Region Archives: Canada East

Business & Politics

Future of the Kénogami plant: Unifor reassured by Domtar management

Radio Canada
October 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Unifor union emerged reassured from its meeting last week with Domtar management regarding the survival of the Kénogami paper mill. The mill has been affected by numerous work stoppages for some time. Unifor’s Quebec director, Daniel Cloutier, received confirmation that the company wants to continue producing paper there and that its hydroelectric facilities, which supply power to the region’s mills, are not for sale. We were nevertheless able to be reassured about certain elements regarding Hydro-Saguenay. The dams are not sold, they are not for sale, according to Domtar’s statements. …The Kénogami and Alma paper mills are powered by the five hydroelectric power plants that Domtar, formerly Resolute Forest Products, owns on the Shipshaw River. [translated by Google Translate]

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Cascades announces the sale of its Flexible Packaging plant in Mississauga to Five Star Holding

Cascades Inc.
October 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KINGSEY FALLS,  Quebec — Cascades announced that it has reached an agreement to sell its Flexible Packaging plant activities to Five Star Holding based in Houston, Texas. The $31 million transaction is effective immediately. Cascades’ will retain ownership of the site real estate. Located in Mississauga, Ontario, Flexible Packaging is Cascades’ only plant that manufactures printed flexible plastic packaging and films. …The Flexible Packaging operations employs 45 people, all of which will be retained by Five Star at closing. …The transaction includes a supply agreement between the two parties to ensure the continued production and supply of the flexible film that is used by Cascades’ Tissue and Packaging sectors. “Today’s decision will allow us to reduce our debt and support the optimization of our operational platform,” said Hugues Simon, CEO of Cascades.

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Deal reached to save northern Ontario paper mill from closure

By Dan Bertrand
CTV News
October 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — Upper levels of government have reached funding agreements to support the Town of Kapuskasing’s Paper Mill, averting a planned closure and providing what local leaders are calling “a critical step” toward securing the region’s economic future. Kap Paper announced the newfound support in a social media post on Friday evening. “Next week, we’ll be working out the details for a restart plan,” the post said, adding that updates would be shared “as soon as everything is confirmed.” Kapuskasing Mayor Dave Plourde, called the deal a “critical step forward for Kapuskasing and the entire region,” in a statement posted to the town’s social media page. …“We now have a second chance – a window of opportunity to come together, calmly and deliberately, to build a plan for modernization and long-term competitiveness,” said Plourde …“Today, I am pleased to confirm that both the federal and provincial governments have agreed to provide support.”

In related coverage:

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New Brunswick softwood lumber industry braces for hit from Donald Trump’s latest tariffs

By Jordan Gill
CBC News
October 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Companies reliant on New Brunswick’s softwood lumber industry are bracing for hard times after US President Trump announced new tariffs on Sept. 30. …In a letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney, New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt pleaded for the federal government to make softwood lumber tariffs a top priority. “In some communities in New Brunswick, one in every 11 workers depends directly on forest products,” Holt wrote. …Ron Marcolin, the New Brunswick vice-president with Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters, said the latest tariffs and duties are a big deal in a long-running drama over softwood lumber.  …While New Brunswick may largely rely on the American market, Marcolin said Americans also rely on New Brunswick’s products. …”The thing is, too, they realize their product is inferior. Their softwood lumber is not as good as a Canadian stick of lumber.”

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Kapuskasing strong’: Hundreds rally to save papermill

By Maija Hoggett
Timmins Today
October 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KAPUSKASING – In the shadow of the Kap Paper mill and with empty rail cards in the background, hundreds of people rallied today to save the Kapuskasing facility that the company announced on Monday would be idled. The ask is for a three-month loan from the province to give the company time to apply for a federal government longer-term fund. “The money will ensure Kap Paper can transition to a long-term stable market. We need Ontario and the federal government to work with us on a solution and not point fingers at each other. The fate of our town’s mills, workers and families are too important for these games,” Kapuskasing, Mayor Dave Plourde said. GreenFirst announced today that its sawmill operations in Kapuskasing, Hearst, Cochrane will be reduced for one week starting on Oct. 6. While Politis said it was heartwarming to see the crowd standing together, he’s disappointed in politicians.

