Region Archives: Canada East

Business & Politics

New Brunswick ruling highlights worries about reconciliation in B.C.

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
December 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West, Canada East

Vaughn Palmer

It took a judge from the other side of the country to put a finger on the challenge posed by the designation of Aboriginal title for the Cowichan Tribes over private land in Richmond. “A declaration of Aboriginal title over privately owned lands — which, by its very nature, gives the Aboriginal beneficiary exclusive possession, occupation, and use — would sound the death knell of reconciliation with the interests of non-Aboriginal Canadians.” That’s Justice Ernest Drapeau of New Brunswick Court of Appeal. …There are differences between the New Brunswick case and…both are likely to end up on the docket of the Supreme Court of Canada sooner or later. …” This week, the premier suggested there could be no Indigenous reconciliation without protection for private property. …The B.C. NDP government, it has been the most progressive in the country on Indigenous relations. If it fears that agenda is going off the rails, it ought to be taken seriously.

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New Brunswick premier says province needs tariff deal on softwood lumber soon

By Sean Mott
CTV News
December 30, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Susan Holt

NEW BRUNSWICK — After months of negotiations, Canada still doesn’t have a deal to reduce or eliminate the 45% tariffs on softwood lumber from the United States, leaving industries across the country to grapple with tough financial decisions as they head into 2026. The New Brunswick industry in particular has been rocked by these tariffs, and Premier Susan Holt says they need a deal soon as thousands of jobs are at risk. “Folks have been working really hard to avoid layoffs in the face of 45% tariffs, but they can’t hold that position for much longer,” Holt told CTV News Atlantic’s Todd Battis during a year-end interview. “What we need is a deal. We need Ottawa to go to Washington and negotiate to get those tariffs off.” …“There’s urgency to get a deal done.”

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‘Things will get better’ forestry minister says of sector’s future

By Matt Prokopchuk
The Bay Today
January 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kevin Holland

EAR FALLS — It’s still uncertain times for forestry in Northwestern Ontario, but the provincial minister for the sector says his government is on the right track to help heading into the new year. …“Forestry, we know, has got some challenges right now … with regards to some of the duties and tariffs that are coming from south of the border and the impact it’s having,” Associate Minister of Forestry and Forest Products Kevin Holland said. “But it really goes beyond the duty and tariff rates that have been imposed.” …“We’re seeing people are being a little bit more cautious, a little bit more reserved on doing some of those plans and construction plans that they had,” Holland said of the uncertain state of things. …“Things will get better, there will be that turn,” he said. “But we need to make sure that we’re in that position to take full advantage of those opportunities when they present themselves.”

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GreenFirst extends its holiday curtailment at three of its four sawmills

By GreenFirst Forest Products Inc.
Businesswire
December 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NORTH BAY, Ontario –GreenFirst Forest Products announced adjustments to its operating schedule in response to continued challenging market conditions in the softwood lumber sector. Given current market conditions, GreenFirst will extend its holiday curtailment at three of its four sawmills — Hearst, Kapuskasing, and Cochrane — resulting in a three-week shutdown from December 22, 2025 to January 9, 2026 “Softwood lumber markets remain under significant pressure, and extending our holiday curtailment is a prudent step to better align production with current demand,” said Joël Fournier, Chief Executive Officer of GreenFirst. …These pressures have led to curtailments across the industry as producers work to balance supply with demand. GreenFirst will continue to closely monitor market dynamics and will adjust production plans as necessary.

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Canada investing in Sault Ste. Marie deep water port development

By Terry Sheehan
Wawa News
December 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Terry Sheehan & La-Na Fragomeni

SAULT STE. MARIE, Ontario — At the Sault Ste. Marie Chamber of Commerce, Terry Sheehan, MP for Sault Ste. Marie–Algoma, announced a FedNor investment of $233,100 to support the development of a public access port in Sault Ste. Marie. …The project will strategically enhance existing port infrastructure to accommodate the rising demand for inbound and outbound goods and resource-based commodities among key industrial users in the Sault Ste. Marie regional area. The funds are further to over $400,000 from Transport Canada, announced by Sheehan in October 2024. Development of a public access port will help expand economic opportunities for the region by enhancing transportation capacity and infrastructure for regional critical minerals, biofuels, forest bioproducts, advanced manufacturing, and other potential economic development opportunities. …The initiative will help diversify the regional economy, strengthen supply chains, and position Sault Ste. Marie as a hub for sustainable development.

