Region Archives: Canada East

Special Feature

Forest bioenergy: Ontario’s low-carbon solution for soaring energy needs

By Ian Dunn, CEO, Ontario Forest Industries Association
Northern Ontario Business
October 22, 2024
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ian Dunn

Canadians are reminded of the enormous and sometimes devastating power when our forests ignite into wildfires. Ontario’s forest sector has used this power to reduce reliance on carbon-emitting fossil fuels and lower costs. For decades, biomass has been used to heat kilns that dry lumber. Biomass is used to create steam that drives turbines to produce electricity both on the mill site and to local grids, supporting circular economies. …On Oct. 16, Ontario’s Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO) revised its forecast for electricity demand, saying demand is expected to soar 75% by 2050. Currently… Forest biomass contributes only 0.3%. …The forest sector has a made-in-Ontario, low-carbon, drop-in replacement for each of these emitting fuels, including biochar, syngas, renewable natural gas, green hydrogen, biocrude, biodiesel, renewable diesel, and sustainable aviation fuels.

Successful management of Ontario’s 28 million hectares of managed productive forest and the carbon emissions from wildfires are tied directly to the success of the forest industry. Advancing forest bioenergy projects will help create a circular economy, improve waste diversion, provide Ontario-made solid wood products for housing needs, reduce carbon emissions in the heavy industry, heating, and transportation sectors, and stimulate economic growth and prosperity across all areas of Ontario. By setting targets and prioritizing forest bioenergy projects, Ontario can not only enhance the sustainability of its forest resources but also pave the way for a resilient and prosperous future for its communities and the environment.

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Business & Politics

Trump tariffs could lead to Quebec sawmills closing, forestry industry fears

CBC News
November 14, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Quebec forestry companies say they’re worried former U.S. president Donald Trump’s re-election will lead to more plants in the province closing. The president-elect promised a 10 per cent tariff on all imports, including Canadian softwood lumber. The threat has made many Canadian forestry companies, which are already struggling, fear the worst. …Étienne Vézina, Domtar senior director of forestry, said the current tariffs are already leading to some sawmills and plants in Quebec closing. …Maïté Blanchette Vézina, Quebec’s natural resources minister, has tried to reassure the local industry. …”We managed to work with Trump’s team in 2016, and I am convinced that we will continue to find ways for Quebec to come out on top.” The Quebec Forestry Industry Council (QFIC) estimates that $2 billion belonging to companies is stuck at customs because of U.S. tariffs. They want to recover the money, but in the meantime, they say they want loans from Quebec.

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Holland: ready to take on Trump’s lumber tariffs

By Clint Fleury
Northwest Ontario Newswatch
November 14, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kevin Holland

THUNDER BAY, Ontario — Softwood lumber tariff increases would present a challenge for Ontario’s forestry industry, but Thunder Bay–Atikokan MPP Kevin Holland said he’s ready to meet that challenge. On the campaign trail, U.S. president-elect Donald Trump promised to crack down on foreign trade. …“Ontario will have a role in meeting with our partners across Canada and the Federal government in developing that strategy as to how we can really impress upon them the importance of the forestry sector, not just to us but to their to their country as well,” Holland continued. …He said his new role as the associate minister gives him an opportunity to show that Northwestern Ontario is an economic competitor on the global stage. “Forestry has been the cornerstone of our economy for generations and I honestly believe that it’s going to be the cornerstone of our economy moving forward,” Holland said.

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Quebec forest producers demand fair competition and compensation

The Sherbrooke Record
November 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Fédération des producteurs forestiers du Québec (FPFQ) and the Union des producteurs agricoles (UPA) are calling for immediate action and fair compensation for Quebec’s forest producers, who are struggling against public forest competition and an ongoing lumber dispute with the U.S. The FPFQ’S president, Gaétan Boudreault, highlighted the unfair market conditions: “Several mills are halting operations due to weakened demand. Meanwhile, the Quebec government continues to allocate substantial volumes of public forest wood at low fees and subsidizes its harvest. This saturates the market, driving down prices and forcing mills to prioritize cheaper public wood, impacting private producers’ income.” UPA president Martin Caron argued that private producers are unfairly caught in the softwood lumber conflict. …The FPFQ and UPA urge Quebec’s Minister of Natural Resources, Maïté Blanchette Vézina, to strengthen residual supply principles, requiring mills to source from private forests before accessing public wood.

