Region Archives: Canada

Opinion / EdiTOADial

Editor’s Note: Following “Rigged by Design?” — Clarifying Commerce’s Method

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
The Tree Frog Forestry News
November 12, 2025
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States

Following Tree Frog News’ November 7 op-ed, Rigged by Design? How Method and Policy Keep U.S. Lumber Duties High, the US Lumber Coalition responded (Understanding Why Duties Persist — Not Because of Arbitrary Math, But Because of Past and Ongoing Harm) noting that the Department of Commerce did not use “zeroing” in its latest anti-dumping calculation. The note below clarifies what Commerce actually applied and what remains unresolved.

Following publication, the US Lumber Coalition pointed out that the Department of Commerce did not use “zeroing” in its latest anti-dumping calculation. In reviewing the record, Tree Frog News found that Commerce applied a differential-pricing framework, which uses statistical tests to determine comparison methods.¹ However, a 2020 WTO panel found that this framework could produce mathematically similar distortions to zeroing — in effect, “replicating the problem without using the name.”² but because the most recent review record is largely redacted and the WTO Appellate Body remains inactive, there has been no external review of how this method performed in the most recent review.

The more important question, then, is whether the procedural change has addressed the sources of bias identified in past WTO rulings — specifically in how Commerce calculates anti-dumping margins, measures subsidies, and selects its review periods — which continue to produce duty levels that appear inconsistent with actual market conditionsTree Frog News will continue to report as new information emerges.

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Canada-US Softwood Lumber Trade: When Trade Becomes Tactics

By Russ Taylor
Russ Taylor Global
November 12, 2025
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States

Russ Taylor

Over the course of my fifty-year career, I have never seen so much misinformation, distortion and political theatre as in 2025. …The recent surge in rhetoric and written attacks aimed at Canada and its softwood lumber industry has been both amusing and perplexing. …The momentum of misinformation continues, with US protectionism and the unrealistic notion of self-sufficiency in softwood lumber production being vigorously promoted. The underlying strategy is clear: penalize all exporters with tariffs to reduce imports, leverage US Trade Law to escalate Canadian duties, inflate US lumber prices, and thus force US lumber buyers to subsidize domestic timber and lumber producers. In this climate, free or fair trade has become undesirable for American lumber companies, especially since the burden of higher-priced lumber—both domestic and imported due to excessive tariffs—is ultimately borne by consumers, home builders and renovators.

US Trade Law has evolved into a permanent tool against Canadian lumber imports, relying on complex methodology to produce calculated duties. Paired with the current US tariff policy, these mechanisms serve to work against all lumber exporters to the US. …While hard facts are the foundation of sound analysis, the intentionally opaque nature of the duty and tariff system makes accessing reliable data difficult. …In conclusion, I urge people to revisit President Ronald Reagan’s 1987 speech on free trade and tariffs, as well as the reports of numerous economists who oppose tariffs. The United States will continue to require billions of board feet of Canadian and other imported lumber. Tariffs will only heighten price volatility and drive prices higher. Fair trade stands to benefit both consumers and producers on both sides of the border, whereas protectionism will result in distinct winners and losers.

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Understanding Why Duties Persist — Not Because of Arbitrary Math, But Because of Past and Ongoing Harm

By Zoltan van Heyningen, Executive Director
The US Lumber Coalition
November 10, 2025
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States

Zoltan van Heyningen

TreeFrogNews recently published an opinion by its Editor Kelly McCloskey. As is often the case for those trying to defend Canada’s softwood lumber trade practices, they must rely on arguments that are irrelevant to the current round of antidumping and countervailing duty cases against unfairly traded Canadian lumber imports. In this instance, Mr. McCloskey’s criticism of the zeroing methodology is beside the point, because the US Department of Commerce did not use zeroing when calculating the antidumping duty rates that are currently in place.

Canada’s unfair trade practices are real. The harm to US companies, workers, and communities is real. Government aid to Canada’s lumber industry, whether provincial or federal, is a subsidy, because providing government money to an industry is the very definition of a subsidy no matter how it is presented. Canada is entitled to its own system and to decide what role the Canadian government plays with respect to its lumber industry. Canada is not entitled to unrestrained access to the US market for its massive excess lumber capacity and production while that industry benefits from subsidies and engages in well-documented dumping practices. Canada is also not entitled to maintain a USMCA Chapter 10 dispute settlement system that is different from any other bilateral or multilateral dispute settlement system.