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Judge signs off on Bragg bid for Northern Pulp timberlands

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
December 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

John Bragg

A BC Supreme Court judge signed off on the $235-million bid from a John Bragg-owned company for the Northern Pulp timberlands. …Bragg’s bid was the top price for the approximately 173,000 hectares of land and other assets during. John Bragg is CEO and founder of the Bragg Group, an organization with holdings that include Oxford Frozen Foods, Eastlink and Bragg Lumber. (Radio-Canada). …Members of Nova Scotia’s forestry sector and even environmentalists have expressed support for the deal, which they say keeps control of the land in the hands of a Nova Scotia company that takes a long view on how it approaches forestry operations. …Among other payees, the Nova Scotia government stands to receive about $100 million to cover debts owed to it by Northern Pulp and the pension plan for mill employees will be topped up. …There is also $15 million intended for maintaining the mill site at Abercrombie Point and implementing a closure plan.

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U.S. Lumber Coalition Comments on Much-Needed Canadian Mill Production Cuts

The US Lumber Coalition
December 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East, United States

Canada’s massive excess lumber capacity sustained by billions of dollars of government subsidies continues to drive Canada’s harmful and unfair trade practices in softwood lumber. …In the state of Maine and the nearby Canadian region, this has resulted in Canadian border mills operating at two shifts enabled by their unfair trade practices while forcing US mills in Maine to operate at one shift. Canada-based Groupe Lebel’s announcement of cutting production by 25% in the face of President Trump’s trade law enforcement and tariff measures provides the type of relief from Canadian unfair trade practices that will allow US producers to increase production. …“Too add insult to injury, many of these Quebec mills exist within 1 mile of the Maine border. They suck sawlogs from our state, convert it to lumber in Quebec, and dump it back into Maine and New England,” stated Jason Brochu, Co-President of Pleasant River Lumber Company.

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Pulp mill owners urged to ‘step up’ and heat shuttered northwestern Ontario plant

CBC News
December 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

People in Terrace Bay are calling for the owners of a pulp mill in northwestern Ontario to provide winter maintenance at the plant where operations came to a halt last year. Local officials, provincial politicians and union leaders are echoing this message. Terrace Bay Pulp Mill is owned by AV Group, which is part of Aditya Birla. The company in January 2024 temporary ided its pulp operations due to prevailing market conditions. Following the closure the province stepped in with temporary support to maintain the plant through the winter months. But there’s been no word from the company about maintenance this winter, a situation Terrace Bay Mayor Paul Malashewski said they need to urgently address. …“The heat should have been on probably by mid November at the latest.” …Minister Holland says Ontario has been clear that decisions about site maintenance are the responsibility of AV Terrace Bay.

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Northern Pulp pensions to be made whole as woodlands sale proceeds

Unifor Canada
December 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

HALIFAX—Unifor members at the now-shuttered Northern Pulp mill in Pictou, Nova Scotia, will see their pension fund made whole and fully wound up as the company’s woodland assets secures a buyer at auction for $235 million. This amount is enough to repay the $37 million owed to Unifor Local 440 members’ defined benefit pension plan. “This is a small but important victory for all workers as the bankruptcy process typically places workers and their pensions at the bottom of the list of creditors or off the list entirely,” said Unifor National President Lana Payne. “Current Northern Pulp pensioners can rest easier knowing their retirement is secure, and those who will retire in the future can now count on the pension they earned being there for them.” Unifor represented 220 members at Northern Pulp prior to its closure in 2020 and has continued to advocate for them through the closure, creditor protection and sale processes.

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Top New Brunswick court removes private forest land from Wolastoqey title case

By Jacques Poitras
CBC News
December 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

New Brunswick’s top court has narrowed the scope of a major title claim by the Wolastoqey Nation, excluding private lands belonging to three large forestry companies from any ownership claim [J.D. Irving Ltd., H.J. Crabbe and Sons, and Acadian Timber]. The Court of Appeal says however that the Wolastoqey can continue their case against the Crown — but only for damages and compensation they deserve for the loss of those same now-private lands. Former chief justice Ernest Drapeau said he was seeking “to open a clearer path to peaceful and respectful reconciliation between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Canadians in this province.” The ruling distinguishes between a declaration of Aboriginal title — the equivalent of awarding present-day ownership — and a finding of Aboriginal title, which would acknowledge the Wolastoqey never gave up ownership and deserve compensation. …Wolastoqey chiefs said they were asking their lawyers to seek an appeal at the Supreme Court of Canada.

