Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

The Crofton closure is a warning Victoria can no longer ignore

By Kermit Dahl, Mayor of Campbell River, & Chair, Alliance of Resource Communities
Chek News
December 5, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kermit Dahl

The closure of the Crofton pulp mill didn’t come out of nowhere. It arrived exactly the way many mayors across resource communities feared and had communicated this fear to government time after time: quietly, predictably, and after years of well-intended but poorly considered provincial policy that has boxed in an industry already on its heels. Here’s the blunt truth: 30% of the fibre feeding Crofton was coming from the US. Even with that desperate backfill, it still wasn’t enough to keep the mill alive. When a BC mill adjacent to one of the most productive forest baskets on the planet yet survives only by importing American fibre, something has gone very wrong in our own house. That’s not bad luck. That’s bad policy. …And if provincial leaders don’t correct course, mills in Ladysmith, North Cowichan, and Nanaimo are next. This, in turn, hits harvesting in Campbell River and other northern coastal communities. It’s all connected. The math is right there in the open.

When a major mill goes down, the provincial legislature doesn’t get the bill. We do. …British Columbia has been told repeatedly that we’re moving into a “new economy.” That sounds appealing until you examine who bears the brunt of experimentation. It’s not downtown departments or far-away advocacy groups. It’s municipalities — the ones responsible for policing, recreation, sewer lines, water plants, roads, and fire halls. When you remove a community’s tax base without a credible replacement, you’re not creating a greener economy. You’re creating an unfunded civic crisis, driving once thriving communities into poverty. …We still have a choice — but time is short. Forestry isn’t a relic. It’s a modern, sustainable, globally demanded sector that — with proper management — can anchor the next 50 years of prosperity. 

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Business & Politics

Over 400 Natural Resources Canada jobs at risk, union says

By Jayden Dill
CBC News
December 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Over 600 public servants were notified this week that their jobs are on the line, with Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) feeling the brunt of the potential cuts. The Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) said in a news release that 219 workers at NRCan received warning that their position could be cut. In addition, the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC) told Radio-Canada that 200 of its members at NRCan were also given notices of a potential layoff. …Jean Bérubé, a forest pathologist at NRCan who is also a union rep for 3,000 federal research scientists, said he was informed his position is being eliminated.The federal government’s cuts to the public service feel similar to those occurring south of the border under the second administration of U.S. President Donald Trump, he said. …Bérubé pointed to the emergence of the invasive Emerald ash borer that has killed millions of ash trees in Canada’s urban areas.

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Minister Ali announces new measures to protect and transform Canada’s steel and lumber industries

By Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
Government of Canada
December 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Today, the Honourable Shafqat Ali, President of the Treasury Board of Canada, visited Brannon Steel in Brampton, Ontario, to reiterate new measures announced by the Government of Canada to protect and transform Canada’s steel and lumber industries. …Building on previously announced measures to help transform the Canadian steel and softwood lumber industries, the government will make it easier to build with Canadian lumber.

  • Canada will work with railway companies to cut freight rates for transporting Canadian steel and lumber interprovincially by 50%, beginning in Spring 2026.
  • Build Canada Homes will prioritise shovel-ready, multi-year projects that can begin within 12 months and that use Canadian wood products.
  • With $700 million next year, Build Canada Homes – our new federal homebuilding agency – alone will create $70 to $140 million of new demand for Canadian wood products – and attract private and provincial capital to multiply its impact.

Using Canadian steel and Canadian lumber, we will build Canada strong.

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Canada Revenue Agency strengthens compliance in trucking sector by lifting the moratorium on T4A penalties

By Canada Revenue Agency
Cision Newswire
December 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – Tax non-compliance in the trucking sector has allowed some companies to avoid tax obligations, undercutting compliant competitors and denying workers the benefits and pensions they have earned. To restore fairness, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) is making changes to improve compliance in the trucking industry. The CRA has lifted the moratorium on penalties for failing to report fees for services for the 2025 tax year and subsequent tax years. Businesses in this sector will now be assessed penalties if they fail to report payments for services exceeding $500 in a calendar year that are made to a Canadian-controlled private corporation in the trucking industry. These payments must be reported to the CRA by February 28, 2026. A business is considered to be operating in the trucking industry if more than 50% of its primary source of income is from trucking activities.