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Fire destroys cedar mill near Woodstock, New Brunswick

By Jim Dumville
The River Valley News
November 1, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

BELLVILLE, New Brunswick — A late afternoon fire raced through a wood mill operation near Woodstock Thursday afternoon, Oct. 31, destroying buildings, equipment and one vehicle. Woodstock Fire Department Chief Harold McLellan said his department responded at 3:29 p.m. at the lumber yard in Belleville, N.B., just west of Woodstock. He said the mill is owned and operated by Hugo Filion. …While the mill operators had water on hand and kept sawdust and other debris removed from the operation, they could not keep the blaze from spreading quickly. …McLellan said there were no injuries reported. …The fire spread from the mill structure to surrounding log piles. Mill crews used their equipment to move and relocate logs. The firefighters suppressed the fire before it reached cellophane-wrapped lumber nearby.

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Labour dispute at the Port of Montreal: Viau and Maisonneuve terminals shut down

By Montreal Port Authority
Cision Newswire
October 31, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTREAL – Yesterday morning an indefinite strike began at the Viau and Maisonneuve terminals, in accordance with the strike notice filed by CUPE Local 375, the longshore workers’ union. As a result, these two Termont-operated terminals are closed, and no rail, truck or ship services will be provided. With 40% of total container handling capacity paralyzed by this work stoppage, and ships and trains already obliged to choose other routes, the Montreal Port Authority (MPA) expresses its deep concern about the negative repercussions of this work stoppage. All the other Port of Montreal terminals remain operational. …We are all aware of how crucial operations at the Port of Montreal are, and the vital role they play not only for Quebec, but also for the rest of Canada. The need to reach an agreement quickly is acute and cannot be ignored,” said Julie Gascon, CEO of the Port of Montreal.

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Cascades combines its containerboard and specialty products, appoints Jean-David Tardif Executive VP, Packaging

Cascades Inc.
October 30, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jean-David Tardif

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades announced organizational changes which will take effect on November 11. These changes will combine its containerboard and specialty products (SPG) activities into a single operational unit. …Mr. Jean-David Tardif, currently President and Chief Operating Officer of the Tissue group, has been appointed to the position of Executive VP, Packaging. …Mr. Charles Malo, current President and COO of the Containerboard Packaging segment recently informed the Company that he wished to hand over the reins. He will be supporting Mr. Tardif throughout this transition. …The Company also announces that Jérôme Porlier has been appointed to the position of Executive VP, Tissue. Mr. Porlier is currently President and COO of the Specialty Products group. Lastly, the Company announces the appointment of Emmanuelle Migneault to the position of VP, Excellence. 

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Finance & Economics

GreenFirst reports Q3, 2024 net income of $8.8 million

GreenFirst Forest Products Inc.
November 12, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO, Ontario — GreenFirst Forest Products announced results for the third quarter ended September 28, 2024. Highlights include: Q3 2024 net income from continuing operations was $14.8 million, compared to net loss of $9.9 million in Q2 2024. Adjusted EBITDA for Q3 2024 was positive $15.7 million compared to negative $6.1 million in Q2 2024. Lumber had a negative contribution to Q3 2024 as a result of weak market conditions. Average realized lumber prices of $614/mfbm for Q3 2024 were also lower than the $637/mfbm pricing realized in Q2 2024. …“We remain cautious in the short term, and the Company will continue to focus on tightly managing its costs and liquidity. Finally, as previously announced, GreenFirst will continue its strategy of selling non-core assets.” said Joel Fournier, Chief Executive Officer of GreenFirst.

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Cascades reports Q3, 2024 net earnings of $27 million

Cascades Inc.
November 7, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades reports its unaudited financial results for the three-month period ended September 30, 2024. Q3 2024 Highlights include: Sales of $1,201 million (compared with $1,180 million in Q2 2024 and $1,198 million in Q3 2023); and net earnings of $27 million (compared to $8 million in Q2 2024 and $45 million in Q3 2023). …Hugues Simon, President and CEO, commented: “Sequentially stronger results were driven by our Containerboard business, where higher average selling prices and lower production expenses offset the impact of higher raw material costs. …Tissue Papers results were lower than the previous quarter due to higher average raw material costs and lower pricing.”