Related in the Financial Post: Wolastoqey Nation plans to take title claim of forest land appeal to Supreme Court

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Bragg family in line to buy Northern Pulp timberlands for $235M

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
December 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

John Bragg

The Bragg family, one of Nova Scotia’s richest families is in line to buy the former timberland holdings once controlled by Northern Pulp. The family was selected as the successful bidder for 173,000 hectares of land and assets. The deal, worth $235 million, is subject to certain conditions and regulatory approvals, including approval by the Supreme Court of British Columbia, where Northern Pulp’s creditor protection process has been playing out. A hearing is scheduled for Dec. 16. “The Bragg family has been in the forestry business for several generations,” said John Bragg. The Bragg Group holdings also include Oxford Frozen Foods and Eastlink. “Our management team and family are dedicated to good forestry practices. We look forward to working with the forestry team at Northern Pulp and Northern Timber, and their associates. We are unable to comment on existing forestry operations, as it is very early days.”

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A seven-day strike has been called at the Kruger plant in LaSalle

The Canadian Press in CTV News
December 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

LASALLE, Quebec — Around 100 workers at the Kruger cardboard packaging plant in LaSalle launched a seven-day strike on Wednesday morning. This strike follows another in November, which lasted a day and a half. Wage increases are at the heart of the labour dispute. Union members rejected the latest offers by a margin of 92.5% last Saturday. The offers were a compromise submitted by the conciliator assigned to the case. Union president Benoît St-Cyr says that the future collective agreement must “prevent the impoverishment of workers, considering the high inflation during the term of the last collective agreement.” Company management denies that the employers’ offers will result in impoverishment. “Contrary to what seems to be being conveyed, our offer makes up for the high inflation of recent years and improves the purchasing power of our employees in the future,” it said. 

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New questions raised about future of Terrace Bay pulp mill

By Gary Rinne
Northern Ontario Business
December 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TERRACE BAY, Ontario — New concerns are being raised about the future of the idled pulp mill at Terrace Bay. A source with the Steelworkers union has told Dougall Media he understands the company is keeping the mill unheated this winter for budget reasons. Thunder Bay-Superior North MPP Lise Vaugeois said she’s heard the same thing from Terrace Bay Mayor Paul Malashewski. There’s no confirmation so far from AV Terrace Bay, but Vaugeois raised the issue in the legislature. “If the mill is not being heated, it’s game over, and this important piece of forestry infrastructure becomes worthless,” she said. …Mike Harris, the minister of natural resources said, “We’re currently evaluating all options when it comes to AV Terrace Bay,” he replied. “We’re going to continue to work with stakeholders and make sure that we do the right thing by Northern Ontario.” …The company suspended production in January 2024.

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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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No injuries in morning fire at BiOrigin Specialty Products paper factory in St. Catharines

CHCH-TV
November 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ST. CATHARINES, Ontario — Fire crews in St. Catharines battled an early morning blaze Thursday at a tissue and paper company in St. Catharines. Emergency services arrived shortly before 1 a.m. to close roads at BiOrigin Specialty Products on Merritt Street near Maplecrest Avenue. Aerial trucks were used to fight the fire, including on the rooftop area, that police say started in a paper machine when particles overheated and ignited. Crews worked against high winds for several hours to put it out. Niagara police say that the fire is not considered suspicious and no injuries were reported. Roads in the area have reopened and a few fire trucks remain at the scene. The estimated cost of damages to the building and its interior is not yet known. [END]

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Unifor Submission to Bill 46 Protect Ontario by Cutting Red Tape Act

By Samia Hashi, Ontario Regional Director, Unifor
Unifor Canada
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

I am writing regarding Bill 46, Protect Ontario by Cutting Red Tape Act, 2025, specifically regarding proposed amendments to the Crown Forest Sustainability Act, 1994. Unifor’s 24,000 forestry sector members – including more than 4,000 in Ontario – work in a variety of forestry, logging, and firefighting occupations as well as wood product, bioenergy and pulp and paper manufacturing facilities. Ontario’s forestry sector continues to experience a perfect storm of repeated and intersecting crises… and global challenges continues to destabilize the broader sector. The ongoing softwood lumber dispute and … intensified trade war are causing disastrous repercussions across the forestry sector. …Defending and rebuilding Canada’s forestry sector requires a comprehensive industrial strategy, spearheaded by the federal and provincial governments and informed by all relevant stakeholders, especially workers. It is in this context that I wish to provide some comments on Bill 46, Protect Ontario by Cutting Red Tape Act, 2025, especially regarding related amendments to the Crown Forest Sustainability Act, 1994 (CFSA).

