouTube
May 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

In an exclusive interview with BC Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar, He shares an exclusive look at the provincial government’s new “Make More in BC” initiative. This strategy aims to shift the province away from a reliance on raw log exports and commodity lumber for the U.S. market, focusing instead on building a high-value “wood value economy.” The Minister highlights a major new partnership with West Kelowna’s Gorman Brothers, centered on a new economic hub in the Merritt timber supply area that will prioritize local logs for local mills. He also delivers a candid critique of the federal government, expressing frustration over Ottawa’s recent $1.5 billion aid package that supported auto and steel but excluded the forestry sector. From reducing permit lag times to exploring emerging markets in the UK and Middle East, the interview covers the essential steps being taken to stabilize the industry.

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COFI Forest Education Program Receives Support from Forestry Innovation Investment

By Travis Joern, Director of Communications & Events
Council of Forest Industries
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

VANCOUVER, BCAs BC’s forest sector continues to evolve, helping students understand career opportunities in modern forestry remains important. The BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) welcomes new support from Forestry Innovation Investment (FII) for COFI’s Forest Education Program, helping expand career awareness and workforce initiatives focused on modern forestry and wood products manufacturing. The program will connect students and job seekers with opportunities in the modern, high-tech forest sector through sawmill and manufacturing awareness events, Indigenous career events, career fairs, and trade and technology awareness initiatives. Delivered in partnership with COFI member companies, Indigenous organizations, school districts, training providers, and community partners, these initiatives are designed to increase awareness of the many career opportunities available in today’s forest sector. Through guided mill tours, classroom presentations, field tours, and career fairs, participants will gain direct exposure to local forestry operations and the technologies driving the industry, including advanced manufacturing, automation, and digital systems. 

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Alberta to Become Testbed for Autonomous Trucking Tech Targeting Forestry Sector

By Knowlton Thomas
Calgary.tech
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Kodiak AI is slated is conduct pilot operations for autonomous driving technology in Alberta. The Silicon Valley upstart, founded in 2018 in Mountain View by Don Burnette and Paz Eshel, has developed purpose-built, AI-powered ground autonomy solutions. Kodiak’s solutions specifically targeting the commercial trucking industry, which is where Alberta comes in; the region serves as a practical testing ground for explore the deployment of trucks equipped with the Kodiak Driver, the firm’s AI-powered autonomous log-hauling operations system. Logging truck routes often involve challenging roads with rough terrain and limited resources. The Mountain View innovator is partnering with Vancouver-based West Fraser Timber Co. to explore deployment of trucks equipped with Kodiak’s flagship Driver technology, which aims to address an industry-wide shortage of drivers and increase consistency of raw material supply to mills. “Innovation that improves safety and sustainability has long been central to how West Fraser operates,” says Mark Cookson, Woods Operations Manager for West Fraser.

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Public input wanted on Nicola and Similkameen ‘OCP for forests’

Penticton Western News
May 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Similkameen residents are being asked to weigh in on the government’s plan that sets how local forests are managed for the next decade. …The FLP is developed based on consultation with land tenure holders, the public, and First Nations, and is used to guide forest management in an area as well as to provide the legal requirements for activities such as timber harvesting. …The area that is covered by the tmixʷ naqscn FLP includes the Nicola and Similkameen watersheds. This will be the first FLP for the area, and will replace any forest stewardship plans that had previously been in place, with the goal of bring all different tenures and plans under a single, unified umbrella. …The plan will be in place for 10 years, with reporting every five years on to what extent it is meeting its objectives.

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We’re hiring! Join the Forest Stewardship Council Canada Team

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
May 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

We’re hiring a Regional Manager for Ontario. FSC Canada is seeking a highly experienced forestry and supply‑chain professional to lead the growth, implementation, and market impact of FSC certification in Ontario. The Regional Manager, Ontario is FSC Canada’s primary representative in the province and plays a critical role in working with forest management organizations, forest companies, and supply-chain businesses. Are you a forestry professional who know how to turn relationships into real impact? Your expertise in forest management, supply chains, and stakeholder engagement can help grow FSC certification across Ontario – connecting responsible forests with the markets that value them. At the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), your work will create a better future for forests and people around the world. When you join our team, you can do your part to build a world where the true value of forests is recognized by all.

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Health & Safety

Province of BC recommends grab-and-go kits for evacuations

By John Arendt
Alberni Valley Times
May 12, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

The B.C. provincial government has information about preparing a grab-and-go kit in case of an evacuation. The small emergency kit is designed to be easy to take in case of an evacuation alert or order. The supplies should be stored in one or two containers such as plastic bins or duffel bags, and should be stored in an area of the home that is easy to access. …The non-perishable food items should be enough for three days to one week, with a manual can opener. Four litres of water per person per day is also suggested, for drinking and sanitation. During the 2025 wildfire season, 30 communities were affected, and 2,670 people were evacuated. In addition, other disasters, including atmospheric rivers and floods, have resulted in evacuation alerts and orders. PreparedBC has information on planning for emergencies and dealing with evacuations.