Related coverage in CBC News: Union says Kapuskasing mill workers were told it was ‘business as usual’ 2 weeks before shutdown

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Advanced Wood Manufacturing Companies in Ontario Condemns Punitive Tariffs

Wood Manufacturing Cluster of Ontario
October 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The advanced wood manufacturing sector in Ontario and across Canada condemns the latest United States administration’s decision to impose unjustified punitive tariffs on kitchen cabinets, select wood furniture, and manufactured softwood lumber products. Immediate action is required by by our Federal and Provincial governments on all political sides to work diligently and aggressively to get these tariffs lifted; this is to guarantee jobs and prosperity for our communities across the country. The advanced wood manufacturing sector in Canada represents over $20 billion in revenues, over 100,000 employees, and includes a majority of small and medium-sized employers. …These tariffs will have a devastating impact on companies that export to the United States. They will also disrupt the North American housing sector supply chain, raise costs for housing in the United States, and destroy the shared prosperity and integrated trade relationship provided.

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Northern Ontario officials call on feds, province to stop Kap Paper mill closure

By Joseph Ryan
CityNews Everywhere
October 1, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Officials and residents of Kapuskasing gathered Wednesday to call on provincial and federal governments to work with the town to keep a paper mill from closing, urging them to “not point fingers at each other.” Kap Paper announced it will begin winding down after failing to secure immediate financial support from the federal government. …the timing “doesn’t appear to be aligning” for a solution to keep the mill open. …Ottawa said Tuesday that it would keep working to help save the mill, with Industry Minister saying it had offered supports such as the Strategic Innovation Fund and targeted programs. …Meanwhile, the provincial government said Monday it has provided Kap Paper with millions to help cover operating expenses and is “disappointed” that the federal government has failed to join in providing immediate support. …Peter Politis, mayor of nearby Cochrane, Ont., said the issue impacts the entire northern Ontario community.

Related coverage from the Ontario Forest Industries Association: OFIA Statement on Kapuskasing Paper Mill and Sawmill Curtailments 

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Ottawa says it will ‘keep working’ with northern Ontario paper mill to resume its operations

The Canadian Press
September 30, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ottawa says it will keep working to help save a northern Ontario paper mill that cited a lack of immediate federal support as it announced this week it was forced to idle operations. Industry Minister Melanie Joly’s office says it had “come to the table” with federal supports for Kap Paper in Kapuskasing, Ont., which directly employs about 420 people and supports 2,500 jobs in the region. It says the federal government has been working directly with the struggling company, citing support offered through the Strategic Innovation Fund and targeted programs. Kap Paper said on Monday that it had received $50 million in loans from the Ontario government and had approached Ottawa for funding, but despite “initial positive responses,” there was no immediate solution to keep the paper mill open. …Joly’s office says it will keep working with the company on options to resume its operations.

Related Coverage in CBC News: Kapuskasing paper mill idling, but company and union saying little else

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GreenFirst Announces the Temporary Curtailment of Some of its Operations

GreenFirst Forest Products Inc.
September 30, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — GreenFirst Forest Products announced a temporary curtailment of certain operations in order to reassess its options, following Kap Paper’s decision to begin an orderly idling of operations at its Kapuskasing paper mill. The announced idling of Kap Paper — GreenFirst’s primary customer for wood by-products — significantly worsens the challenge of managing these residual materials in Ontario. This marks the fourth pulp and paper mill to close in the province over the past two years. The two remaining pulp and paper mills in Western Ontario cannot, on their own, absorb the full volume of chips and biomass generated by sawmill operations across the province. These tough times have been exacerbated by tariffs and resulting economic uncertainty. …Effective October 6, 2025, the Company will reduce sawmill operations at its Kapuskasing, Hearst, and Cochrane facilities for the equivalent of one week. The curtailment at the Kapuskasing sawmill could extend beyond this period.

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Kap Paper is calling it quits

Northern Ontario Business
September 29, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kap Paper announced it is idling operations at its Kapuskasing facility in northeastern Ontario. A Sept. 29 news release said the decision was made after years and months of discussion with governments and partners. …Approximately 300 people work at the mill. Skiffington said while there have been productive discussions with the province and feds, nothing more immediate is available at this time. A spokesperson for Kap Paper could not confirm if the shutdown is permanent or if the mill is being placed on care and maintenance in preparation for the asset to be sold. …The company said that they have approached Ottawa for support for a long-term solution through the federal Strategic Response Fund, but “the timing doesn’t appear to be aligning for an immediate solution to keep the mill operational. …Mike Harris said “We are deeply disappointed that the federal government has failed to join us in providing the immediate support required.”