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Rigged by Design? How Method and Policy Keep U.S. Lumber Duties High

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
November 7, 2025
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States

Kelly McCloskey

Every so often, a technical story reveals a simple truth—showing how easily numbers, once baked into the system, can become policy. A recent essay by analyst Alice Palmer… shows how the US Department of Commerce’s anti-dumping calculations turn fair trade into a numerical fiction—and why, even as markets shift, the duties stay high. …Palmer’s finding naturally raises a broader question: if one methodological choice can create a margin from nothing, are other elements in the system doing similar work? …Tree Frog reached out to Palmer and looked further into how the duty calculations are made—first, anti-dumping, then countervailing duties and finally timing. Taken together, the analysis points to a consistent pattern: much of the duty burden reflects method and timing rather than market reality. …If the anti-dumping and countervailing duties were recalculated using complete data (no zeroing), domestic benchmarks (no non-comparable price substitution), and up-to-date prices (no cycle lag), their combined rate—now roughly 35%—could fall to minimal levels.

In the wider context, the methodological issues described here are not just statistical—they reflect a system without an effective referee. The WTO Appellate Body remains dormant after the US blocked new appointments, and the Canada–US–Mexico Agreement (known in Canada as CUSMA and in the United States as USMCA) offers no practical remedy. The usual checks on bias have eroded, leaving little recourse for affected industries. Political-risk analyst Robert McKellar argues that this represents “a structural vulnerability: when the rules are written by the same players who benefit from them.” Just recently, the US Lumber Coalition reinforced that trend, urging that any USMCA extension be conditioned on eliminating the Chapter 10 binational panel review process—a move that would effectively eliminate external oversight of US trade-remedy decisions. …As McKellar noted, this tension between political power and economic logic typifies today’s protectionist era—a system where duties reflect not only distorted math but also the absence of a functioning arbiter to restore balance.

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Changing Nothing and Expecting Different Results

By Bob Brash, Serving BC’s forest sector for over 50 years
Tree Frog Submitted Editorial
November 10, 2025
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada West

Bob Brash

Between the long-simmering softwood lumber dispute and Donald Trump’s renewed tariffs, the hardships facing BC’s forest sector have rarely been greater. Keeping people working and facilities operating challenges even the best of us in this industry. After the recent federal-provincial Forest Summit, some credit is due to both levels of government for at least attempting to provide relief—along with what we hope is a genuine effort to diversify our markets and products. However, much more collaboration and concrete commitment are needed before we can judge these efforts effective. Many suspect the current plans may offer only limited short-term benefit. …Our financial resilience—and therefore our ability to even more assertively innovate, attract investment, and modernize our facilities—has been severely weakened. The result: we are less able to meet society’s changing expectations while sustaining a viable industry.

How has government responded? By blaming Trump for our woes—criticism he may deserve—but largely ignoring its own role in undermining the prosperity of BC’s forest sector. A familiar analogy comes to mind: a strong structure requires a solid foundation. For our industry, that foundation is the regulatory environment we operate within—and it’s failing. …In short, government is expecting different results while changing nothing—and we all know what that defines. …Real leadership begins with accepting the situation as it is and moving decisively toward practical, shared solutions. Unfortunately, there’s little sign of that happening. Over my career, I’ve seen this sector innovate repeatedly to sustain BC’s prosperity. We’ve done it before—and we can do it again. But not with both hands tied behind our back while standing on a grumbling foundation.

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Business & Politics

Minister Hodgson and Secretary of State Fuhr highlight budget investments in Canada’s forest sector

By Government of Canada, Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
November 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

CASTLEGAR, BC – …The rules-based international order and the trading system that powered Canada’s prosperity for decades are being reshaped — hurting companies, displacing workers and causing major disruption and upheaval for Canadians. Today, the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, and the Secretary of State… [met to] highlight Budget 2025’s Buy Canadian Strategy and investments in Canada’s forest sector. The Government of Canada is helping the forest sector and softwood lumber industry transform to remain competitive …while keeping pace with increased need for housing and major infrastructure construction. These include: Up to $700 million over two years on a cash basis, available now, in loan guarantees … to help ensure companies [can] maintain and restructure their operations during this period of transformation; $500 million over three years on a cash basis, starting in 2026–27, to renew and expand existing Natural Resources Canada’s forest sector programs…; and Prioritizing the adoption of Canadian materials — including mass timber and softwood lumber…

Related Coverage:

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How the feds plan to support the forestry sector

By Sarah Plowman
CTV News
November 9, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Sarah Plowman with a look at the support the federal budget is offering the forests sector after being hit hard by US tariffs. Includes an interview with Derek Nighbor, President and CEO of the Forest Products Association of Canada.

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Standing Committee on Natural Resources: Forest Owners Demand Full Recognition

By Sandra Bishop
Canadian Forest Owners
November 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – Canadian Forest Owners (CFO) appeared before the House of Commons Standing Committee on Natural Resources today as part of its study on the forest industry, which is being severely affected by the ongoing softwood lumber dispute. Andrew de Vries, Chief Executive Officer of CFO, and Vincent Miville, Vice-Chair of CFO and Executive Director of the Quebec Federation of Forest Producers, presented recommendations aimed at better recognizing the strategic role of forest owners and the importance of private forests in Canada. CFO represents 480,000 forest owners who collectively own about 10% of Canada’s forested land, but account for 20% of the country’s timber production. These owners supply wood to the forest industry, contribute to regional economies, and provide essential environmental services to rural communities. “The lack of understanding of private forests is a blind spot in Canada’s forest and trade policy, and as a result, support programs for the sector often overlook their essential contribution,” said de Vries.

