Region Archives: Canada East

Today’s Takeaway

Trump says steep tariffs for Canada could comes as soon as Feb 1

The Tree Frog Forestry News
January 21, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway
Region: Canada East

Trump says steep tariffs for Canada and Mexico could come as soon as February first. In related news: Trump signs executive orders to pull out of the Paris climate agreement, and reverse Alaska environmental protections. Meanwhile: Canada hopes US will delay tariffs but is ready to strike back; Premier Eby outlines BC’s three-pronged response; and Forest Nova Scotia says tariffs mean job losses. 

In Forestry/Wildfire news: insights from Day 2 of the 80th annual Truck Loggers convention include panels titled: Securing the Future for BC’s Forestry Contractors, and Public and Political Influence Strategies; BC learns from California fire response; and Oregon is still scrambling to fund last year’s fire season.

Finally, Los Angeles fire victims turn to prefabricated homes for quick rebuilds.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog Editor

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Trump to Lay Out Trade Vision—but Won’t Impose New Tariffs Yet

The Tree Frog Forestry News
January 20, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway
Region: Canada East

Donald Trump will stop short of imposing new tariffs on his first day in office—plans to study trade policies with China, Canada and Mexico. In related news: the BC Business Council says tariffs will ‘expose’ rural resource jobs; and US economist Paul Krugman says Canada may be in a strong position if a trade war breaks out. In other Business news: the San Group asset sale faces headwinds; Procter & Gamble is accused of misleading consumers; Western Forest Products and Steelworkers have a new collective agreement; and Boise Cascade has a new COO—Jeff Strom

In Forestry news: insights from Day 1 of the 80th annual Truck Loggers convention include panels on Options for BC Industry’s Future; solutions to Mitigate Wildfire Risk; and Political Insights from the Media. Meanwhile: Williams Lake First Nation chief says, ‘we need a seat at the table‘; South Carolina mill closures are impacting conservation goals; and mass timber makes headlines in Illinois; Los Angeles and Stockholm.

Finally, UBC professor Lori Daniels says Vancouver isn’t immune to a Los Angeles-like fire.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog Editor

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Business & Politics

Ontario Business Leaders Unite to Counter Tariff Threat, Strengthen Competitiveness

Ontario Chamber of Commerce
January 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO – In the face of rising international protectionism and the looming threat of U.S. tariffs, the Ontario Chamber of Commerce has launched the Ontario Business & Trade Leadership Coalition (OBTLC). This Coalition unites leaders from key trade-dependent sectors to… advocate for effective government policies and solidify Ontario’s position as a global leader in trade. “President Trump has claimed the U.S. doesn’t need Canada – but we are here to show just how invaluable we are. …The Ontario Business & Trade Leadership Coalition represents a united response,” said Daniel Tisch, President and CEO of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce. …Ian Dunn, R.P.F., President & CEO, Ontario Forest Industries Association said, “Ontario’s forest sector is highly exposed to trade, employing 137,000 people in northern, rural, and Indigenous communities. We are united with our colleagues throughout the province to protect our industries and the communities that rely on their success.” 

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Federal minister signs off on Nova Scotia’s Boat Harbour cleanup plan

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
January 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Nova Scotia government has a green light from Ottawa for its $425-million plan to remediate Boat Harbour, but it comes with a long list of conditions that includes continuing to look for another site to store contaminated sludge in the long term. Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault issued his decision last Friday following an environmental assessment by the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada, work that began almost six years ago for the cleanup of the body of water near Pictou Landing First Nation that for decades received effluent from the Northern Pulp mill. Under terms of the approval, an existing on-site hazardous waste containment facility would be vertically expanded. …The cleanup project follows the shutdown of the former Northern Pulp mill at Abercrombie Point in 2020. …Northern Pulp’s parent company is currently exploring the potential of establishing a new operation in the Liverpool area.