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New Brunswick woodlot owner says current tariff situation not sustainable for forestry industry

By Laura Brown
CTV News
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Private woodlot owner Andrew Clark says this year is one of the toughest he’s seen in the six decades he’s worked in the woods. For him, sales are ‘maybe 50 per cent’ of what they were last year. “It is the lack of markets which are the result of the tremendous uncertainty that the industry is in now because of the actions of the American government,” he said. He feels some of the federal government’s new supports – announced this week – could help. Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Wednesday a $500-million increase to the previously announced Softwood Lumber Development Program, which gives companies access to government-backed loans, totaling $1.2 billion. He also said Ottawa is working with railway companies to cut freight rates when transporting Canadian lumber across the country by 50 per cent. But Clark says the current situation – with the U.S. duties and tariffs amounting to 45 per cent – isn’t sustainable.

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Minister says bid on Northern Pulp lands about supporting forestry sector

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
November 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kim Masland

Nova Scotia government officials will know if they’re the successful bidder for the Northern Pulp timberlands following an auction Friday, but it will be a few weeks before the result is publicly known. “This is a very confidential process,” Natural Resources Minister Kim Masland said. …The auction is part of the creditor protection process Northern Pulp has been moving through. Nova Scotia is bidding on the company’s 162,000 hectares of timberlands and a nursery and seed orchard in Debert. “This has economic benefit and certainly we want to add that to our Crown land,” said Masland. …Premier Tim Houston said he has no issue with Macer but it “wasn’t the assessment of the province” that Macer’s initial bid “should win the day.” …Masland said her government is committed to supporting the forestry industry, and trying to buy the Northern Pulp timberlands is one way to do that.

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Lumber supports won’t ‘make any difference,’ New Brunswick industry insider says

By Anna Mandin & Rebecca Lau
Global News
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Susan Holt

New Brunswick’s forestry industry is feeling the pain of US tariffs and the difficult economic environment, leading stakeholders to say Ottawa’s $500 million in support isn’t enough. …The loan guarantee will “ensure that companies have the financing and the credit support that they need to maintain and restructure their operations during this period of transformation,” Carney said. …Kimberly Jensen, Carleton-Victoria Forest Products Marketing Board manager, says the federal government’s latest move won’t be enough to help New Brunswick’s struggling industries. “When you spread that (financial support) across the 10 provinces and the territories, it’s not going to go very far.” …The president of the New Brunswick Federation of Woodlot Owners says the current economic climate is “total chaos.” …New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt said, “These are companies that are losing business, that are losing clients, and we need to get them the competitive dollars,” she said.

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Shockwaves felt in N.B. forestry sector as Maine mill halts Canadian imports

By Aidan Cox
CBC News
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

A 10 per cent tariff that U.S. President Donald Trump slapped on timber imports this fall has prompted at least one mill in Maine to suspend shipments from New Brunswick, sending shockwaves through parts of the province’s forestry industry. Woodland Pulp LLC halted its purchases of New Brunswick timber starting Oct. 14, in light of the new tariff on softwood and certain hardwood timber, said company spokesperson Scott Beal. “It certainly adds cost to the business and, you know, like other wood users, I mean we’re always looking and hoping and trying to source fibre at the least cost,” Beal said. Beal said the company’s purchase of wood had already been reduced in recent months due to a downturn in the global pulp market. That downturn more recently prompted the company to pause receiving wood for 60 days, in addition to a planned 26-day long suspension of operations at its Baileyville, Me., which started over the weekend.

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The Boreal Springboard initiative aims to help Northwestern Ontario’s forestry industry diversify products — and markets

By Graham Strong
Northern Ontario Business
November 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

A new initiative called The Boreal Springboard launched in Thunder Bay in October 2025 to help Northwestern Ontario’s forestry sector weather current economic challenges and spark new economic growth. Graham Bracken, The Boreal Springboard project co-ordinator, said that several partners had already been developing the framework. The recent economic difficulties resulting from the Canada – U.S. trade war made launching the initiative more urgent. “Everyone’s minds were focused by the recent tariff threats,” Bracken said. “It’s a good time to increase investment into the sector and also build out some innovation of new value-added products, and try to diversify our markets.” Partners include the Northwestern Ontario Innovation Centre (NOIC), the Thunder Bay Community Economic Development Commission (CEDC), the Centre for Research and Innovation in the Bio-Economy (CRIBE), Lakehead University, and Confederation College along with industry players.