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The axe falls on 100 Mile House mill: West Fraser to shutter facilities on both sides of the border

By J.J. Adams
Vancouver Sun
November 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The softwood timber tariffs levied by the U.S. have begun to hit the lumber industry hard. Citing a drooping softwood lumber demand, compounded by higher duties and additional tariffs that have reached 45 per cent for U.S. markets, West Fraser Timber announced Thursday its plans to permanently shutter both its Augusta, Ga., and 100 Mile House lumber mills by the end of 2025. Approximately 165 employees at the 100 Mile House mill will be laid off, as the company says it can’t secure an adequate volume of economically viable timber. The closing of the mill drops West Fraser’s capacity by 160 million board feet. …The closure of the Augusta lumber mill is a result of challenging lumber demand, and the loss of economically viable residual outlets, which combined has compromised the mill’s long-term viability. Around 130 employees will be laid off there, and further reduce West Fraser’s capacity by 140 million board feet.

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US housing demand and production constraints ensure a strong import role for lumber

By Glen O’Kelly and Håkan Ekström
The American Journal of Transportation
November 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Håkan Ekström

Glen O’Kelly

The US has never produced enough softwood lumber to satisfy its own demand. …The US represents roughly 27% of global softwood lumber demand, but only 20% of global supply — a structural gap that requires large-scale imports. Canada remains the dominant source, supplying about 80% of US imports over the last decade and projected to supply more than 22% in 2025, according to a new report. Despite recurring political claims that the US can become self-sufficient in lumber production, the report concludes that the scale of change required makes that unrealistic. To replace the ~25 million m. of imports currently entering the market each year, the country would need to build around 75 new, modern sawmills. That would require capital investment exceeding 12x the total US sawmill investment over the past fifteen years — and would take more than a decade under ideal conditions. …Proposals to increase logging on federal lands are also unlikely to meaningfully reduce import dependence. 

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Budget 2025 makes progress – but workers need stronger action

United Steelworkers
November 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

TORONTO – United Steelworkers union (USW) National Director Marty Warren issued the following statement on the federal Budget 2025: This budget recognizes something workers have been saying for years. Canada needs to build more at home and expand its industrial capacity. The commitments on Buy-Canadian procurement, industrial strategy and trade enforcement are important steps forward and reflect priorities Steelworkers have been advocating for across the country. There are meaningful investments in steel, forestry, critical minerals and manufacturing – sectors that support thousands of good union jobs and anchor regional economies and communities. We welcome tools that can help stabilize supply chains and strengthen domestic production. …Buy-Canadian rules must be enforced, industrial dollars must translate into real jobs and production on the ground, and forestry and industrial communities need long-term certainty, not temporary relief. We see steps in the right direction. Now it’s about follow-through.

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B.C. cancels lumber tariff ads to little effect as another mill closes

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
November 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vaughn Palmer

VICTORIA — Premier David Eby started the week by abandoning his threat to target Americans with a direct advertising campaign against the US’s hefty tariffs on softwood lumber from BC. …No sign of backing off last week. But there he was Monday doing just that at the wrap up of the summit with the federal ministers. …As to what the premier got for this show of humility, it was mostly a working group. …The same day, the leading industry group, COFI, reminded Eby of his promise to increase the annual allowable cut from the current 30 million cubic metres to 45. …Eby agreed the province has work to do but cautioned that even where the annual cut has been allocated, it may not be economic to harvest because of the looming threat of tariffs. …Both concerns were underscored by the end-of-the-week news of the permanent closure of West Fraser’s mill in 100 Mile House.

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100 Mile House Mayor says mill closure at the end of 2025 underscores need for reform

By Wolfgang Depner
The Canadian Press in Castanet
November 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

©Wikipedia (Murray Foubister)

Maureen Pinkney, mayor of 100 Mile House, says U.S. tariffs on the softwood lumber industry “are the icing on the cake” for an industry in need of fundamental reforms as it prepares for the closure of a local lumber mill. Pinkney says she won’t necessarily “point fingers… but what’s been happening in the last 20 years has not worked,” adding issues like the handling of forestry licenses and the annual allowable cut need to be redone. …Pinkney’s comments come after West Fraser Timber announced that it will permanently close its lumber mill in 100 Mile House by the end of 2025, because of a lack of “adequate volume of economically viable timber.” …MLA Ward Stamer, the forest critic, said that the closure is “devastating” and “yet another sign” of what he called the “NDP’s gross neglect” in managing the industry. …100 Mile House MLA Lorne Doerkson agreed, saying government has ignored every warning sign from the industry.