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Trump could decide next year to withdraw from CUSMA trade deal, USTR Greer tells Politico

By Gnaneshwar Rajan
Reuters in CTV News
December 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

US President Trump could decide next year to withdraw from the Canada-United States-Mexico trade agreement (CUSMA), Politico reported on Thursday, citing U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer. “The president’s view is he only wants deals that are a good deal. The reason why we built a review period into CUSMA was in case we needed to revise it, review it or exit it,” Greer told Politico’s White House bureau chief Dasha Burns in a podcast episode that airs Friday. Greer also raised the idea of negotiating separately with Canada and Mexico and dividing the agreement into two parts in the podcast, adding that he spoke with Trump about that possibility just this week. …Trump on Wednesday said that the CUSMA agreement – which faces an upcoming review- will either be left to expire or another deal will be worked out. 

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Chemainus, B.C. sawmill curtailment to extend into 2026

By Adam Chan
Chek News
December 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Western Forest Products says the temporary curtailment at its Chemainus sawmill will extend into the new year, while work slowdowns are expected at its other mills across Vancouver Island in December. The WFP curtailment in Chemainus began in June, affecting about 150 workers, with work yet to resume. …Meanwhile, reduced hours are expected at other work sites on the Island later this month. “In the latter half of December, we will take temporary downtime at our Saltair mill in Ladysmith, Duke Point mill in Nanaimo, and Cowichan Bay mill in Duncan,” said Babita Khunkhun, senior director of communications at WFP. “This will involve reduced operating hours, an extended holiday break and adjusted shift schedules.” Khunkhun says regular operations are expected to resume at all of those mills – except for Chemainus – on Jan. 6 “depending on market conditions and available log supply.”

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Temporary shutdown means layoffs at Brink mills in Prince George, Vanderhoof and Houston

By Ted Clarke
The Prince George Citizen
December 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE, BC — Brink Forest Products announced Thursday that it will shut down its value-added wood products mill operations temporarily, from Dec. 11-Jan. 6, citing American duties, provincial policies and a shortage of economic fibre. The three-week layoff will affect 75 employees in Prince George, Vanderhoof and Houston. “Six months ago we had to curtail our operations when the 45% duty became a reality. We had to go from trying to fully operate in Prince George and Vanderhoof and reduce it to about 25%,” said John Brink. “Now it’s virtually impossible, with more mills closing down we don’t have the fibre, so we’ve decided to curtail our operations for about three weeks.” 90% of the finger-joint lumber the company produces is shipped to the US. …Brink wonders why the government is focusing on trade missions to Asia to diversify exports of wood products when it should be offering more access to timber to stimulate secondary producers.

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West Fraser Reduces OSB Capacity

West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd.
December 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC – West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd. announced that it will indefinitely curtail its oriented strand board (OSB) mill in High Level, Alberta in the spring of 2026 following an orderly wind-down and consumption of the mill’s existing log supply. The decision is the result of a significant weakening of OSB demand and is expected to reduce West Fraser’s capacity by 860 million square feet (3/8-inch). West Fraser expects to mitigate the impact on the approximate 190 affected employees at the site by providing work opportunities at other company operations, where available. West Fraser also confirmed that the idling of one of its production lines at its Cordele, Georgia OSB facility since late 2023 will continue indefinitely. The idled production line at Cordele has a capacity of 440 million square feet (3/8-inch). …West Fraser expects to record an approximately $200 million asset impairment loss in the fourth quarter of 2025 in connection with the indefinite curtailment of the High Level OSB mill.

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Williams Lake sawmill down after fire, rest of operations continue

By Ruth Lloyd
The Williams Lake Tribune
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Tolko’s Lakeview mill in Williams Lake remains down as the company works to find the cause of a fire overnight on Sunday. Chris Dancocks, senior communications advisor for Tolko Industries Ltd. confirmed crews discovered the fire the night of Nov. 29 and early morning Dec. 1, contacting emergency crews immediately. Dancocks said no injuries were reported in relation to the fire and the sawmill remains down until repairs are completed. He said the company is currently planning repairs and the planer mill, log yard, chip plant, and shipping areas remain in full operation. [END]

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Mayor encouraged by meeting with premier over Crofton mill closure

By Robert Barron
Victoria News
December 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Rob Douglas

Providing supports for workers at the Crofton pulp mill, which is permanently closing, was the major topic at a meeting of government officials and union leaders in Victoria on Dec. 3. North Cowichan Mayor Rob Douglas said he … was encouraged when Premier David Eby said providing supports for approximately 350 mill workers … will be a top priority for his government. Douglas said the Public and Private Workers of Canada … asked for flexibility on extensions to the workers’ Employment Insurance benefits. …Douglas said the fact that the Crofton mill is the single biggest taxpayer in North Cowichan, contributing approximately $5 million a year to the municipality to help pay for services and programs, was also raised. …Douglas said he’s also pleased that the government said it is actively looking for buyers to take over the mill and continue its operations. “The Harmac model … was also discussed at the meeting.”