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‘Cultural break’: U.S. senators say relations with Canadian neighbours are suffering

By Michael MacDonald
CBC News
November 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East, United States

Angus King

The tariffs imposed on Canada by US President Trump have clearly caused economic pain for Canada, but a US senator from Maine says he’s more worried about how Canadians are reacting on a personal level. “Like any neighbours, there’s always going to be issues back and forth, and we’ve been fighting about softwood lumber for as long as I could remember,” Angus King told an international security conference in Halifax on Saturday. “But the deeper problem is the cultural break; the idea that Canadians don’t think of Americans as their friends and neighbours, but as adversaries.” The annual Halifax International Security Forum that opened Friday has attracted more than 300 delegates from around the world, including politicians, academics, government officials, military leaders and non-government organizations. …King said the lingering rift between Canadians and Americans is particularly troubling in a state that borders on New Brunswick and Quebec.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

PCL-Built Limberlost Place Named Global Best Project of the Year

By PCL Construction
Cision Newswire
December 18, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

EDMONTON, AB – Celebrated for its pioneering mass timber design and construction, commitment to safety and collaborative excellence, Limberlost Place has been named the Global Best Project of the Year by Engineering News-Record (ENR). In addition to PCL Construction and partners taking home the top honour, PCL was also awarded ENR’s Global Best Projects Award for Limberlost Place in the Education/Research category. …Ontario’s first institutional building of its kind, George Brown Polytechnic’s Limberlost Place has set a new precedent for mass timber construction as a model for sustainable, green building innovation. Located in Toronto, Ontario, the 10-story mass timber, net-zero educational facility integrates first-of-its-kind solutions including: Groundbreaking slab band structural system that advances the use of mass timber in multi-storey buildings; North America’s largest mass timber columns soaring three stories tall; and a striking mass timber feature stair, spanning levels three to five as a centerpiece of architectural design.

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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.

Related coverage:

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Sawing through 30-year journey

By David Parsons
The Chronicle Journal
November 21, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

Thirty years ago, a trio of dedicated local artisans, including Larry Watson, Lou Mazerolle and Vic Germaniuk, held a press conference in the basement of the local McDonald’s to announce the formation of the Superior Woodworkers Association. It was later changed to SAW — Superior Association of Woodworkers, where they would pool their resources and with which they hoped to carve out recognition for locally made wood designs and possibly develop a local woodworking trade show. Last month, at St. Michael’s Church in Thunder Bay, the 30th anniversary meeting was held with 20-plus members in attendance and, happy to say, the three founding members. Each of the three described the 30-year journey, projects worked on, and answered questions on a wide variety of topics from the other members. Thunder Bay is lucky to have the continued dedication of these three individuals and the current members of SAW expressed their gratitude.

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Forestry

This unique forest is being considered for protection — yet Quebec has OK’d roadwork

By Aatefeh Padidar
CBC News
December 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

QUEBEC — A rare old-growth forest in Quebec’s Mauricie region is at the centre of a growing conflict between conservation advocates and the provincial government, after forestry roadwork was authorized in an area currently under review for protected status. The forest, known as the Grandbois Lakes forest, is located near Sainte-Thècle, in the Mékinac Regional County Municipality, northeast of Shawinigan. Composed largely of red spruce trees, the ecosystem is considered one of the last intact forests of its kind in southern Quebec. Despite its ecological value, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forests has approved the construction of a winter road through part of the forest — a step that could lead to logging in the coming months. The roadwork is slated to be carried out by the forestry company Forex Langlois. …Environmental groups and local residents gathered to oppose what they say is a threat to an irreplaceable ecosystem.