Related news coverage in Juno News, by Patrick Quinn: Hundreds of forestry workers to lose jobs as B.C. mills fall to U.S. tariffs

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Alberta Forestry Heads to Asia Amid Soaring U.S. Tariffs

By Aspen Dudzic
Alberta Forest Products Association
November 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Canada’s forest industry has been bruised by U.S. trade barriers this year. The combination of softwood lumber duties and section 232 tariffs result in a staggering 45 per cent tax on Canadian lumber coming into the U.S., artificially pricing us out of a market that takes almost 50% of what is produced in Alberta. Market diversification isn’t just smart business anymore—it’s an economic imperative. This Friday, Alberta’s Minister of Forestry & Parks, Todd Loewen, and a delegation from Canada Wood and both the Alberta and B.C. forest industries are wheels up on a critical trade mission to Japan and South Korea to strengthen relationships and grow market demand for our sustainable wood products. Few markets hold higher standards for quality product than Japan and South Korea—and Alberta can deliver. Our cold climate and short growing season give our trees long fibres and tight growth rings, resulting in wood that is exceptionally strong, stable, and lightweight.

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La-kwa sa muqw Forestry Limited Partnership continues to seek negotiations to end months-long strike by the United Steelworkers Local 1-1937

La-kwa sa muqw Forestry Limited Partnership
November 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Campbell River, BC — La-kwa sa muqw Forestry Limited Partnership (LKSM) is ready to sit down at the bargaining table with the USW at any time, and has been ready throughout this strike, which it has made clear many times to the USW. However the USW has repeatedly refused to do so, as recently as October 24. Despite repeated invitations from LKSM, the USW has also declined both meaningful negotiations and mediation to assist the bargaining process, unnecessarily prolonging this months-long strike. “LKSM’s First Nations shareholders are dismayed and extremely frustrated by the provincial government’s failure to help both parties to make progress through the appointment of a mediator, especially given the hardships the forestry industry is facing right now,” says Nanwakolas Council President Dallas Smith. “Mediation is an opportunity to bring the parties together …and yet BC still has failed to appoint a mediator after all this time.”

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Finance & Economics

Interfor reports Q3, 2025 net loss of $216 million

Interfor Corporation
November 6, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

BURNABY, BC — Interfor reported its Q3, 2025 results. The company recorded a net loss of $215.8 million compared to net earnings of $11.1 million in Q2’25 and a net loss of $105.7 million in Q3’24. Adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $183.8 million on sales of $689.3 million in Q3’25 versus Adjusted EBITDA of $17.2 million on sales of $780.5 million in Q2’25 and an Adjusted EBITDA loss of $22.0 million on sales of $692.7 million in Q3’24. Lumber production of 912 million board feet was down 23 million board feet versus the preceding quarter. This decline largely reflects the Company’s announcement on September 4, 2025, to temporarily curtail production. …Weak lumber market conditions were reflected in Interfor’s average selling price of $618 per mfbm, down $66 per mfbm versus Q2’25. …Interfor’s strategy of maintaining a diversified portfolio of operations in multiple regions allows the Company to both reduce risk and maximize returns on capital over the business cycle.

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Mercer reports Q3, 2025 net loss of $81 million

Mercer International Inc.
November 6, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, International

NEW YORK — Mercer International reported third quarter 2025 Operating EBITDA of negative $28.1 million, a decrease from positive $50.5 million in the same quarter of 2024 and negative $20.9 million in the second quarter of 2025. In the third quarter of 2025, net loss was $80.8 million compared to $17.6 million in the same quarter of 2024 and $86.1 million in the second quarter of 2025. Mr. Juan Carlos Bueno, CEO, stated: “In the third quarter of 2025, persistent global economic and trade uncertainties, fiber scarcity in Germany as well as the impact of pulp substitution accelerated the decline in pulp market demand and pricing, which negatively impacted our operating results and contributed to a $20.4 million non-cash inventory impairment charge in the quarter.

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Canfor Corp report Q3, 2025 net loss of $172 million

Canfor Corporation
November 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

VANCOUVER, BC — Canfor Corporation reported its third quarter of 2025 results. The Company reported an operating loss of $208 million and a net loss of $172 million. …Canfor’s CEO, Susan Yurkovich, stated: “The ongoing global economic and trade uncertainty, in conjunction with punitive US softwood lumber duties, led to persistently weak market conditions and subdued demand across all of our operating regions during the third quarter of 2025. …For the lumber segment, the operating loss was $182.2 million for the third quarter of 2025, compared to the previous quarter’s operating loss of $229.2 million. …For the pulp and paper segment, the operating loss was $16.0 million for the third quarter of 2025, compared to an operating loss of $5.3 million for the second quarter of 2025. …Global pulp market fundamentals remained at depressed levels throughout the third quarter; markets in China were persistently weak, while North American markets softened, adjusting to the lower pricing environment in other regions.