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Stella-Jones Expands its Utility Product Offering with an Agreement to Acquire Brooks Manufacturing Co

Stella-Jones Inc.
September 30, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Montreal, Quebec – Stella-Jones Inc. announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire the assets of Brooks Manufacturing Co., a manufacturer of treated wood distribution crossarms and transmission framing components located in the United States. This transaction marks another significant step in the Company’s strategy to expand beyond its traditional product categories and leverage its extensive sales and distribution network to better support the needs of the utility sector. Founded in 1915, Brooks is a long-standing supplier to utilities with a proven track record of quality and customer service. It operates a facility located in Bellingham, Washington, supplying a wide array of treated crossarms and framing components that play a vital role in ensuring the strength and reliability of overhead electrical systems. …The definitive agreement provides for a purchase price of approximately US$140.0 million, subject to customary working capital adjustments. 

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Kapuskasing mayor says hard work continues to keep Kap Paper open

By Lydia Chubak
CTV News
September 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kapuskasing Mayor Dave Plourde said that, after much lobbying, the federal government said it is willing to sit down with the province to discuss a solution for the northeastern forest industry. That means that Kap Paper remains open, at least for now. The company is facing a crisis because of tariffs imposed by the US as part of the trade war launched by President Trump. …Plourde said he felt some relief to hear the federal government has agreed to sit down with the province. …News of a working group that includes the federal and provincial governments, as well as representatives from the industry, is also good news. …“In a recent news release, Kap Paper indicated a couple of ways the federal government can help would be to provide proportional forestry funding to Ontario, equivalent to BC and Quebec, and to address duties and tariffs that unfairly penalize Canadian producers.

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Ontario Investing An Additional $30 Million to Protect Forestry Workers

By Ministry of Natural Resources
The Government of Ontario
September 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

THUNDER BAY, Ontario — The Ontario government is investing a further $30 million to support businesses, workers and communities dependent on the province’s forest sector. This funding will build and maintain more forestry access roads and provide immediate support for Ontario sawmills to find new markets for their woodchips. These investments will strengthen Ontario’s forestry sector, create jobs and increase the sector’s competitiveness in the face of increased US softwood lumber duties and the threat of tariffs. …An additional $20 million is being invested through the Provincial Forest Access Roads Funding Program, bringing the government’s total funding for the program to over $79 million this year. …The government is also providing immediate support to sawmills by investing $10 million in the Ontario Sawmill Chip Support Program. The funding provides immediate support to sawmills while they find new, innovative markets for their wood chips such as energy production or alternatives for single-use plastics.

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CIB loans $660 million towards Saint John Mill Modernization

By Canada Infrastructure Bank
Cision Newswire
September 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

SAINT JOHN, NB – The Canada Infrastructure Bank (CIB) has reached financial close on a $660 million loan to Irving Pulp & Paper to support the large-scale modernization of the company’s pulp mill in west Saint John, New Brunswick. Enabled by the CIB’s partnership, the modernization project consists of replacing 1970s era technology with current best-available solutions to improve productivity and maintain mill competitiveness within the sector. This includes a new recovery boiler, steam turbine and generator to produce up to 145 megawatts of renewable energy. Excess energy generated at the mill will be exported to the provincial grid under a power purchase agreement with NB Power, with approximately 50 megawatts being used to sustainably energize mill operations.

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Decisions ‘forthcoming’ to keep Kap Paper from closure

Northern Ontario Business
September 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Struggling Kap Paper is looking for a lifeline from Ottawa to keep the Kapuskasing newsprint mill afloat and avoiding closure. The northwestern Ontario company has been threatening to shut down within a few short weeks unless the federal government comes forth with matching funds that equals the commitment by the Ontario government for a $6-million loan extension. The company is making a direct appeal, via a news release, to “act now” to keep its 300 workers employed and the pulp and paper supply chain in northeastern Ontario intact. …A spokesperson issued this statement on Wednesday: Kap Paper continues to work closely with the Governments of Canada and Ontario on long-term stability measures. Decisions on next steps are forthcoming, and we will provide a public update immediately once they are finalized. In the meantime, our focus remains on meeting commitments to our employees, customers, and community.