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Stella-Jones reports Q3,2024 net income of $80 million

Stella-Jones Inc.
November 6, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTREAL, Quebec – Stella-Jones announced financial results for its third quarter ended September 30, 2024. Sales in the third quarter were $915 million, compared to sales of $949 million for the corresponding period last year. Excluding the positive effect of currency conversion, sales were down $44 million, or 5%. Net income for the third quarter was $80 million, compared to net income of $110 million in Q3, 2023. “Despite strong long-term demand tailwinds, we witnessed a slower pace of purchases by our utility customers. Though total sales were lower than anticipated, we delivered a solid quarter EBITDA margin of 17.7% and strong operating cashflows,” said Eric Vachon, President and CEO. …“Utilities continue to forecast meaningful increases in infrastructure investments, evidenced by the longer-term sales contracts secured from new and existing customers.”

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Acadian Timber reports Q3, 2024 net income of $2.2 million

By Acadian Timber Corp.
The Ottawa Citizen
October 31, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

EDMUNDSTON, New Brunswick — Acadian Timber reported financial and operating results for the three months ended September 28, 2024. Acadian generated sales of $26.0 million in the third quarter, compared to $26.6 million in the prior year period. Increased sales volumes from our freehold land were offset by a lower weighted average selling price and lower timber services activity. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $4.0 million, compared to $4.9 million in the same period of 2023. Acadian generated $2.5 million of Free Cash Flow during the quarter, compared to $4.3 million in the third quarter of 2023, and declared dividends of $5.1 million.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Creating sustainable housing solutions

By Solange Richer de Lefleche
Dalhousie University
November 8, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Canada is currently confronting a national housing crisis, which presents a unique set of social, economic and environmental issues to be considered. With a new federal housing plan in place, the work to find solutions is even more pressing. Dr. Susan Fitzgerald, associate professor in the School of Architecture is leading the Mass Timber Project, which focuses on creating a prefabricated modular housing prototype using mass timber – an engineered wood known for its durability and comparative sustainability. Dr. Fitzgerald’s project is investigating the potential of this building material to provide a scalable, rapidly deployable solution to the housing crisis. Definity Financial Corporation – a leading Canadian property and casualty insurance company – has identified mass timber as a potential solution. In Spring 2024, they committed $300,000 in support of the Mass Timber Project as part of a broader mission to address housing challenges through sustainable practices.

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George Brown hosts successful national WoodWorks Summit, attracting government reps and industry leaders

Education News Canada
November 6, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Industry leaders, government officials and many others attended the 2024 WoodWorks Summit at George Brown College’s Waterfront Campus to connect and learn from innovators and trailblazers in wood construction. The event was co-hosted by the Canadian Wood Council and George Brown College’s Brookfield Sustainability Institute, as part of their multi-year strategic partnership.The summit ran October 21 – 25, where speakers explored new and innovative ways of city-building and industry transformation to mitigate the effects of climate change. George Brown’s Associate Vice-President of Research and Innovation Dr. Krista Holmes set the tone, showcasing the college’s construction and sustainability projects. “The WoodWorks Summit provided an incredible opportunity for us to connect with and learn from other sustainable design and construction leaders around the world,” Holmes said. “And as host, George Brown College demonstrated how we advance research and, innovation, engaging with partners to explore new ideas and make and test new products and services.”

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Toronto is getting a generation of stunning new buildings made entirely out of wood

By Jack Landau
BigTO
November 5, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Toronto’s towering structures of steel and concrete are getting some new company in an old-fashioned building medium reborn in an innovative new form. …Unlike the untreated wood of yesteryear, modern wood construction uses a treated form of the material known as mass timber, which uses several layers of wood bonded together and laminated to create structural elements with load-bearing and fire resistance ratings that far exceed the performance of standard wood. Recent changes to the Ontario Building Code have allowed developers to utilize this innovative building medium to push the boundaries of sustainable construction, resulting in a wave of new large-scale wood-framed structures in Toronto. A pair of mass-timber buildings now stand as showpieces in one of Toronto’s newest neighbourhoods, and is just an appetizer for even more ambitious wood towers in the pipeline.