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Province Investing $100 Million in Job Training to Protect Ontario Workers

The Province of Ontario
January 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Ontario government is stepping up to protect Ontario workers in the face of potential American tariffs on Canadian goods by investing an additional $100 million in the province’s Skills Development Fund (SDF) Training Stream, bringing the total provincial investment in SDF to $1.5 billion. This investment will support workers in fields including manufacturing, construction, critical mineral extraction and other skilled trades, providing them with the skills and training they need to secure better jobs and bigger paycheques while protecting Ontario’s economy… “The Ontario Forest Industries Association welcomes additional investment in the Skills Development Fund,” said Ian Dunn, President & CEO. “This commitment will help ensure workers in Ontario’s forestry sector—and across the province—are equipped with the skills and training needed to thrive in an increasingly competitive global market. By investing in our forestry workforce, Premier Ford’s government is strengthening our economy and supporting industries that are vital to Ontario’s growth and resilience.”

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Ontario providing support to Kap Paper Inc. to strengthen forest sector productivity

By Ministry of Natural Resources
The Government of Ontario
January 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KAPUSKASING — The Ontario government is providing a $10 million loan to Kap Paper Inc., protecting approximately 2,500 jobs in Kapuskasing and the surrounding region which depend on the company’s ongoing operation. “Our government is ensuring Ontario’s world-class forest sector continues to build prosperity for Northern workers, families and communities,” said Kevin Holland, Associate Minister of Forestry and Forest Products. “This financial support delivers on our government’s commitment to forest sector success by protecting jobs and maintaining productivity in Kapuskasing.” Kap Paper is a key employer for Kapuskasing and a vital part of Ontario’s forest sector supply chain. Operations at three nearby sawmills depend on Kap Paper to provide demand for mill by-products generated by lumber production. …The loan will support Kap Paper’s ongoing operation during challenging market conditions.

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Ontario Regional Chief Abram Benedict issues statement on Canada-U.S. relations

Chiefs of Ontario
January 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Toronto, Ont.—Ontario Regional Chief Abram Benedict has issued a statement on the relationship between Canada and the United States: I wish to congratulate President Donald Trump on his recent election. I also want to make clear to his government, all levels of Canadian governments, and to Ontario First Nations Leadership, that the Chiefs of Ontario will continue to advocate for the rights and interests of all 133 First Nations in Ontario. …President Trump has made threats to Canada, including annexation of the country and coercion through economic force. For First Nations, it echoes the colonial rhetoric that we’ve dealt with for centuries. …Engaging in costly economic confrontations or extracting natural resources cannot come at the expense of First Nations’ inherent and Treaty rights nor our sovereignty. Rather, it must be done in collaboration and with the spirit of reconciliation. There are no natural resources in this country that are not on First Nations’ lands. 

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New Brunswick pulp mills forced to make changes in face of rising NB Power bills

By John Chilibeck
The Telegraph-Journal
January 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

AV Group Canada, which runs pulps mills in Nackawic, just west of Fredericton, and in Atholville near Campbellton in the province’s north, warns that NB Power’s rates are making it uncompetitive against other firms around the world. Irving Paper says it will reduce operations at its Saint John mill again by half, to deal with the high electricity cost, for an undetermined period. “The current situation regarding escalating power costs… has serious consequences for our facilities,” said Mike Legere, for AV Group Canada. The company employs 1,200, making it the dominant player in both small towns. Energy makes up one-quarter of AV’s input costs at its pulp mills, second only to wood fibre, he said. …And Irving Paper said it welcomed the third-party audit. Since last April, when rates went up, it has warned that New Brunswick’s industrial rates are having a negative impact on the provincial economy. 