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Taiga Building Products reports Q3, 2025 net income of 12.8 million

Taiga Building Products Ltd.
November 7, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

BURNABY, BC –– Taiga Building Products reported its financial results for Q3, 2025. The Company’s sales for the quarter were $431.3 million compared to $423.9 million over the same period last year. The increase in sales by $7.4 million or 2% was largely due to a higher average lumber pricing as well as changes in product mix during the quarter. …Net earnings for the quarter ended September 30, 2025 decreased to $12.8 million from $14.3 million over the same period last year primarily due to increases in selling and administrative expenses and interest costs from renewed borrowing under Taiga’s credit facility, as a result of the dividends paid out in the second quarter.

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Doman Building Materials reports Q3, 2025 net income of $18.1 million

Doman Building Materials Group Ltd.
November 6, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, Canada – Doman Building Materials Group announced its third quarter 2025 financial results for the period ended September 30, 2025. Consolidated revenues increased to $795.1 million, compared to $663.1 million in 2024, largely due to the impact of the results from the Doman Tucker Lumber Acquisition. …Net earnings for the three-month period ended September 30, 2025, were $18.1 million versus $14.6 million in the comparative period of 2024.

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GreenFirst reports Q3, 2025 of $57.4 million

GreenFirst Forest Products Inc.
November 11, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO —  GreenFirst Forest Products announced results for the third quarter and three quarter ended September 27, 2025. Highlights include: Q3 2025 net sales from operations was $70.2 million, compared to $84.5 million in Q2, 2025. Q3 2025 net loss from continuing operations was $57.4 million compared to net loss of $9.6 million in Q2 2025. Adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations for Q3 2025 was negative $47.2 million, compared to negative $5.2 million in Q2 2025. Benchmark prices saw decreases during the quarter which resulted in an average realized lumber prices of $695/mfbm for Q3 2025. …“Q3 2025 results were impacted by a weak lumber market and ongoing uncertainty surrounding higher duty rates and tariffs,” said Joel Fournier, GreenFirst’s Chief Executive Officer.

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Cascades report Q3, 2025 net earnings of $29 million

Cascades Inc.
November 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades reported its unaudited financial results for the three-month period ended September 30, 2025. Highlights include: Sales of $1,238 million (compared with $1,187 million in Q2 2025 and $1,201 million in Q3 2024); and net income of $29 million (compared with $3 million loss in Q2 2025 and $1million in Q3 2024). …Hugues Simon, CEO, commented: “Third quarter consolidated results were driven by stronger volume, good operational execution, benefits from ongoing profitability initiatives, and favourable raw material and selling price trends. Our packaging business, in particular, had a stronger than expected quarter.”

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Webinar: Quiet by Design

Canadian Wood Council
November 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Join the Canadian Wood Council for Quiet by Design, an in-depth webinar exploring how to achieve consistent, high-performing acoustics in mass timber projects. In partnership with AcoustiTECH, a panel of leading acoustic experts will unpack the complexities of flanking (Kij), share best-practice detailing strategies—including bulkheads and wall interfaces—to help you avoid costly construction errors, and present the latest research on lightweight floor and ceiling assemblies for mass timber systems, including GLT. Expect practical design strategies, real-world insights, and clear, actionable guidance to help you choose the right acoustic solutions for your next project. Date: Tue, Nov 25, 2025

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Strengthening supply chains and the manufacturing-building ecosystem

By Forestry Innovation Investment
LinkedIn
November 7, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Over the past year, 475 professionals attended 40 UBC CAWP events, organized into three programs: Timber Tech Connect (TTC) events, the SHAPE prototyping series, and TWIG (The Wood Innovation Group). TTC is a series of seminars highlighting British Columbia’s advancements in mass timber and wood prefabrication offered collaboratively by the UBC Centre for Advanced Wood Processing (CAWP), the Wood Innovation Group and Fast + Epp.  Five TTC events brought participants inside some of B.C.’s most innovative timber buildings, including a session about the Mass Timber Demonstration program Vienna House (a seven-storey, 123-unit affordable housing project in East Vancouver) that explored key learnings from its prefabrication and mass timber assembly. Each event included members from the project team—developers, architects, engineers, and builders—offering honest, technical deep dives into material choices and design strategies. …These gatherings—whether a Wood-First- Wednesday in a local workshop or a student field trip—served as vital entry points for the next generation of timber champions.