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Sustainable housing solutions by design

University of Waterloo
October 23, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Researchers at the University of Waterloo have created modular homes with an innovative new design that allows structures to be more easily relocated, reassembled and reconfigured in urban or remote areas. The Structural Timber and Applied Research Team (START), uses cross-laminated timber (CLT) and a wall-to-floor connection with few bolts needed in each connection. Unlike traditional fasteners, the novel connector plate was intentionally designed for ease of disassembly and reassembly, ideal for multiple reuses and relocations. The demand for flexible housing options … is spurring inventive solutions that can expedite the deployment of safe, sustainable and affordable homes. The ability to reuse walls and other parts means fewer materials end up in landfills. The lightweight and durable CLT is ideal for modular housing in remote areas with limited road access. The system is conceived to be transported in a flat pack arrangement and be assembled using little to no heavy equipment.

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Forestry

Forestry sector capable of thriving again: MPP

By Sandi Krasowski
The Chronicle Journal
November 14, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kevin Holland

MPP Kevin Holland presented a picture of Northwestern Ontario’s economic direction during the Thunder Bay Chamber of Commerce Leader’s Luncheon on Wednesday. Recently appointed as associate minister for forestry and forest products, Holland said forestry has been the “cornerstone of our economy for generations” and will continue to be. “The question is how we can incorporate and work the synergies between the mining boom that we’re expecting here, and forestry, which is one area that we can capitalize on,” he said. “But it’s really about making sure that the industry is in a position to have that sustainability and that viability. We all know that there are some challenges in the forestry sector right now, but with every challenge comes an opportunity.” …”Though, biomass energy is currently the buzzword on everyone’s mind, let’s not forget about the traditional uses of wood — lumber, structural panels, newsprint, pulp and paper, tissue and packaging,” he said.

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Protecting nature along the Bruce Trail to help fight climate change and reverse biodiversity loss

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
Government of Canada
November 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Government of Canada announced an additional $2.4 million in funding to the Bruce Trail Conservancy through the Nature Smart Climate Solutions Fund. This is part of the Government of Canada’s largest conservation campaign in the country to meet its emissions reduction targets and protect 30 percent of land and water in Canada by 2030. This funding is in addition to a $5 million investment through the Nature Smart Climate Solutions Fund, awarded to the Bruce Trail Conservancy in 2022. The funding will be used to help advance conservation goals with urgent Niagara Escarpment land securement. This additional funding advances conservation of over 300 hectares of important habitat and contributes to capturing and storing greenhouse gas emissions by securing carbon-rich forest, wetland, and grassland ecosystems within the Niagara Escarpment. …It will also improve the connectivity of the iconic Bruce Trail and expand recreational opportunities across all seasons for activities such as nature appreciation, hiking, birdwatching, snowshoeing, and more.

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Beetles from B.C. settling in Nova Scotia, taking up the fight to rescue hemlocks

Canadian Press in CTV News Atlantic
November 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

FREDERICTON – 5,000 Laricobius nigrinus beetles imported from British Columbia are ready to combat an invasive insect that is killing hemlock trees in Nova Scotia. Lucas Roscoe, research scientist with the Canadian Forest Service, said that in the fight against the invasive woolly adelgid that is destroying swaths of hemlock trees in Nova Scotia, the first step was to make sure the beetle — called Lari by scientists — could survive a Nova Scotia winter. They were released across six sites in Nova Scotia and Roscoe, along with other scientists, waited to see if the tiny black flying predators would live. …The scientists also visited the six sites this October, a year after the first releases, and found the beetles had reproduced, he said. …The next step for scientists is to evaluate whether the beetles have been able to destroy the woolly adelgid in the hemlock trees in those six sites, Roscoe said.

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Government is disrespecting forest firefighters, Vaugeois says

By Mike Stimpson
Fort Frances Times
November 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

People risk their lives battling forest fires, but Ontario’s government is treating them unfairly. That’s the message Thunder Bay-Superior North MPP Lise Vaugeois and others brought to a news conference Wednesday at Queen’s Park. Wildland firefighters are not getting the “supports and respect” they deserve, said Vaugeois, who is the New Democrat critic for the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB). In particular, firefighter Noah Freedman said, recent legislation regarding WSIB coverage for workplace-related cancer “came with a glaring condition” requiring wildland firefighters to serve for 30 years before they could qualify. The law requires 15 years of service, but each annual fire season counts as only half a year, so a person battling forest blazes does not qualify until 30 fire seasons. Freedman, vice-president of OPSEU Local 703, said he and his colleagues are “risking our lives not only in the moment but forever” when they fight fires, because of airborne carcinogens.