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Quebec government scraps forestry reform bill that drew widespread ire

CBC News
September 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

François Legault

MONTREAL — Earlier this week, a coalition made up of First Nations chiefs, environmental groups, mayors and unions called on the Legault government to scrap its controversial forestry reform bill. On Thursday, the Legault government capitulated. CBC News has learned the premier will announce later today that his government is abandoning Bill 97, which was tabled in the spring and has faced persistent opposition since. The bill would have divided the province’s forest into three zones: one that prioritizes conservation, one focused on timber production and a third zone for multiple uses. The Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador (AFNQL) had panned the proposed system, arguing the bill essentially would have given the forestry industry the right to bypass consultations with First Nations regarding activities on those territories zoned for intensive logging. …The AFNQL has said the province must try to create a new bill from scratch.

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$5M in funding announced for Interfor’s Sault lumber mill

By Stephen Alexander
Sootoday.com
September 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ontario’s Associate Minister of Forestry and Forest Products announced over $5 million in funding today for Interfor Sault Ste. Marie at the company’s mill on Peoples Road. Kevin Holland said the funding will help the mill install equipment and technology – including artificial intelligence screening – to increase production capacity by 12%, reduce wood waste by 25% and reduce emissions by 21%. “This project will enable greater processing of small diameter logs, which are underused in current operations,” Holland said. …The funding will support Interfor Sault Ste. Marie as the Canadian forestry sector grapples with U.S. tariffs. “The whole idea behind our forest biomass program is to invest into the sector as we deal with the increase in uncertainties created by the duties and tariffs that are being imposed by the United States government,” Holland said. …Interfor employs over 100 people in the Sault. …The announcement was accompanied separate funding for Northshore Forest to complete repairs to a bridge.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Mass timber takes centre stage at North Bay’s eco-friendly rec centre

The Bay Today
October 7, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

As Ontario updates its building code to allow taller wood structures, the City of North Bay is leading by example with a state-of-the-art recreation centre built using nail-laminated mass timber panels. The City hosted WoodWorks and the Canadian Wood Council today for a site tour at the new North Bay Community and Recreation Centre, which highlighted the use of mass timber construction. …Steven Street, Executive Director of WoodWorks Ontario… “Mass timber construction not only supports local jobs and communities, it also highlights the region’s manufacturing expertise and strengthens forest industry supply chains, demonstrating how homegrown, renewable resources can deliver high-performance, low-carbon buildings that benefit people, the environment, and regional economies.” …Updates to the Ontario Building Code became effective January 1, which now allow mass timber buildings up to 18 storeys, making wood a viable low-carbon alternative to traditional building materials such as steel and concrete.

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Ontario Investing $10 Million in Forest Sector Innovation at Daiken North America

By Ministry of Natural Resources
Government of Ontario
October 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

HUNTSVILLE — The Ontario government is investing $10 million through the Forest Sector Investment and Innovation Program to help Daiken North America upgrade its laminated board production line at its manufacturing facility in Huntsville. This investment will help the company bring a first-of-its-kind wood panel product to market, create jobs and boost productivity. As part of its plan to protect Ontario, the government is making strategic investments to help forest sector businesses adapt, compete and grow to stay resilient in the face of U.S. tariffs. …Daiken’s $70 million project will equip them to manufacture a new type of wood panel used in flooring, recreational vehicles and modular housing, while supporting 128 existing jobs and creating 10 new jobs. This made-in-Ontario forest product is the first of its kind in the world, offering a higher-performance, lower-cost alternative to imported material. 

 

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Canada’s last hockey stick factory survives in face of tariff threats, globalization

By Kelvin Chan
The Chronicle Journal
October 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

BRANTFORD, Ontario — In the Roustan Hockey production line, workers are busy shaping, trimming, sanding, painting and screen printing as they turn lumber into a Canadian national symbol. The 15 workers at Canada’s last major hockey stick factory, are located 100 kilometres southwest of Toronto. The operation has origins that date back to the 1800s and has survived decades of trade globalization to hang on as the last North American commercial manufacturer of traditional wooden hockey sticks. Now it’s facing fresh headwinds from the trade war launched by U.S. President Donald Trump …Bo Crawford, the factory’s general manager, said shipments to the U.S. have been held up for manual inspections at the border, where they’ve been hit with surprise tariffs, which the company’s customs broker has managed to get waived. …CEO Graeme Roustan acknowledges that the wooden hockey stick market is not a growth industry and, at best, production will hold steady.