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Port of Québec announces appointment of Olga Farman as Chief Executive Officer

By the Port of Quebec
Cision Newswire
January 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

QUÉBEC – The Port of Québec’s Board of Directors is pleased to announce the appointment of Olga Farman as CEO, succeeding Mario Girard’s fourteen-year service in that position. As a member of the Board since 2020 and its Chair since last June, Me Farman, who will take office on February 1, 2025, understands the realities and challenges of the Port. …Ms Olga Farman was a corporate lawyer, until very recently, the managing partner of the Québec office of Norton Rose Fulbright Canada. She is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, Beneva, insurance & financial services, and the Fondation du Musée de la civilisation de Québec. Ms. Farman is a member of the Québec Bar and holds a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) degree and an MBA from Université Laval. She has received multiple awards and distinctions throughout her remarkable career.

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How Trump’s tariffs could impact Canada’s lumber industry

By Stephane Tsicos
CTV News
January 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NOVA SCOTIA — U.S. President Donald Trump has only been back in office for a day, but he’s already suggested moving ahead with 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian imports. “I’m not sure anybody knows what the impact would be,” said Robin Wilber, Elmsdale Lumber Company president. “Everybody’s coming up with their own thoughts on it, but I think that will remain to be seen, but I know it will be huge.”Elmsdale Lumber Company produces 30 million board feet of spruce lumber each year. Most of it stays in the Maritimes, but Wilber said some is shipped to the United States. Nova Scotia is currently exempt from American softwood lumber duties, but Wilber worries that could change. “We run the risk of losing that exclusion, and that would be massive.” He said Canadians won’t be the only one impacted by the proposed tariffs. It could also cause major issues for American consumers…

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Nova Scotia forestry sector anxious about possible U.S. tariffs

By Gareth Hampshire
CBC News
January 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

U.S. President Donald Trump did not announce any tariffs against Canada during his inauguration on Monday but mused late in the day about introducing them on Feb. 1. …Almost half of the wood that is harvested from their woodlots in northern Nova Scotia ends up being exported to the U.S. “Any more downward pressure, I don’t know how much more we could take before it makes sense just not to cut wood,” Greg Watson said. …Forest Nova Scotia estimates the industry exports about $600 million in forest products to the U.S. every year. It estimates the implementation of tariffs could carry a severe impact. “You would see businesses go out of business,” said Todd Burgess, the organization’s executive director. “You would see contractors go out of business. You would see job losses. You would see mills curtail their production.”

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Commonwealth plywood remains open

By Tashi Farmilo
Pontiac Journal
January 15, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

RAPIDES-DES-JOACHIMS, Quebec – Commonwealth Plywood, originally expected to close in December 2024, continues to operate into 2025, but its long-term future remains uncertain as the company evaluates its viability on a monthly basis. While the mill’s continued operation has brought relief to the local community, significant challenges persist. Joël Quevillon, VP of forestry at Commonwealth Plywood said, “The situation is reviewed monthly, but we hope to continue until spring,” Quevillon wrote. “Our ability to operate depends on fibre availability, fibre costs, the market price for our products—primarily white and red pine—and the mill’s performance.” He noted improved performance during late 2024 allowed operations to extend into the new year. …While the company hasn’t requested financial assistance, Quevillon acknowledged the precarious situation. “We’ve had to issue closure notices to employees because the necessary changes aren’t happening quickly enough,” he said.

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Unions fight over New Brunswick mill workers amid U.S. tariffs

By Adam Huras
The Telegraph-Journal
January 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

New Brunswick’s J.D. Irving Limited is calling on the province’s labour board to block the workers at one of its sawmills from being represented by a union it says actively lobbies in favour of punishing tariffs on Canadian lumber at the border. …It makes that argument in a reply to an application for union certification that states that the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local 683, is seeking to represent 321 employees at its at its Chipman Grand Lake Timber mill. The carpenters’ union is denying J.D. Irving’s allegations. In a statement, it said Local 683 “opposes tariffs on softwood lumber”. …workers at the Chipman mill already have a union representing them. …Unifor added that the carpenters and joiners of America are now “attempting to raid this local. …Trump also said he plans to use ‘economic force’ to annex Canada, so the timing is suspicious for an American labour union that has previously spoken in favour of lumber tariffs to be raiding Canadian forestry workplaces.” [A subscription to the Telegraph-Journal is required to read the full story]