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354-year-old forest found in Algonquin Park

By Sadeen Mohsen
The Toronto Star
December 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — Researchers have discovered old-growth forests nestled within Algonquin Park that have been thriving for more than 350 years, sheltering some of the oldest trees in the area. And by 2031, they could be cut down, according to a new report by the Algonquin Park Old-Growth Forest Project. …At Algonquin Park, 65% of the land is designated for “commercial logging,” according to the Wilderness Committee. “What it comes down to is it’s one of the last chunks of pristine forest,” he said. “They’re going to selectively log it and it will never be the same again.” …As part of the province’s Forest Management Planning process, old-growth was “of special consideration during the planning process” and the plan also considers other “forest values”, said Tracey Bradley, general manager at the Algonquin Forestry Authority. …“Only one per cent of the Park area is impacted by harvesting activities in any given year.”

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Federation of Northern Ontario Municipalities calls for continued provincial partnership for forestry sector

By Richard Coffin
My NorthBay Now
December 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The Federation of Northern Ontario Municipalities (FONOM) is thinking long-term as it calls for a renewed provincial partnership to help sustain the forestry industry. “When Ontario invests in the North, the entire province benefits,” says Dave Plourde, FONOM President and Mayor of Kapuskasing. “We are asking the government to build on the progress already made by continuing to work with communities, industry, and workers to secure long-term solutions that will keep Northern Ontario strong.” FONOM says Northern Ontario municipalities are facing mounting pressures as global market shifts, aging infrastructure, and rising operating costs challenge the forestry sector.

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Province, feds funding wildfire planning for 50 New Brunswick communities

By Ian Curran
CBC News
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Michael Boyle

The federal and provincial governments are providing 50 New Brunswick communities with a combined $2.6 million for wildfire planning. According to the Department of Natural Resources, there have been 448 wildfires in 2025, burning over 3,412 hectares of New Brunswick’s forests. This is almost double the 281 wildfires that were recorded in 2024. “I think in New Brunswick and the Maritimes, we’ve sometimes not thought that wildfires were much of an issue,” said Kennebecasis Valley Fire Chief Mike Boyle. “It’s obvious that it’s something that we need to be aware of and a concern for us.” Boyle said his community is one of the 50 that have been selected to receive some of the funding. It will go towards allowing fire departments to hire consultants who will help create or update wildfire preparedness plans.

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Standing dead … the hidden risk of ash trees across region

By Monika Rekola
Orillia Matters
December 14, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©NRCan

What used to be a healthy ash forest now stands as a thin, brittle skeleton along Tay Shore Trail. Last winter’s ice storm didn’t just knock out power across southern Ontario, it uncovered a serious hazard: thousands of tall, brittle, and bone-dead ash trees, silent casualties of the emerald ash borer (EAB). Ash forests once stretched across Ontario floodplains, including pockets of Simcoe County. They filtered groundwater, stabilized riverbanks, and sheltered entire ecological communities. Indigenous peoples relied on ash for basket-making; farmers used it for tool handles; athletes swung ash baseball bats. To lose them so fast — in a single generation — is heartbreaking. Simcoe County is now fully infested. And we are entering the phase where the last remaining dead trunks are collapsing.

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Over 200 Natural Resources Canada employees face job loss amid lack of transparent communication from Ottawa

By Keira Miller
98 Cool FM
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Over 200 employees at Natural Resources Canada have been informed that their positions either have been, or will be, cut in the near future. Mark Grimson is Union of Canadian Transportation Employees’ Regional Vice President for the Prairies & the North. He says last week, about 100 employees at Natural Resources Canada were told that their positions had been cut, and notices were sent out to over 100 more, warning that they could face the same fate. He says the cut workers were responsible for tasks such as forest fire tracking, flood tracking, and identification of other environmental risks. Although these are important jobs in an everchanging climate, Grimson says what’s more disturbing is the human impact these job cuts have had. …Most of the information being received comes in the form of public news releases, not personal addresses. Grimson says it would be nice to hear directly from the federal government.  

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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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New Brunswick researchers find lichen species in most eastern place on record

By Oliver Pearson
CBC News
November 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Researchers with the Nature Trust of New Brunswick are on the hunt for four different types of lichens and they’ve found one – in an unusual spot. The scaly fringe lichen, known scientifically as heterodermia squamulosa, was found between Alma and Riverside-Albert, east of Fundy National Park. “As far as I know, it’s the most eastern recorded occurrence of the species to date,” said Ilana Urquhart, a conservation coordinator with the Nature Trust. …Urquhart said lichens can be a good indicator of a healthy environment that can support a variety of species. “We might not directly see what the importance of them is, but they’re often found in areas that are really rich, that are biodiverse.” The biggest threat to lichens is habitat loss, according to Urquhart, which can be caused by logging and harvesting.