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The Crofton Mill Closure Highlights Multiple Government Failures

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
December 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

When it comes to what ultimately lies behind Crofton’s impending closure, previous BC Liberal and NDP governments past and present all have much to answer for. Both were at the helm as tumultuous changes rocked BC’s forestry sector. And both did little of consequence in response. The result is not only pain for workers and their families, but a big economic hit for local government. …The first change that governments ignored was the disintegration of what were once highly integrated forest companies. At one point, each of B.C.’s three remaining coastal pulp mills — Crofton, Harmac and Howe Sound — were part of a continuous production chain owned by the same company. In the case of Harmac and Crofton, that company was MacMillan Bloedel, while Howe Sound’s pulp mill was co-owned by Canfor. With integrated companies, all aspects of production from the tree standing in the forest to final products were linked.

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Crofton Closure Underscores Urgency of Coastal Forest Crisis

Coast Forest Policy Coalition
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Coast Forest Policy Coalition expresses deep concern over Domtar’s announcement of the permanent closure of its Crofton pulp and paper mill and calls for immediate collaborative action to address BC’s coastal fibre supply challenges. The Crofton closure affects hundreds of families and businesses in the Cowichan Valley and represents the tenth coastal mill to permanently close since 2018. The coast has lost 5,400 jobs since 2022 alone, with over 700 companies across the supply chain facing uncertainty. “Pulp mills are critical infrastructure on the coast—they’re essential to our integrated forest economy, utilizing sawmill and harvest residuals that are a necessary part of coastal forestry operations,” says Peter Lister, Chair of the Coast Forest Policy Coalition and Executive Director of the Truck Loggers Association. …The Coalition has outlined solutions that emphasize collaborative action: streamlining permit preparation processes to reduce current timelines, providing regulatory certainty by pausing new policy initiatives until existing processes work efficiently, and developing coast-specific solutions that recognize coastal operations’ unique requirements.

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Truck Loggers Association’s Statement on Domtar’s Closure of Crofton Pulp Mill

BC Truck Loggers Association
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Domtar’s announcement of its Crofton pulp and paper mill closure was a major and far-reaching loss for its workers, the North Cowichan community, and the broader forest-industry supply chain across the BC Coast. It is especially difficult knowing that this closure was preventable. Industry, labour and municipal governments have been warning the BC government about the risk of mill closures for many months. The government was given numerous recommendations, solutions, and opportunities that could have helped avoid this outcome, but has largely failed to act with the urgency that was required. …This closure underscores the many challenges facing BC’s coastal forest sector: ongoing constraints on access to economically viable fibre, an uncompetitive business cost structure, and regulatory uncertainty. For TLA members, these pressures threaten the stability of their operations and the forestry-dependent communities they support. The TLA remains committed to working with government and industry partners to stabilize the sector…

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Eby says no to harvesting old growth for pulp to extend life of B.C. mill

The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

VICTORIA — The British Columbia government is looking for ways to help a pulp mill closing on Vancouver Island, Premier David Eby said, but logging the province’s old-growth forests for pulp is not an option. Eby was scheduled to meet Wednesday with the head of the union representing the 350 Domtar workers who are set to lose their jobs, as well as the mayor of Crofton, BC. A team from the Ministry of Jobs will be going to the community of about 1,500 people to identify opportunities around retraining and employment, the premier said, adding the government was mulling ways to keep some jobs at the site. “If there’s something else we can do, absolutely… But the idea that we would pulp old growth in order to buy a little bit of time is not a solution we’re looking for.” Eby said the province was looking for “long-term, sustainable solutions.” 

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Why a B.C. mill imported U.S. pulp, then announced it was folding

By Penny Daflos
CTV News
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

When Domtar announced it would be shuttering a Vancouver Island pulp mill and laying off 350 workers, it came as little surprise to those who knew the company was losing millions of dollars despite cost-cutting measures by management and staff. What’s not widely known is that the company had been buying and transporting American pulp to the Cowichan Valley facility to keep it running after struggling to find enough material in Canada. “It’s cheaper and it’s more readily available and dependable, in terms of its supply,” said Domtar’s senior director of public affairs, Chris Stoicheff. “That should give an indication to British Columbians of where we’re at.” …The forestry sector has been urging the government to reform permitting and approvals processes and reduce red tape in order to make them more economically viable. Stoicheff says the opposite has been true, with companies going from weeks-long waits for harvesting permits to year-long waits.