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WoodWorks BC presents new series of Mass Timber Business Case Studies

WoodWorks BC
November 12, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

WoodWorks BC is pleased to present a new series of Mass Timber Business Case Studies that offers a detailed look at the financial and strategic realities of building with mass timber today. Drawing from three BC projects –Catalyst’s North Shore Neighbourhood House, Faction Projects’ The Exchange and Wesgroup’s River District 19.1 – we break down how each team approached risk, cost, and schedule to position mass timber as a competitive, strategic choice. The findings combine quantitative analysis with firsthand insights to illustrate the conditions that drive success and where challenges can arise along the way. Developers, investors, and project decision-makers will find practical takeaways to inform future projects and investment strategies. Be among the first to explore how these groundbreaking projects are informing the evolving business case for mass timber in Canada.

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Top influencers showcase B.C. wood

naturally:wood
November 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Here is the latest news from naturally:wood

  • Online personalities soak in B.C.’s mass timber projects in a whirlwind tour: This fall, naturally:wood invited Australian influencers Archimarathon to British Columbia to learn about B.C.’s North American-leading portfolio of mass timber and wood buildings—from the Temple of Light in the remote Kootenay Bay to Beatty Street in downtown Vancouver.
  • Woodrise 2025 brought together over 800 global leaders in Vancouver to promote timber construction and sustainable, resilient building practices. With informative panels featuring local legends, to tours of unique B.C. buildings such as Richmond Olympic Oval and the Sea to Sky Gondola, visitors left equipped with best practices and feeling inspired to implement learnings in their local regions.
  • Case Study: In 2015, the French cultural centre Alliance Française Vancouver began working with local architects and engineers to design a new facility. The result became Vancouver’s first mass assembly, mass timber building over two storeys. While the project was a success, the team faced significant challenges along the way.

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Forestry

B.C.’s century-long feast on big, old trees has sent forests into freefall

By Zoë Yunker
The Narwhal
November 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

BC’s NDP government has recently lent a steadying hand to its beleaguered forestry sector, pausing stumpage fees, expediting permits and investing in mills to prevent its looming fall — but some say to no avail. “Why does it keep getting worse?” Prince George-Mackenzie Conservative MLA Kiel Giddens asked during the spring legislative session. …A new report commissioned by the Sierra Club BC points to a theory: BC’s supply of unlogged, high-value trees that industry has long relied on is dwindling, rendering short-term fixes and freebies inadequate. …Pressure on BC’s most at-risk forests appears to be intensifying. The report says the province’s efforts to temporarily pause logging in rare forests through old-growth deferrals have failed. Instead, BC forests were four times more likely to be logged inside recommended deferral zones than outside over the past four years. …The report suggests BC’s century-long feast on big, old trees is approaching its end.

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Forest Genetics Council of British Columbia Newsletter

Forest Genetics Council of BC
November 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

In the November newsletter you’ll find these stories and more:

  • The tree seed planning dashboard has been updated to include the latest seedling demand and seed orchard production forecasts, and historic planting numbers and seed production to 2024, by species, BEC variant and management unit. Dashboard 2.0, developed by Forsite also includes information about BC’s seed orchards.
  • Obituary, Jenij Konishi, RPF(Ret), August 9, 1937 – October 12, 2025: During his 33-year career with the BC Forest Service, Jenji made significant contributions to BC’s reforestation and tree improvement programs. His legacies include several ministry seed orchards and the Provincial Tree Seed Centre in Surrey. 
  • Forest Genetics 2025 was held in Ottawa, August 11-15, 2025. This biennial conference of the Canadian Forest Genetics Association (CFGA) included a workshop co-hosted by Dave Kolotelo, RPF, tree seed centre, and toured the Petewawa National Research Forest.
  • The Forest Nursery Association of BC held its 43rd annual conference and AGM in Sidney, BC, September 23-25, 2025.

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Film fuels biologist call to help protect unique B.C. old-growth wilderness

By Evert Lindquist
The Cowichan Valley Citizen
November 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Biologist Amber Peters and the Valhalla Wilderness Society (VWS) screened their highly-anticipated film, Safe Haven: The Rainbow-Jordan Wilderness, about the biodiverse and nearly-untouched inland temperate rainforest just north of Revelstoke. “This is the best example of a fully-intact inland temperate rainforest,” Peters said. … The Rainbow-Jordan is likely “the largest pocket of intact temperate rainforest in the region” around Revelstoke, Wildsight Revelstoke branch manager Reanne Harvey said. “The forest itself has been in that space for over a thousand years.” … The 30-minute film, produced in collaboration with Damien Gillis, advocates for the B.C. government to protect these expanses of hard-to-access and undisturbed old-growth from logging as a Class A provincial park. Unlike an old-growth protected area or Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area, park status would ensure legislated protection for the Rainbow-Jordan, Peters told some 200 attendees at the screening.