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Nova Scotia paper mill to be powered by wind farm with financing from federal agency

The Canadian Press in CTV News
January 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

HALIFAX – A Cape Breton paper mill says a federal investment in 24 new wind turbines completes the financing of a project that will secure its future electricity needs. The Canada Infrastructure Bank has announced it will provide $224.2 million in loans for Port Hawkesbury Paper Wind Ltd, which will supply about 60% of the average annual power needs of its sister company, Port Hawkesbury Paper. Nigel Cave, the VP of Stern Partners, said that the $450 million project, called Goose Harbour Lake wind farm, is now fully financed. The wind farm, which will be 10 per cent owned by 13 Mi’kmaq First Nations, will be capable of generating 168 megawatts of electricity once the turbines begin operating in late fall 2026. …In total, the wind farm is expected to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by more than 350,000 tonnes a year, equivalent to 2.4 per cent of Nova Scotia’s emissions in 2021.

Additional coverage in the Guysborough Journal, by Alec Bruce: Green light for $450M Goose Harbour Wind Farm

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Irving Forest Products to Acquire Masardis Sawmill in Maine

JD Irving
January 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East, United States

SAINT JOHN, New Brunswick — Irving Forest Products will acquire the Masardis Sawmill in Masardis, Maine. The sale will close January 5, 2025. Previously owned by Groupe Lebel, the Masardis operation has a long history of producing random-length spruce and fir lumber. It currently employs 80 people and has the capacity to produce 115 million board feet annually. The sawmill is located within close proximity to Irving’s 1.3 million acres of timberlands in Maine. …Jerome Pelletier, VP of Irving said, “The Masardis mill is well-located to access high-quality timber. It is also serviced by the Maine Northern Railway and benefits from having a team of highly skilled and dedicated employees who have worked together for decades to ensure the success of their operation.” With the addition of the Masardis operation, J.D. Irving, Limited now operates 10 sawmills as part of its solid wood operations, with a total annual capacity of 1.3 billion board feet.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Huge tower made of wood is unlike anything else under construction in Toronto

Canadian Reviews
January 22, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Toronto’s skyline is getting some company in the form of a new generation of tall towers constructed out of wood, and the first of the bunch is already making headway. The University of Toronto’s new Academic Wood Tower is quickly sprouting… The 14-storey institutional building designed by Patkau Architects and MacLennan Jaunkalns Miller Architects was first proposed in 2018, but it already had a bit of a head start before work even began. …A crane was erected in November 2023, and work on assembling the mass-timber structural frame has gradually progressed in the 14 months since. Timber beams now stretch to the seventh floor of the tower, meaning the building is now approximately halfway towards its final height. …Once complete, the building will stand as Canada’s tallest academic wood building, as well as the tallest timber-framed structure in the country overall. 

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North America’s first all mass timber acute care hospital breaks ground

By Novid Parsi
Building Design+Construction
January 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

What’s expected to be the first all mass timber acute care hospital in North America has broken ground. The 97,000-sf Quinte Health Prince Edward County Memorial Hospital will be located in Picton, Ontario, Canada, with completion anticipated for 2027. Designed by HDR and constructed by M. Sullivan & Son, the mass timber structure integrates sustainable building practices with advanced medical technology. According to HDR, unencapsulated mass timber sequesters carbon better than any other structural material. “It’s about balancing environmental and social sustainability in the sense that mass timber in healthcare is at once about human comfort and environmental stewardship,” Jason-Emery Groen, design principal at HDR, said in a statement. To optimize energy use and reduce the carbon footprint, the design incorporates natural light, energy-efficient windows, and sustainable materials throughout, including the structure. …In line with biophilic principles, the design offers access to nature throughout the facility. 

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Toronto breaks ground on affordable housing project at 35 Bellevue Ave.