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Forester leaves city due to ‘mismanagement’

By Clint Fleury
TB Newswatch
November 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

THUNDER BAY — The city is failing to manage its urban forests, says urban forester Dan Corbett. …There were several instances, he said, in which the city either outright refused to implement the strategy or implemented it ineffectively. …Corbett said, “I created a plan to remove 700 trees per year in a certain order over the next six years to meet the 2030 target that’s identified in the emerald ash borer strategy.” …Corbett alleges that the city conducted the work piecemeal and did not include stump removal in its tree removal contracts. Now he says there are over 3,000 stumps that are past due for removal and the number continues to grow. …Kayla Dixon, Commissioner of Infrastructure & Operations told Newswatch in a statement that “the City of Thunder Bay does not respond to public statements made by former employees.”

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KBM Forestry Consultants Inc. receives Northern Ontario Heritage Fund Corporation funding for hanger expansion

By Clint Fleury
Thunder Bay News Watch
November 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

THUNDER BAY — A local company has expanded its hangar at the Thunder Bay airport, with a big helping hand from the province. KBM Forestry Consultants Inc. received $340,764 from the Northern Ontario Heritage Fund Corporation (NOHFC) back in May. Ian Gillies, Principal Aviation at KBM Forestry Consultants Inc, told Newswatch the new 6,400 square foot expansion allows additional room to house their aircraft. “With aircraft, its dimensions are pretty key to making sure you’ve got a big enough door. It’s like your garage at home, you never quite build it big enough,” Gillies said. Thunder Bay-Atikokan MPP Kevin Holland was at the hangar on Tuesday to announce the funding. “KBM provides valuable resources or services to our natural resources industry,” said Holland, “which of course, is the cornerstone of the economy here in Northwestern Ontario.”

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Government of Canada and Memorial University Announce Funding for New Tree Nursery

By Natural Resources Canada
The Government of Canada
November 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador — Natural Resources Canada announced funding of $295,000 under the 2 Billion Trees (2BT) program for the Memorial University Botanical Garden to establish a tree nursery on its expansive botanical garden, which will support tree planting in the region. With this funding, the Memorial University Botanical Garden will: build a tree nursery producing 500 saplings per year to plant across Newfoundland and Labrador; support future tree-planting projects that increase tree cover and green spaces; act as a hub for outreach, community engagement and hands-on training for students, researchers, Indigenous youth and the public; and create jobs in nursery management, horticulture and arboriculture. Today’s announcement follows the release of an update on the progress of the Government of Canada’s commitment to plant two billion trees, alongside an investment of over $200 million in more than 30 new tree-planting projects that will result in over 160 million new trees across the country.

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Forests Canada: A New Name Dedicated to Diverse, Resilient, Thriving Forests Across Canada

By Matthew Brown
Forests Canada
November 7, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Barrie, Ontario – Since 2007, Forests Ontario has facilitated the planting of 46.5 million trees, enhancing 900,000 hectares of connected forest landscapes through over 8,000 restoration projects across 10 provinces. Now, Forests Ontario is becoming Forests Canada to broaden the scope of its operations, while inspiring collaboration and investment to better conserve, restore and grow forests today and for future generations. “As Forests Canada, we are working to improve biodiversity and the connectivity of forested landscapes, increase much- needed wildlife habitat, fight the effects of climate change, and foster a connection to our forests – all while supporting local economies across Canada,” Jess Kaknevicius, CEO, Forests Canada, says. “We are taking our decades of knowledge and experience creating and supporting diverse, thriving forests in Ontario and applying it on a national scale to achieve the greatest possible outcomes from coast to coast to coast.”

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Impact study questioned by environmental group

By Nelson Sergerie
The Gaspe Spec
November 3, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Environnement vert plus has raised concerns about the credibility of a study that claims the caribou pilot project could result in significant job losses and an economic downturn of $23 million in Haute-Gaspésie… On the forestry aspect, Mr. Bergeron [Spokesperson] emphasizes that the plan to recover 5,000 hectares of forest damaged by a windfall last December is misleading.  “What science tells us is that it is not in our interest to come and disturb a habitat that has been naturally disturbed. When we read what is said about forest fires, we are going to recover the wood, we are affecting the soil, we are creating entry routes for predators… It is not a good idea. This proposal must be studied more rigorously,” believes Mr. Bergeron. 