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2026 Wood Pellet & Biomass Safety Summit

Wood Pellet Association of Canada
May 12, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Safety Starts Here: June 9-10, 2026, Prince George, BC | The Wood Pellet Association of Canada’s (WPAC’s) 2026 Wood Pellet and Bioenergy Safety Summit is rapidly approaching. The Summit offers valuable opportunities to learn, share and strengthen safety practices across the industry. Join industry leaders, safety professionals and regulators to discuss rotary drum dryer safety, process safety management (PSM) and emerging safety initiatives. Participate in a hands-on musculoskeletal injury (MSI) workshop and a full-day mental health workshop, giving you tools to support the physical and psychological well-being of yourself and your colleagues. Hosted by WPAC’s Safety Committee, in collaboration with the BC Forest Safety Council, WorkSafe BC and media partner Canadian Biomass, the Summit focuses on practical, real-world safety challenges facing the sector today. Whether your role is in safety leadership, operations, maintenance, or workforce health, the WPAC Safety Summit provides valuable opportunities to learn, connect, and contribute to safer workplaces across the sector.

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New Program to Support the Mental Health of BC Forestry Workers

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
May 12, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

British Columbia – People working in British Columbia’s forestry sector have faced a period of disruption in recent years, including mill curtailments and closures, workforce reductions, and ongoing economic uncertainty. These pressures, combined with a continuing barrage of bad news about politics, finances and the environment, can contribute to increased stress and feelings of uncertainty among forestry workers across the province that can manifest as mental health concerns, such as depression or anxiety. In response to this growing need, the BC Forest Safety Council in partnership with the BC Association of Clinical Counsellors and the BC Municipal Safety Association have introduced ‘Connection to Care’, a free, anonymous and confidential mental health call-in program available to all forestry workers in British Columbia. …“As someone who has experienced recurring depression, I understand the importance of creating space for open and honest conversations,” shared Jason Fisher, Executive Director, Forest Enhancement Society of BC.

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Forest Fires

Crews battling wildfire near Whitecourt bracing for gusting winds after ‘subdued’ conditions Tuesday

By Wallis Snowdon
CBC News
May 13, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

Crews fighting to contain a fire threatening homes mere kilometres from the community of Whitecourt are bracing for gusting winds Wednesday that could fan the flames. The wildfire, which now spans across more than 50 hectares of forest in Woodlands County, has forced hundreds of people to evacuate their homes. The wildfire continues to burn near homes in the area of West Ridge. As of Tuesday night, the fire remained approximately 3.5 km southeast of the Town of Whitecourt and less than 1 km south of Highway 43. As the evacuation enters its third day, the forecast could prove critical in how the fire-fight unfolds. Officials said strong wind gusts Wednesday could make conditions more challenging but they hope cooler temperatures and calm winds prevail. …at least one home has been lost to the flames. …As of Tuesday evening, approximately 150 families, 424 individuals and 350 pets had registered (at the evacuation centre).

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Wildfire on the Sunshine Coast burning near structures, but no immediate threat, says B.C. Wildfire Service

By Alanna Kelly
CBC News
May 12, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

A wildfire burning out of control on the Sunshine Coast has more than tripled in size since it was sparked on Monday. The Earle Creek wildfire is burning in a remote area of Old Egmont, across from the Skookumchuck Narrows. Erika Berg, an information officer with the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS), said the fire has grown to an estimated eight hectares in size, as of Tuesday afternoon. “The fire is burning in some heavy coastal timber, and so we’re seeing the fire growing a little bit, creeping along the ground,” Berg said. Dawn Henderson said she was working at the Bathgate General Store in Egmont when she saw the smoke … and has been fielding calls from concerned residents since it started. The wildfire is burning close to structures, but none of them have been impacted by the fire, according to the BCWS.

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Whitecourt Forest Area wildfires: Woodlands County gives evacuation order for some

By Brad Quarin
The Whitecourt Star
May 11, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

Residents of Woodlands County impacted by a wildfire south of Highway 43, east of Range Road 114 are being ordered to evacuate. The area includes the West Ridge subdivision. The order was given on the evening of May 11 after the wildfire was spotted earlier in the afternoon, approximately 3.5 kilometres south of Whitecourt, according to Woodlands County. According to Alberta Wildfire, the fire is approximately 75 hectares in size and the county noted that firefighters and helicopters are responding. “All residents in the affected area must evacuate immediately,” the county stated on the evening of May 11.  “Gather pets, important documentation, and medication.” Meanwhile, another wildfire in the Whitecourt Forest Area first spotted on May 10 grew to be 11.67 ha in size and is currently being held, according to Alberta Wildfire. The fire started burning 22 km northeast of the Town of Whitecourt and east of Blue Ridge Haul Road, according to Alberta Wildfire.

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10 Manitoba firefighters land in Minnesota to help state’s wildfire fight

CBC News
May 11, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West, US West

Manitoba is returning the favour to a southern neighbour that sent firefighters to the province during last year’s devastating wildfire season that killed two people and displaced 33,000 others. Ten Manitoba firefighters landed in Bemidji, Minn., on Saturday to help with that state’s wildfire-fighting efforts. “You were there for us, we will be there for you,” said Ian Bushie, Manitoba’s natural resources minister. …Manitoba and Minnesota are part of the Great Lakes Forest Fire Compact and share resources during major fires. …There was a blaze near Lake Bemidji State Park over the weekend that burned around eight acres. “While their fires are not out of control, this is assistance and relief for the crews that they have on the ground there,” Bushie said in an interview. He added the firefighters are on a 14-day deployment but could be called back early if conditions change.

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