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Crofton mill closure shows B.C.’s forestry problems start with Victoria, not Trump

By Rob Shaw
Business in Vancouver
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government’s attempts to blame U.S. President Donald Trump for everything wrong with the province’s forestry sector ran headlong into a reality check with the closure of Domtar’s long-running Crofton pulp mill on Vancouver Island. … Crofton doesn’t sell its goods … to the Americans, and so its decline isn’t being driven by the ongoing softwood lumber tariffs. The culprit, according to the company, is provincial forestry policies. …“We’re the most expensive jurisdiction in North America to do forestry,” echoed Council of Forest Industries CEO Kim Haakstad. …Forest Minister Parmar insists there’s wood permitted and available. The sector argues the cost is so high, it’s not worth harvesting. Politics is another layer in the Crofton closure. …The premier keeps demanding urgency from Ottawa on forestry. Too bad his government can’t muster any of it to fix its own policy failures here at home. Maybe then, mills like Crofton wouldn’t be closing.

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Small and medium sized enterprises are vital to Canada’s forest sector resilience

By Curtis Cook, Executive director, Canadian Institute of Forestry
Wood Business
December 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Curtis Cook

Small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) have always been the backbone of Canada’s economy, employing most of the country’s private-sector workforce (over 60 per cent as of last year) and generating much of Canada’s product, service, business process, and technological innovation across a spectrum of industries. The country’s forestry sector is no exception. SMEs are vital to sustainable forest management, job creation, and direct contributions to local and regional economies. …The recent Canadian Institute of Forestry 2025 National Conference in Thunder Bay featured a panel of dynamic entrepreneurs who are guiding their forest sector businesses to success despite the external challenges. True to the theme of the event, they are “finding opportunity in complexity.” These self-starters talked about their choices to enter the market and run their own companies and, at the same time, affirmed the importance of sector collaboration and partnerships as a path to growth and innovation.

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Finance & Economics

Lumber Futures Hits 12-week Low

Trading Economics
December 3, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures fell toward $530 per thousand board feet, down nearly 10% from November’s peak, as the market contends with pronounced oversupply and lingering weak demand. Mills and distributors continue to carry elevated inventories, a hangover from early 2025 when buyers front-loaded purchases in anticipation of tariffs, leaving the market with a persistent supply overhang. At the same time, US housing starts and building permits remain below last year’s levels, reflecting a prolonged construction slowdown as easing borrowing costs have yet to materialize in higher new building activity and limit near-term consumption of framing lumber. Demand from renovation and new homebuilding also remains subdued, with housing-related wood products consumption estimated to have declined in 2024 and only a modest recovery expected in 2025. 

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Canfor Corporation to acquire Canfor Pulp

Canfor Corporation
December 3, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver, BC – Canfor Corporation and Canfor Pulp Products Inc. announced today that they have entered into an arrangement agreement pursuant to which Canfor Corp will acquire all of Canfor Pulp’s issued and outstanding common shares not already owned by Canfor Corp and its affiliates pursuant to a court-approved plan of arrangement under the Business Corporations Act. Under the terms of the Arrangement Agreement, the shareholders of Canfor Pulp, other than Canfor Corp and its affiliates, will have the option to receive, for each Canfor Pulp Share held: 0.0425 of a common share of Canfor Corp, or $0.50 in cash. ….Canfor Corp currently owns approximately 54.8% of the issued and outstanding Canfor Pulp Shares. The $0.50 per Canfor Pulp Share represents a premium of 25% to Canfor Pulp’s closing share price on December 2, 2025, on the Toronto Stock Exchange and a premium of 38% based on the 10-day volume-weighted average share price of Canfor Pulp as of December 2, 2025, on the TSX.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Economic uncertainty casts shadow on an otherwise successful Woodworking Machinery & Supply Conference and Expo 2025

By Rich Christianson
Woodworking Network
December 5, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

TORONTO — Against the headwinds of a weakening Canadian economy, the 2025 Woodworking Machinery & Supply Conference and Expo still managed to conclude a successful three-day run November 12-14 at the Toronto Congress Centre. While attendance lagged by about 15 percent below projections, exhibitors who account for 60 percent of the show’s floor plan affirmed their support for Canada’s national woodworking event by reserving booth space for WMS 2027. “Even though we were disappointed in the three-day attendance turnout, we were extremely pleased with the quality of this year’s attendees,” said Tim Fixmer, president of CCI Media, owner of the event. “There was a good deal of buying taking place on the show floor. …Plus, back by popular demand following their successful debuts at WMS 2023, were the WMS Live Auction presented by Boss Auctions and Student Day organized by the Wood Manufacturing Council and WMS in cooperation with the Canadian Kitchen Cabinet Association.