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Owners of popular Christmas tree farm win coveted White Pine Award

By the Huronia Woodland Owners Association
Orillia Matters
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Andrew & Doug Drysdale

The Huronia Woodland Owners Association awarded its White Pine Award last week to the Doug Drysdale Jr. family for their long-term commitment to sustainable forestry and maintaining healthy and productive woodlots. Accepting the award were Doug Drysdale Jr. and his son, Andrew. The Drysdales are the 45th recipients of this award, which is bestowed annually to a person or group that displays remarkable care and promotion of a healthy forest. Interestingly, Reg Drysdale, grandfather of Doug Drysdale Jr., was the second recipient of this award back in 1982. Since 1945, the Drysdale family has operated Christmas tree farms throughout Simcoe County. They were the first to introduce the concept of “cut your own,” and the trend caught on rapidly. Andrew is the fourth generation to operate this well-known enterprise, which has grown to include a retail shop, wedding venue and nursery for landscape trees.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Ontario Investing $2.2 Million to Unlock New Markets for Forest Biocoal

By Ministry of Natural Resources
Government of Ontario
December 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

THOROLD, Ontario — The Ontario government is investing $2.25 million through the Forest Biomass Program to help CHAR Technologies commercialize biocoal, a rapidly emerging low-carbon fuel derived from forest mill by-products and underused wood. This work will develop a new supply chain for made-in-Ontario forest products, create new revenue streams to drive growth in forestry and empower heavy industries to adopt sustainable fuels. …Kevin Holland, Associate Minister of Forestry and Forest Products said “We are ready to lead and establish Ontario as a global leader in biocoal.” This Forest Biomass Program investment will help CHAR Technologies improve biocoal’s storage and transport durability, needed for use in steelmaking at ArcelorMittal Dofasco. This project will support six existing jobs, create four new jobs and build a more productive and diversified forest sector by putting up to 180,000 tonnes of forest biomass to use each year. 

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Biomass heating system among federal funding recipients

Northern Ontario Business
December 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada East

Federal funding of nearly $460,000 will enable Bingwi Neyaashi Anishinaabek to move forward with the installation of a district biomass heating system in the community. The project is one of 10 being supported with $4.8 million from FedNor’s Northern Ontario Development Program, announced Dec. 5. Bingwi Neyaashi Anishinaabek — also known as Sand Point First Nation — has been working on its district biomass heating project for well over a decade. The system will be fed with wood residue generated from the community’s sawmill, and the resulting energy will heat residential, commercial and institutional buildings. Excess materials are expected to be sold to neighbouring communities pursuing their own district heating projects. …See the FedNor site for the full list of projects and their allotments.

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Toronto’s climate action plan is missing a major tool to lower emissions, experts say

By Tyler Cheese
CBC News
November 30, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — Environmental experts are calling out the City of Toronto for not including a what they say is a key climate tool in its five-year climate action plan. The Toronto Environmental Alliance is highlighting the lack of building emission performance standards (BEPS) in the plan. BEPS are regulations that set emission limits for new and existing buildings. How-Sen Chong, TEA’s climate campaigner,  such standards are one of the most significant policy tools as they would help the city cut emissions more efficiently. …Bryan Purcell, at the Atmospheric Fund, said,  “Buildings are the largest source of GHG emissions in Toronto, accounting for over half of the emissions,” he said. “Reducing emissions from buildings is absolutely key to reaching the city’s climate targets.” …Chong “we’re hoping city council recognizes how important this is because so much of the city’s emissions are coming from the building sector,” he said.

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Prince Edward Island’s $170M waste processing facility a North American energy marvel

By Grant Cameron
The Daily Commercial News
November 24, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada East

A design team of more than 100 engineers and personnel is putting the finishing touches on plans for a new, $170-million waste processing facility on Prince Edward Island that will convert municipal solid waste and scrap wood into power for the province’s district energy network. The facility will be capable of processing 90 per cent of the province’s total black cart residential waste, diverting up to 49,000 tonnes of solid waste from going to the landfill annually. Energy from the plant and an attached wood biomass facility will provide power to connected customers. It’s an approach that has not yet been taken by any other energy-from-waste facilities in North America, with most incorporating either turbines or small hot water heating systems. …Using solid waste instead of sending it to landfill will lead to a savings of up to 908,000 tonnes of CO2 by 2052.

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Health & Safety

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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