By Robin MacLennan
Ontario Construction News
January 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

The City of Toronto has launched construction on a new affordable and supportive housing development at 35 Bellevue Ave. The project, operated by the Kensington Market Community Land Trust (KMCLT) and St. Clare’s Multifaith Housing Society, will add 78 new homes for individuals experiencing or at risk of homelessness. …The building will be constructed using mass timber technology, designed to meet or exceed the city’s energy efficiency standards under the TransformTO Net Zero Strategy and the Toronto Green Standard. Construction is expected to be completed by the end of 2025. …In addition to affordable rent, tenants will have access to wrap-around services to enhance their housing stability, health and well-being.

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Ontario now allows developers to build 18 storey towers made of wood

By Becky Robertson
Real Estate Toronto
January 4, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

An update to the Ontario Building Code that just came into effect with the dawn of 2025 should mean quieter, more eco-friendly and, perhaps more importantly, faster construction of new homes across the province in the years to come. Introduced by Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing Paul Calandra in the spring, the amendment pertains to mass timber buildings, which were previously subject to significant height restrictions, initially to up to six storeys until 2022, then to 12 storeys. As of January 1, developers can now design encapsulated mass timber developments of up to 18 storeys, which the Province says will “help the sector build more homes faster, keep the cost of construction down and boost our northern economy,” among other benefits. …Other changes to the Building Code Act as of January 1 will also help “streamline Ontario’s Building Code and reduce barriers between provinces by increasing harmonization between Ontario’s Building Code and the National Construction Codes,” the province says.

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Wood Solutions Conference Ottawa 2025

Canadian Wood Council
January 3, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Join us as we showcase innovations and ideas in wood products, design, and construction. Don’t miss your chance to attend the 2025 Ottawa Wood Solutions Conference for just $99 +HST when you register by January 9, 2025. This specialized design and construction conference is dedicated to showcasing innovative advancements and applications for wood products and building systems in design and construction. Leading-edge experts from near and far will inform and inspire you at the 2025 Ottawa Wood Solutions Conference. Join us on February 5, 2025, at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa for a full day of inspiration, learning, and networking. Spaces are limited—secure your spot today!

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Forestry

Canada and Quebec Announce Major Investment in Wildfire Equipment

By Natural Resources Canada
Government of Canada
January 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTREAL – With wildfires increasing in frequency and severity across Canada — impacting our health, economies, communities and wildlife — the Governments of Canada and Quebec are supporting Canadians and residents of Quebec whose lives and livelihoods are at stake.  Natural Resources Canada announced a joint investment of $64 million over three years through the Government of Canada’s Fighting and Managing Wildfires in a Changing Climate Program – Equipment Fund. This joint investment is supporting Quebec’s efforts to purchase wildfire firefighting equipment, such as vehicles, drones and telecommunications equipment. By buying and upgrading equipment and hiring and training more personnel, Quebec will be better prepared to respond to wildfires and provide support when other regions in Canada experience high fire activity.

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City seeks new urban forester and new urban forestry plan

By Matt Prokopchuk
Tbnewswatch.com
January 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Cory Halvorsen

The City of Thunder Bay is currently working at hiring a new urban forester, according to the city’s manager of parks and open spaces. “We’re still working through the recruitment on that, so it’s vacant at this time,” said parks manager Cory Halvorsen. Aside from drafting up a new management plan, Halvorsen said that other top priorities for urban forestry include continuing to manage the emerald ash borer (both by removing infected ash trees and replacing them with other species, as well as treating a set number of existing ones with an insecticide), and following through on proactive maintenance and increasing the number of planted trees. “Every year we do have — whether it’s through impacts from EAB or just the natural cycle of the trees — we have a certain amount of loss each year that we offset through the annual tree plant,” Halvorsen said.