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Canada can achieve more new homes by building them in factories

By Tore Jacobsen and Baldev Gill, Fraser Valley Real Estate Board
Daily Hive – Urbanized Vancouver
December 7, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

When Prime Minister Mark Carney toured Intelligent City’s advanced manufacturing facility in Delta, B.C. this spring, it was more than just another campaign stop. It signalled that prefabricated and modular construction has moved from the margins to the mainstream of Canada’s housing conversation. That recognition is overdue. If we are serious about tackling Canada’s housing affordability crisis by delivering more homes at scale, governments need to stop paying lip service to the huge potential of off- site construction and start putting it into policy and practice. …First, governments should publish a multi-year prefabricated housing procurement roadmap. Off-site manufacturing depends on predictable, portfolio-scale demand. A provincial roadmap in British Columbia, for example, that consolidates housing needs across ministries, Crown agencies, and municipalities would give factories the confidence to invest in automation, skilled labour, and supply chains.

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Canada needs 22 million homes fast. University of BC and partners are delivering solutions

By Lou Bosshart
The University of British Columbia
December 4, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Dr. Tony Yang

Canada needs 22 million new homes by 2030. The University of British Columbia is working with governments, industry and communities to make that goal more achievable—by mapping buildable land, testing faster and greener construction, and designing homes built for climate extremes. Together, these projects could help unlock land for up to 50,000 new housing units, cut construction costs by as much as 60 per cent, and create jobs while reducing emissions. It starts with knowing where to build. UBC’s Housing Assessment Resource Tools (HART) team is creating the BC Public Lands Map, the first province-wide inventory of public land. …Dr. Tony Yang and industry partners are leading an $8.3 million national project to make modular construction faster, cheaper and cleaner. The team is developing factory-built modules made from engineered wood and carbon-neutral materials that can be assembled in days —cutting build times by half and costs by about 30 per cent. 

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UBC forestry team develops cleaner way to produce rayon-type fibres

UBC Faculty of Forestry
December 3, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Huayu Liu and Feng Jiang

A UBC research team has developed a cleaner way to produce rayon, a popular fabric used in clothing for more than a century. The process could significantly reduce chemical use and improve sustainability in textile manufacturing. The study, led by UBC Forestry associate professor Dr. Feng Jiang and doctoral student Huayu Liu, demonstrates a method for spinning continuous cellulose fibres without the harsh, toxic solvents traditionally used in commercial fibre production. “People have been making synthetic cellulose fibres like rayon for more than 130 years,” says Dr. Jiang. “The material itself is biodegradable and renewable, but the processes behind it can be highly toxic, energy-intensive and damaging to the environment. Our goal was to find a way to dramatically reduce that impact.” …This method cuts out several steps that normally involve bleaching or harsh chemical treatment for dissolving pulp, making the entire process cleaner, simpler and more sustainable.

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Ontario Launches Advanced Wood Construction Working Group

By Ministry of Natural Resources
The Government of Ontario
December 3, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

TORONTO — The Ontario government has launched a new working group to guide the implementation of the Advanced Wood Construction Action Plan: Ontario’s blueprint for education, research and investment in the fast-growing sector of prefabricated and modular wood-based building materials, known as advanced wood construction. The action plan was launched earlier this year to support the government’s plan to protect Ontario by promoting the use of more wood-based building materials that can help build more homes and buildings faster and create a more resilient forestry sector in response to U.S. tariffs. …”The Province’s Advanced Wood Construction Action Plan shows real leadership at a pivotal time for Ontario’s construction sector. By aligning policy, investment, and industry capacity, the Ministry is helping modernize how we build and supporting the continued growth of advanced wood construction across the province,” said Robert Jonkman, P.Eng., Vice-President, Codes and Engineering, Canadian Wood Council.

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Forestry

Study that said glyphosate herbicide is safe retracted 25 years after publication

By Sarah Ritchie
The Canadian Press in CTV News
December 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — An influential research article that claimed a popular weed-killer was safe has been retracted 25 years after it was published, prompting environment groups in Canada to ask the federal government to review the science on glyphosate use. Health Canada said Thursday that its decision to approve glyphosate will not be affected by this development. Last week, the journal Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology retracted a paper published in 2000 that concluded the herbicide glyphosate, the main ingredient in Roundup, is safe for humans. …The retraction notice cited documents made public through litigation in the US that suggest employees of Monsanto may have helped write the article without proper acknowledgment. …Health Canada said in a written statement that “the retraction of this review does not affect our previous review conclusions” because the department also independently evaluated the primary data sources used in the 2000 review paper.