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Documentary offering solutions to B.C.’s wildfire crisis to screen in Salmon Arm

By Lachlan Labere
The Salmon Arm Observer
November 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Murray Wilson believes active forest management is crucial to reducing greenhouse emissions. The connection between the two is wildfires. “If you can reduce wildfires, just on carbon alone – your CO2 emissions – you’re doing a good thing,” said the retired Vernon forester… For the past year, Wilson has been sharing this message, about the need for active forest management, with residents and politicians through his new and first film, the documentary B.C. is Burning. …The Shuswap Climate Action Society, Forsite Consultants Ltd. and Canoe Forest Products will present the film in Salmon Arm on Nov. 26, with a Q&A moderated by Salmon Arm Mayor Alan Harrison. …Wilson will be screening the documentary at the B.C. Legislature. He said government officials, including B.C. Wildfire assistant deputy minister Rob Schweitzer, featured in the film, have taken part in past screenings and question periods. He views this as a sign the documentary is resonating with the Province.

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Omineca residents invited to help guide future of forest stewardship

By the Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
November 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Local residents are invited to share their input on the development of the Mackenzie forest landscape plan (FLP), which will guide long-term forest management in the area. “This is an opportunity for Mackenzie residents to share what matters most about your forests,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “Forests are part of who we are and your voices guide how they’re managed.” People can share their thoughts through a survey, open from Monday, Nov. 10 until Dec. 22, 2025. …FLPs are intended to be developed in partnership with First Nations to ensure meaningful participation in forestry planning and decision-making. Tsay Keh Dene Nation has partnered with the Province on the Mackenzie FLP. Engagement with other First Nations in the area continues. Community engagement is also a key part of every FLP, ensuring everyone in the area has an opportunity to be heard. 

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C̕awak ʔqin Forestry questioned for fires

By David Wiwchar
Nanaimo News Now
November 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A First Nations joint-venture forestry company is under fire for its burning practices. C̕awak ʔqin Forestry recently lit up a series of burn piles only a few metres from where a local company turns post harvest wood waste into much needed hogfuel for the Catalyst paper mill. Under provincial guidelines, forest harvesters are supposed to look for grinding or chipping opportunities ahead of burning. Keith Wyton from the local air quality council says local governments should push foresters to not burn. …Forest companies are allowed to pile and burn slash at this time of year, but Wyton wants the BC Government to step in. …C̕awak ʔqin General Manager Geoff Payne said they were operating within provincial guidelines and were permitted to burn. C̕awak ʔqin Forestry is a joint venture between Western Forest Products and the Huu-ay-aht First Nation.

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Trouble in the Headwaters – Film Screening and Panel Discussion

Tourism Golden
November 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Trouble in the Headwaters, a 25-minute documentary by Daniel J. Pierce, is coming to Golden! This film sheds light on the disastrous 2018 flood event in Grand Forks, BC, and features UBC forest hydrology and watershed management Professor Dr. Younes Alila. Both Daniel and Younes will be present to introduce the film and answer questions afterwards as part of a panel discussion with local experts and Wildsight’s forestry team. Join us to explore the complex connection between clearcut logging and the increasing frequency of floods, landslides and droughts across our province. 

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B.C. government should focus on province’s actual environmental problems

By Kenneth Green, Senior Fellow
The Fraser Institute
November 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Kenneth Green

Premier David Eby claims to be a true and faithful protector of the environment. But reality, he’s not. …Finally, the B.C. government has enacted over time various policies to reduce the extent of clear-cutting, with buy-in from the forestry industry and First Nations. But governments have not made these agreements work. …according to conservation group Wildsight, the “B.C. NDP’s momentum towards a ‘new, holistic approach’ to the management of old-growth forests has slowed almost to the point of regression. …UBC researchers agree. …The need to stop this practice is ‘urgent,’ said Younes Alila, a hydrologist and professor in the Faculty of Forestry, because of the mounting problems caused by human-caused climate change such as drought, flooding and wildfires.” …Before obsessing about a new pipeline project, to be built safely with new technologies and new safety protocols, perhaps he should look more closely at his province and fix its glaring eco-problems.

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Managing a matchstick forest

Letter by David McIntyre
The Calgary Herald
November 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

ALBERTA — Crowsnest Pass, the lowest pass through the Rocky Mountains between New Mexico and Jasper National Park, is home to Alberta’s rarest, most tree-species-rich forest. Some species growing here are as rare in Alberta as sage grouse and woodland caribou. …Trees don’t thrive within this forest. They cling to life. …A question I’ve long posed to society and the managers of southwestern Alberta’s matchstick forest is this: Is it economically viable to manage this forest for timber production? …Some years ago, I was selected to sit on a Government of Alberta advisory committee creating a vision for future management of this forest. …Alberta’s forest managers, responding to the problem they helped create, have now placed a new prescription on the pharmacist’s cutting block. The old prescription — clear-cut logging. The new prescription — profoundly expanded clear-cut logging.