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The Buildings Show 2025: Setting the stage for Canada’s construction future

By Robin MacLennan, Editor, Ontario Construction News
Ontario Construction News
October 1, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

For more than 35 years, The Buildings Show has been the gathering place for Canada’s building industry, bringing together leaders, innovators and practitioners for three days of learning, networking and discovery. This year’s event — running December 3–5 at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre — is shaping up to be the most dynamic yet. …New for 2025, the Canadian Wood Council joins forces with The Buildings Show to introduce WoodWorks, integrating technical expertise and sustainable material innovation directly into the event. With new Friday programming and offsite WoodWorks education, the conference line-up is stronger than ever. To mark the countdown to The Buildings Show, Ontario Construction News is launching a video series featuring expert voices from across the industry. …In this first video, Clive Thurston, President of Thurston Consulting Services, talks about what makes Canada’s construction industry unique compared to its global counterparts.

Additional coverage from The Buildings Show: WoodWorks at The Buildings Show – incredible opportunity for all professionals of the built environment to immerse themselves in the latest innovations in wood-based design and construction.

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Inside an office building that mirrors its mission with construction

By David Israelson
The Globe and Mail
September 30, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

The design and construction of the new headquarters of the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA) is a nod to the agency’s environmental work. The $56-million structure, which took nine years to complete – partly delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic – officially opened in April. It’s an airy, open-concept, four-storey building that’s 86,000 square feet and made with mass timber – a low-carbon, fire-resistant construction material. …Mass-timber construction is on the uptick in Canada, with a recent report revealing that nearly 700 projects have been completed across the country, while more than 140 are either under construction or in the planning stages. Nature Resources Canada says mass-timber buildings can meet or exceed fire code safety requirements and they are capable of lasting hundreds of years, proving their resilience and longevity. …At a time when many workers are being ordered to return to office, an attractive, eco- and user-friendly building can be motivating for them to show up…

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Forestry

Boreal Springboard a boost for Northwestern Ontario forestry

By Sandi Krasowski
The Chronicle Journal
October 14, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — The Northwestern Ontario Innovation Centre has partnered with the Thunder Bay Community Economic Development Commission (CEDC), the Centre for Research and Innovation in the Bio-Economy (CRIBE), Lakehead University and Confederation College to launch the Boreal Springboard, an innovative initiative aimed at strengthening and diversifying the forestry sector in Northwestern Ontario. Graham Bracken, at the Northwestern Ontario Innovation Centre, said the launch comes at a critical time for forestry in the region. …“The trade pressures were really the impetus to focus people’s minds,” Bracken said. “The sector is really integrated, and any threat to protection on the sawmill side weakens the rest of the sector. There’s a real drive to look to trade diversification and try and develop new value-added products that we can access other markets with.” Bracken says these investors will bring skills, technologies, and solutions that can be adapted to strengthen and grow the sector.

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Former premier, family recognized by Woodlot Association of Prince Edward Island

By Jenna Banfield
CBC News
October 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The Woodlot Owners Association of P.E.I. has announced that former premier Pat Binns and his wife, Carol Binns, are the association’s woodlot owners of the year. The pair were described in a release from the association as “an incredible example of stewardship in action” and applauds their efforts to create biodiverse forests. The former premier owns various parts of woodland in Murray River. He, along with a few others created an organization called the Sustainable Forest Alliance, which encourages woodlot owners to grow their woodlots, and helps create plans to guide owners in the future. …The Woodlot Owners Association of P.E.I. encourages proper forest management, sustainable forestry and moving forward in the direction of developing woodlands.

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Community members want land protected amid concerns over clearcutting

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
October 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

NOVA SCOTIA — Mike Lancaster, executive director of the St. Margarets Bay Stewardship Association, has been working to get provincial protection for the proposed Ingram River wilderness area, about 11,000 hectares of Crown land that once belonged to Bowater. Lancaster says part of the proposed area is seeing applications for high-production forestry activity, such as clearcutting. …Lancaster said the proposed wilderness area would include “one of the most, if not the most, ecologically valuable parts of Nova Scotia.” …A spokesperson for the Natural Resources Department said about 4,000 hectares of land in the Ingram River area has been protected as part of the Island Lake Wilderness Area, where no forestry activity is permitted. …“Harvests in this area have gone through the proper reviews and any areas with old-growth forest or species at risk were removed from the harvest plans before we approved them,” Adele Poirier said.