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National Peatland Strategy proposed to protect climate-critical ecosystems amid extraction and industrial development rush

By Wildlife Conservation Society Canada
Cision Newswire
December 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

TORONTO – Wildlife Conservation Society Canada Canada has today unveiled a proposed National Peatland Strategy, calling on federal, provincial, and territorial governments to adopt urgent measures to safeguard Canada’s most carbon-rich ecosystems. Peatlands – critical natural stores of carbon that also support biodiversity, water quality and Indigenous ways of life – are increasingly threatened by industrial development, resource extraction, and policy gaps that leave them unprotected. Canada is home to roughly 25% of the world’s peatlands, storing 150 billion tonnes of carbon – more than five times the carbon in all the country’s forests combined. Yet these ecosystems face mounting pressures from industrial development, especially mining, oil and gas, agriculture and forestry. Experts warn that without immediate, coordinated action, degradation of Canada’s peatlands could release massive amounts of irrecoverable greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere, undermining national and global climate targets.

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Climate Smart Forestry Initiative Advisory Committees Announced

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
December 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Washington, D.C.— The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) announces the establishment of two SFI Climate Smart Forestry Initiative Advisory Committees, one in the United States and one in Canada, to shape the activities and outputs of the SFI Climate Smart Forestry (SFI CSF) Initiative on climate-informed forest management practices, science syntheses, and knowledge sharing across North America. In 2024, SFI launched the Climate Smart Forestry Initiative to advance Objective 9 (Climate Smart Forestry) of the SFI 2022 Forest Management Standard. Objective 9 requires organizations certified to the SFI Forest Management Standard to consider and implement actions to reduce the negative effects of climate change and adapt to changing conditions. The SFI CSF Initiative is a collaborative effort to identify and implement climate-informed, data-driven forestry practices that address climate change through adaptive management, enhanced carbon storage, and increased forest resilience.

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Document reveals approval to harvest remnant old-growth in B.C.’s northwest

By Brenna Owen
Canadian Press in Chek News
December 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

British Columbia’s logging agency has changed a policy that conserved remnant old-growth forest in the province’s northwest, with a government briefing note showing a plan to open those areas for harvesting has been approved. The note, obtained by The Canadian Press and written by a BC Timber Sales manager in the Babine region, acknowledged the shift “may invoke scrutiny” from conservationist environmental groups. It says First Nations in the Bulkley, Morice and Lakes timber supply areas do not support old-growth logging deferrals recommended by a provincially appointed panel in 2021,and continuing to conserve remnant stands “does not demonstrate respect of the First Nations’ responses” to that process. …Independent ecologist Rachel Holt says the briefing note demonstrates a lack of understanding within BC Timber Sales about “the importance of … these irrecoverable ecological values.” But the crisis in B.C.’s forests is not just ecological.

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Woodland Almanac Fall 2025

Woodlots BC
December 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Fall 2025 Woodland Almanac is now available. This edition provides an overview of recent activities undertaken by Woodlots BC, including fall conferences, training sessions, and project updates relevant to woodlot licensees. The Executive Director’s Report outlines several current operational and policy matters, offering context on issues that may affect management planning in the months ahead. Also included are two new “Meet a Woodlotter” profiles, featuring Marvin Strimbold and Don Whyte, both of whom share perspectives based on long-term involvement in woodlot stewardship. 

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BC Wildfire Service travelled to more places than ever, Minister of Forests says

By Michael Potestio
Castanet
December 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The BC Wildfire Service was well-travelled in 2025. In a social media post, Minister of Forest Ravi Parmar said the BCWS was deployed to more out of province location than any past season to help fight forest fires. The BCWS helped fight fires in Alberta, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Ontario, the Yukon, and, for the first time, Newfoundland & Labrador and Nova Scotia this year. In January, they also travelled to support the wildfire suppression effort in California. At home, the 2025 wildfire season in BC wasn’t as bad as 2024 or 2023, but it was still way above the 20-year average for the number of hectares burned.