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Tree seedling nurseries concerned about end of 2 Billion Tree program

By Dean Stoltz
Chek News
November 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The PRT tree seedling nursery …with locations in Canada and the United States is North America’s largest producer of container-grown forest seedlings. …But at time when the forestry sector is facing hurdles such as softwood lumber duties and new American tariffs, the 2 Billion Trees program will be scrapped in the proposed federal 2025 budget. …a billion trees would have been grown from seed in nurseries like PRT and then planted across Canada. …Brinkman Reforestation is the largest tree planting company in Canada and says the industry is facing enough hurdles without having the 2 Billion Trees program cancelled. …In Black Creek, three generations of the same family have been growing tree seedlings at Sylvan Vale Nurseries. …manager Siriol Paquet says extra programs like 2 Billion Trees are important at at time when logging is declining, because if trees aren’t being cut, then they don’t need to be replaced with new ones.

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Landslides ‘are everywhere’ in Oregon and more unpredictable than earthquakes

By Miranda Cyr
The Register-Guard
November 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, US West

Every year, there are thousands of landslides in Oregon. Geologists say the number is increasing due to climate change. …Swaths of the Pacific Northwest are particularly prone, thanks to a combination of mountainous landscape and heavy rainfall. “Over the last couple decades, the landslides and the surface processes and surface hazards that I’ve been working on have become much more prominent, primarily due to climate change and humans inhabiting more areas in hazardous terrain,” said Josh Roering, a professor of earth sciences at the University of Oregon. …Roering is one of the geologists involved in the newly formed Center for Land Surface Hazards (CLaSH). A $15 million NSF grant jumpstarted the center that will study landslides and other surface hazards. While CLaSH is housed in the University of Michigan, it is a collaboration with more than a dozen academic, governmental and community partners across the country. 

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

A pivotal moment for climate action: what to expect at COP30 in Belém

By Fiona Harvey
The Guardian
November 10, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, United States, International

Rich countries have lost enthusiasm for combating the climate crisis while China is surging ahead in producing and using clean energy equipment, the president of the UN climate talks has said. More countries should follow China’s lead instead of complaining about being outcompeted, said André Corrêa do Lago, the Brazilian diplomat in charge of the Cop30 conference, which begins on Monday. …Top of the agenda will be national plans on cutting greenhouse gas emissions, which currently would lead to a devastating 2.5C of heating. Vulnerable countries want to draw up a plan that will show how countries can outdo their current inadequate efforts and meet the Paris agreement targets. …The Brazilian hosts are focused on “implementation” – that is, putting into practice commitments that have already been made. Despite efforts by Brazil, bitter disagreements over what the conference should focus on are still likely on Monday.

In related coverage:

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Drax still burning 250-year-old trees sourced from forests in Canada, experts say

By Jillian Ambrose
The Guardian UK
November 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West, International

Drax power plant has continued to burn 250-year-old trees sourced from some of Canada’s oldest forests despite growing scrutiny of its sustainability claims, forestry experts say. A new report suggests it is “highly likely” that Britain’s biggest power plant sourced some wood from ecologically valuable forests as recently as this summer. Drax, Britain’s single biggest source of carbon emissions, has received billions of pounds in subsidies from burning biomass derived largely from wood. The report, by Stand.earth, claims that a subsidiary of Drax Group received hundreds of truckloads of whole logs at its biomass pellet sites throughout 2024 and into 2025, which were likely to have included trees that were hundreds of years old. The report could raise fresh questions for the owner of the North Yorkshire power plant, which has been forced in recent years to defend its sustainability claims while receiving more than £2m a day in green energy subsidies from UK bill payers.

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Health & Safety

WorkSafeBC fines B.C. government over $750K for two wildfire fighting incidents from 2023

By Victor Kaisar
CFJC Today Kamloops
November 8, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

WorkSafeBC has fined the Provincial Government over $750,000 in connection with a pair of incidents involving the BC Wildfire Service that date back to 2023. An administrative penalty of $759,369 was levied on Sept. 25 following investigations into the two incidents – one of which led to the death of a firefighter near Fort St. John, while the other could have killed or injured multiple firefighters in the North Shuswap. In that North Shuswap incident, previous inspection reports by WorkSafeBC determined that a group of five Brazilian firefighters became “trapped by extreme fire behavior” during a planned ignition. …WorkSafeBC determined that a lack of planning, training, and communication were all contributing factors. …The other incident dates back to July 28, 2023, when 25-year-old firefighter, Zak Muise, was killed while fighting the Donnie Creek fire. WorkSafeBC determined that neither worker was wearing a helmet, the passenger had not been using a seatbelt, and the passenger-side retention netting had been damaged.

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