The response by the Regroupement des MRC de la Gaspésie [who commissioned the study] is available here:
Caribou pilot project: 1,000 jobs at risk in Haute-Gaspésie according to study

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Slower than normal forest fire season in northwestern Ontario wraps up

By Kris Ketonen
CBC News
October 31, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The 2024 Ontario forest fire season officially comes to an end on Thursday. This year saw a total of 479 fires reported province-wide, burning nearly 90,000 hectares of forest. Of those, 218 fires were in the northwest, said Chris Marchand, fire information officer with Aviation, Forest Fire and Emergency Services. “Certainly it falls well below the 10-year average, which is about 694 fires,” Marchand said. “If we look to last year, we finished the season with 741 wildland fires, which impacted 441,000 hectares.” “Consistent and widespread spring rains across the province largely reduced our early spring fire danger,” he said. Fire activity did pick up toward the end of the season, thanks to dry conditions from late August to October, Marchand said. “The most active areas that we saw in Ontario in terms of forest fire activity remain, for the most part, in far northwestern Ontario,” said Geoff Coulson, warning preparedness meteorologist with Environment Canada.

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Canadians Unite In a Fight to Save an Ancient Tree Older Than the Country Itself

By Penelope Wilson
The Hearty Soul
October 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Citizens in Toronto, Ontario, Canada are fighting to save a 300-year-old Northern Red Oak tree from being cut down by the owner of its host property. Homeowner Ali Simaga agreed to a deal with the Toronto City Council to sell the property to the city for conservation purposes. The tree dates back to some of the earliest French explorers who settled in Ontario. Standing at a stunning 79 feet (24 meters), the beautiful piece of history and nature is one of the oldest trees in the city. This special oak bears a powerful sentimental heritage from Canadians – It was an important landmark that safely guided thousands of native travelers. According to historian Madeleine McDowell, the tree’s current location was formerly the Humber Valley trail used by Indigenous Canadians and European traders.

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Fredericton adopts plan for keeping its urban forest healthy

By Sam Farley
CBC News
October 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

After 18 months of work by a consultant, the City of Fredericton can now estimate how many trees it has in its urban core: 19,288. On Monday night, city council adopted a strategy for managing the urban forest on municipal land after commissioning Stantec Consulting in 2022 to come up with a 25-year management plan… “Fredericton is a leader in urban forestry with one of the most impressive and well-managed urban forests in Canada,” the report said… The consultant found that 44 per cent of urban Fredericton has tree canopy cover, while rural areas have almost 70 per cent cover… Stantec recommended increasing annual tree planting to 750 to 1,000 trees.

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Nova Scotia forestry program to fund small logging business

By Dakota Smith
Woodworking Network
October 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

CHESTER, Nova Scotia — Wood products producer Kyle Millett Logging will receive funding from the Nova Scotia Forestry Innovation Transition Trust to increase production capacity, support sustainable forestry practices and reduce local greenhouse gas emissions at its Chester Grant mill. … “Our business has been part of the Chester Grant community for almost 60 years,” says Kyle Millett, owner of Kyle Millett Logging. “We are loyal to local tree harvesters and are proud to sell most of our wood products here in Nova Scotia. This investment in our business will allow us to modernize key aspects of our mill operations.” …The company will receive $500,000 toward a $526,545 project to upgrade power service at the mill. Converting operations to run on electricity instead of generators will increase the mill’s capacity while reducing energy use and emissions.

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A message of hope’: 6 European countries pledge €130 million to protect biodiversity

Euronews
October 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East, International

Green groups say it’s an “okay start” but many more nations need to step up with finance for nature. Six European countries have pledged new money to the world’s foremost biodiversity fund, which gained €200 million yesterday. Austria, Denmark, France, Germany, Norway and the UK announced fresh funding at the UN biodiversity summit, COP16, currently taking place in Colombia. The Global Biodiversity Framework Fund (GBFF) was one of the key outcomes of the Kunming-Montreal Agreement struck at the previous COP15 in 2022. The UK, Germany, Spain and Luxembourg previously contributed to the GBFF after it was launched last year. European countries now make up eight of the fund’s 12 donors, which also include Canada, Japan, New Zealand and – in an unusual show of leadership from a sub-national government – Québec.