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This $1.3M salmon restoration effort in Nootka Sound could mend decades of heavy logging

By Nora O’Malley
Ha-Shilth-Sa
December 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

NOOTKA SOUND, BC — Optimism for the future of Chinook salmon is swimming up Muchalat River near the town of Gold River, BC in Mowachaht/Muchalaht First Nations (MMFN) territory. Kent O’Neill, of the Nootka Sound Watershed Society (NSWS), says he observed hundreds of fish using a newly restored gravel spawning pad this fall. …Navigating a storm of challenges from historical logging practices to droughty summers, Chinook salmon in the region were assessed as Threatened by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada in 2020. To revive local Chinook salmon stocks, a collective effort led by NSWS, Ecofish Research, a Trinity Consultants Canada team, MMFN and the Pacific Salmon Foundation (PSF) was hatched. …Western Forest Products (WFP) also played a major role by providing the gravel and access to the forest service roads. “We wouldn’t have been able to do this project without WFP,” said O’Neill.

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Okanagan activist says loggers use fire mitigation as a ‘Trojan horse’ for profit

By Jesse Tomas
InfoNews.ca
December 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Taryn Skalbania

A Peachland environmental activist says logging companies use fire mitigation for profit while continuing practices that make fires worse as the industry struggles. Taryn Skalbania is the co-founder of the Peachland Watershed Protection Alliance, and she said the logging industry’s participation in fire mitigation is more about profit than reducing the impact of wildfires. “The minute you’re going in with machines and pulling out trees and pretending to be firescaping, what you’re doing is logging. It’s just a Trojan horse and it’s a cash grab,” she said. The BC Wildfire Service said working with the logging and forestry sector is an essential part of fire mitigation. “Working with the forest sector is one of the most effective ways to tackle wildfire risk to BC communities at scale. Building wildfire resilience in BC would not, and will not, be possible without working with the sector as a partner,” the wildfire service said.

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Empathy erosion is the latest weapon in the anti-logging arsenal

By Alice Palmer
Resource Works
December 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Alice Palmer

The ongoing lumber trade war has attracted spirited campaigns featuring opaque details and emotional arguments. The debate over forest management has too. Last month, I attended “Forestry in Flux: Reimagining BC’s Forests,” put on by UBC Forestry. …The event was both informative and provocative. However, it was also unsettling. In telling the narrative of “economics versus the environment,” the conservation community makes it clear who the villain of the story is: people like me. When the forest industry is portrayed not as a group of people, but rather a faceless Borg intent on destroying Mother Nature, it is much easier to ignore the human harms that accrue from deindustrialization. But this would be a mistake. …It’s a simple strategy, really: provoke your audience’s anger, suggest a bold solution, and then reassure them the solution won’t have adverse consequences. The goal is to convince decision-makers (and those who could lobby them) to eliminate the enemy. [to access Alice Palmer’s full Substack click here]

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‘Important investment’: B.C. forestry ministry praises $257.6 million federal boost to wildfire fighting

By Ruth Prarthana and Stephen Albert
Energetic City
December 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

FORT ST. JOHN, B.C.  — The B.C. Ministry of Forests is encouraged that the Government of Canada has taken a huge step to amp up aerial firefighting capacity. Anthony Housefather, parliamentary secretary to Eleanor Olszewski, federal minister of emergency management and community resilience and minister responsible for Prairies economic development, recently highlighted a new multi-million-dollar investment of over $257.6 million for four years to Natural Resources Canada. The funds will be used to lease firefighting aircrafts, which can include waterbombers or other aircrafts to deliver water or fire retardant drops in hard-to-reach areas. …The Ministry of Forests will be hosting a national wildfire symposium in Vancouver on December 5th. This event will bring the government, wildfire experts, key industry and Indigenous partners to discuss the 2025 wildfire season. However, this event is by invite only. 

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Why was ‘incredible’ giant cedar cut down, despite B.C.’s big-tree protection law?

By Brenna Owen
The Canadian Press in Global News
December 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Joshua Wright says a yellow cedar tree he photographed last year was the largest he’d ever seen in a decade of hiking around Vancouver Island. …Wright measured the cedar’s diameter at 2.79 metres, a size that should have ensured protection for the tree, along with a one-hectare buffer under provincial law. But when he returned to the area south of Gold River in June, Wright says the tree had been felled as part of a logging operation approved by the province. …the area where Wright documented the yellow cedar overlaps significantly with a category of old-growth representing the largest trees left standing. …Yet the deferrals required support from First Nations to go ahead, and at the time, there was no significant funding to help communities offset foregone revenues. …the yellow cedar was felled in an area where Matchlee Ltd. Partnership, majority owned by Mowachaht/Muchalaht First Nation, holds a non-renewable forest licence.