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Thessalon lumber mill closure is a ‘significant loss for the community’

By James Hopkin
Sootoday.com
January 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A lumber producer in Thessalon, Ont. that has been active for more than seven decades quietly shuttered its operations late last month — resulting in the layoff of roughly 40 employees in the weeks leading up to its impending closure. Midway Lumber Mills Ltd. first notified employees of plans to shut down the mill and lay off its workforce in October of last year, the soon-to-be former chair of USW Local 8748 told SooToday on Monday. “We got nine weeks advance notice that it was going to happen,” said Derrick Bookman, who has worked in a number of roles at the mill over the years. “They went above and beyond.”

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Monocultures, glyphosate fanning flames of forest fires

By Monika Rekola
Orillia Matters
January 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Recently, images of air tankers releasing bright red and pink powder over Los Angeles suburbs have taken the internet by storm. The dramatic, almost surreal sight has a practical purpose as the Forest Service uses fire retardants to help fight the raging wildfires. These substances coat vegetation and surfaces to starve the fire of oxygen, slow the burn and give ground crews a fighting chance. …While these chemical suppressants might help fight fires, they’re not without their downsides. Recent research suggests they can be harmful to both human health and the environment. The chemicals in fire retardants pose risks to fish, wildlife and sensitive ecosystems. …If we take a moment to listen to the lessons these disasters are teaching us, we can shift toward a more balanced, sustainable approach to forest management here in Ontario.

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South Carolina paper mill closures threaten timber industry and conservation goals

By Jennifer Howard, South Carolina Land Trust Network
The Post and Courier
January 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East, United States

Jennifer Howard

SOUTH CAROLINA — International Paper’s announcement of the impending closure of the Georgetown paper mill follows on the heels of the closure of the WestRock paper mill in North Charleston as well as other shutdowns across the Southeast. While some may celebrate fewer trucks on the road or the fading of a mill’s distinct odor, a healthy forest products industry is imperative for the conservation of special places, a hallmark of South Carolina’s values and culture. …More than half of South Carolina’s forests are owned and managed by families. …Land ownership is an investment, one that requires considerable resources at the time of tree planting and throughout the lifecycle of the trees. That investment is recouped when the trees are thinned or harvested. …The closure of these two major mills on the coast means that landowners will continue to experience a crippling financial loss. When landowners of forests and farms suffer financially, conservation suffers.

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Integrity Reforestation and Agoke Development LP Launch Major Initiative to Restore Wildfire-Impacted Land and Caribou Habitat in Ontario’s Ogoki Forest

By Integrity Reforestation Inc.
Business Wire
January 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — We are proud to announce the launch of a major reforestation project to plant 3 million trees in the Ogoki Forest, a region 400 km northeast of Thunder Bay, Ontario devastated by catastrophic wildfires of 2023. This initiative marks a pivotal step in restoring a landscape critical to both ecological health and the cultural heritage of local First Nations communities. In 2023, two massive wildfires ravaged 40,188 hectares of the Ogoki Forest, leaving behind widespread ecological damage. The Ogoki Wildfire Reforestation Project aims to heal these scars by focusing reforestation efforts on the most severely affected areas. …A cornerstone of this initiative is the restoration of critical caribou habitat. The Ogoki Forest is home to two vital caribou ranges, the Nipigon and the Ozhiski, that were heavily impacted by the wildfires. …This project is driven by the support of Forests Canada, Tree Canada, and the Arbor Day Foundation, Chilly Moose Ltd., and Orca Intelligence Inc. 

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Government of Canada Invests in the Reforestation of Wildfire-Affected Areas in Northern Ontario

By Natural Resources Canada
Government of Canada
January 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

OTTAWA, ON – Today, the Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Canada’s Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, announced an investment of more than $900,000 to Integrity Reforestation for a major reforestation project that will help to restore wildfire-impacted land and caribou habitat in Ontario’s Ogoki Forest. With this funding, Integrity Reforestation will: plant 800,000 trees, covering 450 hectares of the Ogoki Forest; rehabilitate ecosystems destroyed by wildfires using native species to restore the habitats of woodland caribou, moose and black bears; and create over 40 tree-planting jobs in the region. With this agreement, Canada and Integrity Reforestation are leveraging their shared commitment to habitat restoration and climate action. Canada will continue to work with provinces, territories, local communities, organizations and Indigenous Peoples to create a greener, healthier and more resilient Canada while reinforcing our country’s ability to respond to wildfires, especially in the face of changing climate.