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Canada set to lose irreplaceable ‘treasure trove’ of fungi

By Emily Chung
CBC News
October 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Canadians could soon lose access to a unique public collection of fungi that scientists say is crucial for important research, such as developing new drugs to treat antibiotic-resistant pathogens and treatments for fungal diseases emerging in a warmer climate. The public biobank at the UAMH Centre for Global Microfungal Biodiversity at the University of Toronto includes 12,000 strains of fungi collected since 1933, said James Scott, a professor at U of T’s Dalla Lana School of Public Health and director of the centre. “We are really the only biobank in Canada for fungi,” he said. It’s the largest collection of disease-causing fungi in the Western hemisphere, where Canadian researchers from industry, public health labs and colleges and universities can research diseases and their treatments. But it has run out of funding. Unless a government or other funder steps up, the collection will likely be sent overseas. 

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Forestry Trust Funding for Chester Grant Business

By Nova Scotia Forestry Innovation Transition Trust
The Government of Nova Scotia
October 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Wood products producer Kyle Millett Logging will receive funding from the Nova Scotia Forestry Innovation Transition Trust to increase production capacity, support sustainable forestry practices and reduce local greenhouse gas emissions at its Chester Grant mill. Kyle Millett Logging sources all wood from private woodlot owners within a 50-kilometre radius of the mill. The family-run business is committed to supporting local private landowners while finding markets for its commercial and residential milled products at home in Nova Scotia. …By adopting sustainable business practices, Kyle Millet Logging will have an even greater impact on the local economy. The company will receive $500,000 toward a $526,545 project to upgrade power service at the mill. Converting operations to run on electricity instead of generators will increase the mill’s capacity while reducing energy use and emissions.

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At loggerheads over the fate of woodland caribou

By Luis Millán
Canadian Bar Association National
October 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Woodland caribou … are in peril. The North American subspecies of reindeer is also at the center of a heated tussle between Ottawa and Quebec. It’s the third time in three years that the a species at risk has been caught between two government orders, underscoring the strain between federal and provincial jurisdiction in environmental protection. “It’s a shame to see this kind of tension between the provincial and federal governments because everyone agrees that it’s up to the provincial government to put in place sufficient measures to ensure adequate protection of biodiversity,” says Marc Bishai, a lawyer with the Quebec Environmental Law Center in Montreal. The responsibility for managing land and wildlife in Canada is a tangled web of legal jurisdiction shared among the federal government, provinces, territories, municipalities and Indigenous peoples. The provinces and territories have primary responsibility within their borders, subject to Aboriginal rights.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Chapleau looks to heat seven public buildings with wood chips

The Kirkland Lake Northern News
November 8, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

A new partnership could see seven public buildings heated with wood chips. The Chapleau District Heating Project brings together the Township of Chapleau with Commercial BioEnergy Inc., a northern Ontario biomass energy company dedicated to assisting communities in reducing their dependence on fossil fuels. The project will determine the feasibility of constructing a centralized biomass fuelled heating plant to deliver heating to seven public buildings within the community. This will involve converting existing heating sources from propane or electricity to biomass generated heat using locally sourced wood chips. It will be the first such project in North America of this scale, according to the project partners. …A reduction in greenhouse gas emissions of up to 90 per cent for all targeted buildings combined is anticipated.

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Kruger To Implement A Demonstration Project For Carbon Capture And Reuse at it’s Wayagamack Mill

By Kruger Inc
Cision Newswire
November 1, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kruger Inc. announced today a $23.75 million investment in an innovative demonstration project for carbon capture and reuse at its Wayagamack Mill in Trois-Rivières…The promising technology has already proven successful at the laboratory scale and will be tested for the first time in an industrial setting at the Kruger Wayagamack Pulp and Paper Mill. Among its many groundbreaking features is the use of a cutting-edge absorption fluid, molten borate salt, which can withstand extremely high temperatures, up to 600°C. This crucial distinction allows for the direct integration of the capture system into a steam boiler. In addition to being more efficient and cost effective than other carbon capture methods, Mantel’s technology is also energy efficient and sustainable.

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BluSky Carbon Signs Master Services Agreement with Scotia BioChar

By BlueSky Carbon
BlueSky Carbon News
October 25, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

BluSky Carbon Inc., an innovative entry into the carbon removal clean technology sector is pleased to announce it has entered into a master services agreement with Scotia BioChar Inc. pursuant to which Scotia may, from time to time, issue statements of work for provision by the Company of manufacturing equipment and/or professional consulting services relating to the production of biochar. Scotia BioChar is headquartered in Bedford, Nova Scotia, Canada and aims to become a producer of high-quality biochar from waste wood biomass found in central Nova Scotia. Several regional biomass sources are available, including the approximately 20 million tonnes of trees blown down during Hurricane Fiona (2022).