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Logging roads: The overlooked infrastructure powering northern Ontario

By Bill Steer
The Soo Today
December 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

We tend to take logging roads for granted as an inherent right of access to Crown land. Their importance was recently reinforced when, just before the first snowfall, we travelled on one of the longest continuous and scenic forestry roads in the province. Ontario’s forest industry is critical to the provincial economy and many northern and rural communities. In 2023, the forest industry contributed $5.4 billion to Ontario’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and generated $21.6 billion in total revenue. The sector supported approximately 128,000 direct, indirect, and induced jobs in 2024, many of which are in Indigenous, rural, and northern communities. …The Ontario Forest Industries Association’s policy advisor, Adrian Smith said, “Forest access roads serve far more than the forestry sector. Built and maintained by our sector, they provide vital infrastructure. Forestry companies invest millions of dollars in grading, resurfacing, bridge and culvert upkeep, and winter snow clearing to keep this extensive network safe and reliable.

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Ontario Wildlife Rescue honours black bear sanctuary founder

By Gary Rinne
The Thunder Bay News Watch
December 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©BearWithUs

SPRUCEDALE, ON — A man who’s worked for over three decades on the rehabilitation of orphaned and injured black bears, including many from Northwestern Ontario, has been recognized for his contributions to animal welfare. Mike McIntosh of the Bear With Us Sanctuary and Rehabilitation Centre for Bears received the Wildlife Rehabber of the Year award from Ontario Wildlife Rescue. McIntosh and his wife, Ella, look after as many as 100 bears at a time at their facility in Sprucedale, east of Parry Sound. He works closely with the Ministry of Natural Resources Bear Wise program, and is a partner in a coyote/wolf/bear education initiative. Ontario Wildlife Rescue works with over 50 wildlife rehabilitation centres in the province.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Climate Adaptation and Resilience Professional Development Program for Forest Professionals in Canada

Canadian Institute of Forestry
December 8, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

The Climate Risk Institute (CRI), in collaboration with the Canadian Institute of Forestry/Institut forestier du Canada (CIF-IFC) and with contributions from the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR), have developed a Climate Adaptation and Resilience Professional Development Program for Forest Professionals in Canada. This course is designed to provide forestry professionals and practitioners with new knowledge of climate change, climate impacts and adaptation strategies to complement their existing knowledge base, strengthen climate resilience in forest management, and build capacity across the sector to integrate adaptation measures into daily practice. Funded in part by Natural Resources Canada through the Climate Change Adaptation Program, this initiative supports Canada’s National Adaptation Strategy by equipping forest professionals with critical climate adaptation skills.

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Health & Safety

Wildfire emissions in 2025 reach records for Europe and Canada

By Iain Hoey
International Fire & Safety Journal
December 5, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, International

The Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) has reported that global wildfire emissions from January to November 2025 reached around 1,380 megatonnes of carbon, with record European Union emissions and Canada recording its second highest annual total in the CAMS dataset. CAMS compared the 2025 figure with estimated emissions of 1,850 megatonnes of carbon from January to November 2024 and 1,940 megatonnes over the full year 2024. According to CAMS, Canada contributed an estimated 263 megatonnes of carbon to the 2025 total, with only 2023 recording a higher annual figure in the 23 year dataset that began in 2003. CAMS noted that biomass burning in tropical Africa remains the largest contributor to global biomass burning emissions, and that this region has driven an overall decline over the past two decades because of fewer savanna fires. In contrast, CAMS data show rising emissions in recent years in other regions, including North America between 2023 and 2025 and the record fire season in South America in 2024.

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A Mill That Made a Town and Made a River Sick

By James Murray
The Net News Ledger
December 7, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada East

Thunder Bay – For more than 100 years, the pulp and paper mill in Dryden has been the most important building in this small city in northwestern Ontario. It was the engine of the local economy, providing jobs for generations and connecting Dryden to a larger network of forest products that includes Thunder Bay and other communities in the area. But the same industrial complex also caused one of Canada’s worst environmental disasters. In the 1960s and 1970s, a chlor-alkali plant that was part of the mill dumped an estimated 9,000 to 10,000 kilograms (about 10 metric tons) of mercury into the English–Wabigoon River system. …People have lived with symptoms of mercury poisoning for generations, including Minamata disease. Commercial fishing was stopped, and guiding jobs disappeared. The main question is still painfully unanswered decades later: Who should pay to clean up the river, fix the land, and help the people who were hurt?

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