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Wildfire investigation answers aren’t coming fast enough, opposition MLAs say

By Savannah Awde
CBC News
October 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The New Brunswick government says it’s now planning for the next wildfire season, but some opposition MLAs are questioning why more information hasn’t been shared about the cause of this year’s fires. Appearing at a legislative committee on Wednesday, the deputy minister of the Department of Natural Resources, Cade Libby, said the department is still investigating what caused one such major blaze, outside Moncton, that put about 900 structures and 1,500 people at risk. Speaking with reporters at the legislature, Progressive Conservative MLA Kris Austin questioned why the public hasn’t gotten answers about what happened. …The Department of Natural Resources referred follow-up questions about the investigation to the Department of Justice and Public Safety, which did not respond to a request for comment on Wednesday. Roger Collett, the province’s wildfire co-ordinator, has said another large fire outside Miramichi, known as the Oldfield Road fire, was likely human-caused.

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Rooted in Strength: Forestry Technician program in Pembroke enters 58th year

By Jodi Bucholtz
The Pembroke Observer
October 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Since 1967, Algonquin College Pembroke Campus’s Forestry Technician program has stood as a pillar of applied education in the natural resources sector. Over nearly six decades, it has shaped countless graduates who walk into the woods, the mills, conservation agencies, and government environmental departments at all levels. In doing so, the program has strengthened our region and the broader stewardship of Canada’s forests. This fall, as students return to campus, the program is thriving, evolving, and more relevant than ever. …What makes the program robust today is its adaptability. The curriculum integrates both traditional forestry foundations and modern tools such as GIS mapping, remote sensing, and forest health assessment. Our proximity to Algonquin Park and partnerships with organizations such as the Petawawa Research Forest and Canadian Nuclear Laboratories ensure that students encounter diverse and real-world conditions. 

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Lakehead University celebrating 77 years in forestry, with one more tree

By Nicky Shaw
The Thunder Bay News Watch
October 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

THUNDER BAY — A decades-long legacy in forestry was celebrated over the weekend with the planting of a commemorative tree. The ceremony was part of Lakehead University’s 60th anniversary celebrations, but the forestry and mining program actually predates the founding of the university by 17 years. The event kicked-off the Canadian Institute of Forestry’s annual conference, which is being held in Thunder Bay this week. The newly planted red pine now grows in the university’s Agora Circle, where a number of dignitaries spoke about the importance of forestry to the region at Saturday’s event. …Brigitte Leblon, dean of Natural Resources Management, explained that the forestry program was one of the founding programs in the university. The first forestry diplomas in Forest and Mining Technology were offered in 1948, two years after the founding of the Lakehead Technical Institute, and the program evolved into a Bachelor of Science in Forestry program in 1965

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Forestry at University of New Brunswick: A century on, deep roots and new growth come together so that innovation, opportunity and sustainability can blossom

By Kayla Cormier
University of New Brunswick
October 2, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The University of New Brunswick’s faculty of forestry and environmental management (ForEM) is an “old growth” tree, with over a hundred rings to show its age. Since its first graduating class in 1910, it continues growing out in new directions in an ever-changing landscape. As the climate crisis intensifies and industries evolve, the faculty is at the forefront of a sector undergoing rapid transformation. With cutting-edge technology, a growing demand for skilled professionals and a commitment to sustainability, ForEM grads are shaping the future of forestry. Over the next decade, New Brunswick’s forestry sector is anticipating a significant wave of job openings—as many as 3,200—as seasoned professionals retire and transition out of the workforce. “Our graduates are entering a workforce that’s hungry for their skills,” said Dr. Michelle Gray, ForEM dean and associate professor. “We’re seeing unprecedented demand for professionals who understand both the science and the technology driving modern forestry…”

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Mi’kmaw land protectors say they won’t leave mountain even if Nova Scotia passes controversial law

By Angel Moore
APTN News
October 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

While the Nova Scotia government works to pass its controversial law that would make it illegal to block forest roads in the province, Mi’kmaw land protectors say they’re not going anywhere. On Sept. 23, the province introduced the Protecting Nova Scotians Act… The part of the proposed law that is drawing the ire of Mi’kmaw across the province deals with Crown Lands. The bill promises to “prevent the blocking of forest access roads and to allow structures to be removed without notice if they are a hazard to public health, safety or order or if they are impeding the lawful use of Crown lands.” According to land protectors on the Hunters Mountain, that part of the bill is aimed at them. …They said they’re protecting the forest from clear-cutting. Sacred lands that contain medicines and important sites.