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Health & Safety

Ontario wildland firefighters say new bill offering presumptive cancer care falls short

CBC News
November 6, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

Wildland firefighters say that a new provincial bill extending health coverage for presumptive cancer care does not go far enough after the government rejected adding in language that clarified that one fire season equals one year of service.  “The legislation came with a glaring condition,” Noah Freedman, wildland firefighter crew leader and Ontario Public Service Employees Union local president, said at a news conference at Queen’s Park on Wednesday. “Wildland firefighters have to work over double the number of years as municipal firefighters to qualify for cancer coverage,” he said. “Even though wildland firefighters are exposed to a decade worth of carcinogenic smoke in a single busy fire season, a six-month fire season only counts as a half-year of service under the legislation.” “Therefore, in order to qualify for cancer coverage, which requires 15 years of service, a wildland firefighter would have to work for 30 fire seasons.” 

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Workplace Safety North wins Canada Award for Excellence

Wawa News
October 24, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

Workplace Safety North (WSN), an Ontario health and safety association has received the Canada Award for Excellence from Excellence Canada, a national authority on organizational excellence established by Industry Canada. The award recognizes outstanding achievements by organizations across Canada in different sectors, including private, public, and not-for-profit. WSN was the platinum winner of the Canada Award for Excellence in the Mental Health, based on Excellence Canada’s Mental Health at Work framework. This framework was created with input from experts across Canada and follows national standards for psychological health and safety in the workplace. …WSN provides health and safety advice, training, and consulting services to companies in Ontario’s mining and forest products sectors. With around 80 employees based in North Bay, Sudbury, and other areas across the province, WSN has been working to improve workplace safety in Ontario for nearly 100 years.

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Forest Fires

Forest fire season officially ends, three fires still burning in Northern Ontario

By Elaine Della-Mattia
The Timmins Times
November 4, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

Forest fires across Ontario were relatively low compared to the previous year and the 10-year average, statistics show. The Ministry of Natural Resources Aviation, Forest Fires and Emergency Services division officially calls Oct. 31 the end to their annual wildfire season. In 2024 there were 480 fires reported, well below the 741 fires reported across Ontario in 2023. The 10-year provincial average is 694 fires. Despite the end of the official season, there are still three active fires burning. Sudbury 57 is an active fire that began Oct. 22. It is about five hectares in size and is under observation. Thunder Bay 24 is about 74.5 hectares in size and is not under control. It was reported Oct. 17. Thunder Bay 21 is also an active fire, but currently under control with 41 hectares of forest burning. It began Oct. 3.  

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Forest History & Archives

How Log Chutes Transformed Canada’s Lumber Industry

By Steve Paikin
TVO Today
November 13, 2024
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — The Hawk Lake log chute is a preserved piece of Canada’s past in the Haliburton region. There were hundreds, if not thousands, of chutes like this across the country at the peak of the logging industry. They helped to open the country to resource extraction and settlement, which is why the Township of Algonquin Highlands has rebuilt and preserved this model from the 1860s. But could it, or perhaps, should it, stand for more than just a colonial victory over the natural world? In this episode, we’ll learn how these chutes transformed the lumber industry, but also led to major harms to both the natural world and Indigenous peoples. [YouTube video 10:45 min]

 

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Laurentian University prof and students are writing a book chronicling Tembec Industries

The Sudbury Star
November 10, 2024
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada, Canada East

Two Laurentian students are contributing to not only the research but also the writing of a book about a Northern Ontario pulp and paper company. Professor Mark Kuhlberg is “an award-winning author whose work primarily focuses on Canada’s forest history,” the university said. “For his most recent project that will delve into the compelling history of Tembec Industries, Dr. Kuhlberg is leveraging the support of undergraduate students Sarah Gould and Fiona Symington. Through this unique collaborative opportunity, the students will help tell the story of a company with deep roots in Northern Ontario’s community and industrial heritage.” …The book will chronicle the efforts of Tembec’s workers, who fought against the mill’s closure in the 1970s by forming a unique partnership among workers-turned-entrepreneurs, the local community, and various levels of government. …The book, which is supported by Forest History Ontario and an angel donor is expected to be published late 2026.

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