Additional coverage:

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University of Toronto students gather White Oak acorns at Queen’s Park in an effort to preserve native trees

Muriel Draaisma
CBC News
October 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

A group of University of Toronto forestry students collected acorns from a giant White Oak tree at Queen’s Park on Wednesday as part of an effort to preserve the diversity of Toronto’s native trees. Eric Davies, a forest ecologist at the University of Toronto, led a group of undergraduate students in the university’s foresters club as they gathered about six litres of acorns from a tree in Queen’s Park North, one of four remaining large White Oaks in the park. White Oaks, a common deciduous tree species in North America, are the largest and oldest trees in the green spaces outside the Ontario Legislature. …Davies said timing is key, as White Oaks produce acorns about once every five to 10 years — this year being one of them. …Davies said the students will donate most of the acorns to the City of Toronto’s tree seed diversity program in the next two weeks. Some of the acorns will be kept at U of T to be grown there, he added.

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Domtar, Government of Canada support efforts by Nature Conservancy of Canada to conserve ecologically significant lands in central Newfoundland

Domtar
October 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

GANDER, Newfoundland — The Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) is announcing a bold campaign to protect more than 1,800 hectares of boreal forest, freshwater shoreline and wetlands in central Newfoundland and Labrador. It is the largest land donation NCC has received during its 54-year history working in Atlantic Canada. Domtar has agreed to donate land to NCC, thus allowing NCC to conserve four large parcels of forested lands and waters along the Southwest Gander River and Gander Lake near the communities of Glenwood and Appleton. The land donation project is significant as it enables better wildlife movement through connected conservation lands. Less than three per cent of the Central Newfoundland ecoregion currently falls under conservation status. …”This initiative reflects our commitment to community, sustainability and collaboration… that safeguard biodiversity — which is embedded in our 2030 sustainability strategy. We are honored to play a role,” said Luc Thériault, President, Domtar Wood Products.

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Nova Scotia Crown lands bill would criminalize peaceful protests, critics say

By Keith Doucette
Canadian Press in CityNews Everywhere
September 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The Nova Scotia government’s proposed move to make it illegal to block forest access roads on Crown lands is being dismissed as heavy-handed and an attempt to ignore Mi’kmaq rights. Several presenters spoke out in opposition Monday during an appearance before the legislature’s public bills committee hearing on the Protecting Nova Scotians Act. The omnibus bill includes one new piece of legislation and amends seven other acts, including the Crown Lands Act. The changes to the act would impose a $50,000 fine and/or six months in jail for protests or individuals who ignore protest camp removal orders. Michelle Paul, a Mi’kmaq water protector and land defender, said the bill was written without consultation or consideration of treaty rights and should be withdrawn. “It’s not lost upon us that this bill is being rushed through on the eve of Treaty Day and the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation,” said Paul. 

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Quinte Woodland Conference, Tending Our Woodlands: The Rewards of Action

By Susan Moore
Frontenac News
September 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

After 5 years, this celebrated conference is back with a new look. Don’t miss the Quinte Woodland Conference, Tending Our Woodlands: The Rewards of Action on October 2, 2025 in Belleville. The Quinte Woodlot Association has revived the former Trenton Woodlot Conference, continuing its 30-year legacy in our community. This one-day event welcomes rural landowners, foresters, farmers, conservationists and naturalists from all over Eastern Ontario. The program blends practical advice with science-based insights. In addition to the keynote, presentations will include: Wildfire Protection, Plantation Cooperatives, Biochar as Soil Amendment, and a panel on Succession Planning with a conservation planner, a farm preservation specialist, an accountant and a lawyer.  …The keynote speaker, Ethan Tapper, is a forester and the bestselling author of How to Love a Forest: The Bittersweet Work of Tending a Changing World.

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Omnibus bill tackles Crown land protesters in Nova Scotia, supports domestic violence survivors

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
September 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

NOVA SCOTIA — New powers to deal with protesters blocking logging roads on Crown land are being dealt with by the Nova Scotia government in… the Protecting Nova Scotians Act introduced Tuesday. …Notable changes include amendments to the Crown Lands Act that will make it illegal to “block, obstruct the use of or impede access to” forest access roads. It will also give officials the ability to remove structures without notice when they’re deemed to be a hazard to public health and safety or are harmful to the economic interests of the province. …An official with the Natural Resources Department said the changes are being made out of concern for people who might have protests or other gatherings located too close to logging equipment. …The proposed changes come as protesters in Cape Breton are blocking a logging operation by Port Hawkesbury Paper on Crown land. Natural Resources Minister Tory Rushton told reporters that the changes were requested by conservation officers. 

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Northwestern Ontario forestry, energy interests advance regional priorities

By Matt Prokopchuk
The Welland Tribune
October 6, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

THUNDER BAY — A number of stakeholders, largely from the forestry and energy sectors, got to provide regional input into a series of ongoing cross-province talks about energy policy. The Vaughn and Thunder Bay Chambers of Commerce held a roundtable discussion in the city on Oct. 2. The goal was for regional interests to provide requested input into an issues paper on energy being developed by the Toronto-based business lobby. …In Northwestern Ontario, she said, that includes longstanding sources like hydroelectricity and natural gas, but also continually-emerging opportunities connected to forestry and biomass. “We also talked a lot about the opportunities through the forest sector and biomass and the many things that can be created by harnessing forest products into energy,” Robinson said. “I think the most important thing was talking about how, from a forestry perspective, it really does check all the boxes.”

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Proposed wood waste-to-energy facility is licensed by province

Northern Ontario Business
September 26, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — Toronto’s CHAR Technologies and joint venture partner Lake Nipigon Forest Management Inc. (LNFMI) have secured a provincial forest resource processing facility licence for a proposed renewable energy facility. CHAR and LNFMI are the co-developers in a proposed wood waste-to-renewable energy facility, near Hurkett, Ontario. CHAR is an innovative clean technology specializing in the production of renewable natural gas and a bio-coal (biochar) product from residual wood waste. LNFMI is the Sustainable Forest License holder to the Lake Nipigon Forest. CHAR’s partnership with LNFMI secures the woody feedstock supply. CHAR calls receipt of the licence a “historic achievement”. It clears the path to greenlight construction for a “biohub” forestry processing operation, expected to commence sometime in 2026. Initial civil works at a greenfield site have been completed. …“LNFMI and CHAR are putting forest biomass to work and creating new opportunities in forestry,” said Kevin Holland, associate minister of forestry.

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Forest Fires

Nova Scotia wildfire burning out of control amid hot fall weather

By Keith Doucette
The Canadian Press in the National Observer
October 6, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

NOVA SCOTIA — Unseasonably warm temperatures proved challenging Monday as the fight against an out-of-control wildfire in Nova Scotia’s Annapolis Valley entered its second week. The Department of Natural Resources estimated that the fire at Lake George had grown slightly in 24 hours to just over 2.8 square kilometres, mainly because of dry and windy conditions. Monday’s forecast for the area near Aylesford, N.S., called for a high of 28 C — the average daily high in the region for October is normally below 15 C. “I can’t believe it — in October we normally get frost and cold,” Dave Corkum, mayor of the Municipality of the County of Kings, said in an interview. “There is some rain in the forecast in a few days and hopefully we will get it.” Despite the conditions, Corkum said there are no reports of damage to structures in the area.

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275 homes, cottages under evacuation order as N.S. wildfire burns near Lake George

By Meig Campbell
CBC News
September 30, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

Nova Scotia’s Department of Natural Resources says more evacuations are possible as a fire near Lake George in the Annapolis Valley continues to burn out of control. Residents of … Aylesford Lake’s southwest end have been told to prepare to evacuate. The fire in Kings County, which broke out Sunday, is estimated to be 150 hectares. It had been pegged at 300 hectares Monday night but officials at a briefing Tuesday afternoon said that was the result of an overestimation due to dense smoke conditions. Jim Rudderham, DNR’s director of fleet and forest protection, told reporters the cause of the fire has not been determined but it’s presumed human activity is responsible since there has been no lightning in the area. “It’s frustrating for us and for everybody when this happens,” Rudderham said. No buildings have been damaged but 275 civic addresses have been evacuated and 56 others are under an evacuation alert. Some of those addresses are cottages.

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Out-of-control wildfire in Nova Scotia threatens homes in Annapolis Valley

Canadian Press in CityNews Everywhere
September 29, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

AYLESFORD — Nova Scotia officials say more evacuation orders are possible as a wildfire in the Annapolis Valley remains out of control. In a social media post, the Department of Natural Resources said a helicopter had been dispatched to gauge the area of the Lake George fire, which at last estimate was roughly 300 hectares in size. The fire broke out Sunday and was declared out of control late Monday, prompting officials to announce an evacuation of nearby campgrounds and homes. Officials said Tuesday residents on Birch Lane, Spruce Drive and Blue Lane at Aylesford Lake’s southwest end should be prepared to evacuated. Dry and windy conditions have helped push the fire from the northern end of Lake George eastward toward the northern end of Aylesford Lake. Evacuees are asked to register at the Louis Millett Community Complex in New Minas, N.S., where services are being offered.

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