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Dr. John Kershaw honoured for a lifetime of measuring forests and mentoring minds

By the University of New Brunswick
Education News Canada
January 14, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

John Kershaw (left)

New Brunswick — Dr. John Kershaw didn’t plan a career in forestry when, as a young man, he left the family farm in southern Indiana to study at Purdue University. He wanted to be a veterinarian. However, a summer experience in Colorado during his first year at Purdue sparked his forestry interest, leading him to switch majors and embark on a journey that would take him around the world. …After over three decades of research, teaching and pursuing international partnerships, Kershaw has been recognized with a prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award from his alma mater, which will be presented in April. Kershaw, a professor at the University of New Brunswick (UNB) since 1991, was caught off guard when he received the news of the award. …Kershaw is deeply engaged as the assistant vice president for partnerships at UNB … he has worked to diversify the university’s international pathways and build strong partnerships with other universities worldwide.

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Deputy chief says new provincial money will buy forest fire gear

By Nicole Stoffman
The Timmins Daily Press
January 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Scott Atkinson

A new $30 million province-wide fire grant is going to help Timmins firefighters stay protected from hazardous carcinogens when fighting wildland fires, their deputy chief says. Timmins will be receiving $49,382 from the province through the office of Solicitor General Michael Kerzner, who oversees the office of the fire marshal. Local Deputy Fire Chief Scott Atkinson told the Daily Press those funds will be used to purchase 156 wildland fire jumpsuits. “The cancer-preventative measure we’ve put forward for that would be coveralls for almost every firefighter in the city,” Atkinson said. The grant applies to municipal firefighters, but the Timmins Fire Department is often called upon to fight grass fires and other wildland fires within the Municipal Protection Area of the city. “We’re in partnership with the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry. They’re the experts on forest fires, but we often work together,” said Atkinson.

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Holland sees link between health, economy

By Sandi Krasowski
The Chronicle Journal
January 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kevin Holland, MPP for Thunder Bay-Atikokan, and associate minister of forestry in Doug Ford’s Conservative government, says healthy communities make a stronger economy and one can’t exist without the other. …“Forestry has been the cornerstone of our economy for generations,” he said. “While we see mining ramping up — and we’re going to see investments coming into Thunder Bay, particularly around processing — we have to continue to make sure that we’re not losing track of forestry.” In the role of associate forestry minister, Holland says it’s a “real priority for him. “We’re developing new strategies to help the forestry industry when the pulp market starts dropping off so it’s not volatile for the forestry sector,” he said. “We can do that by bringing on new value-added businesses associated with forestry to use up our biomass and our forest and mill residuals so that we don’t experience these dips in the system.”

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How Prince Edward Island plans to plant 2 billion trees

By Yutaro Sasaki
The Guardian Charlottetown
January 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Heather Laiskonis

Prince Edward Island is becoming greener once more. Recently, the provincial government launched the P.E.I. 2 Billion Trees program to help restore nature, create healthy forest ecosystems and increase carbon capture across the Island. Across the country, the federal government has set the goal of planting two billion trees in the next 10 years. Heather Laiskonis, executive director of the P.E.I. Watershed Alliance, which administers small landowner applicants of the provincial tree planting initiative, explained how it works in an interview with The Guardian. She said the watershed alliance group administers 2.5 acres or smaller sites. “The province recognizes the benefit of having the watershed groups and having those relationships with landowners,” Laiskonis said. For the next seven years, P.E.I. Watershed Alliance will plant approximately more than 100,000 trees each year. …red maple, white pine, yellow birch, white spruce, white birch, and eastern hemlock the tree-planting program, Laiskonis said.

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Quebec accused of catering to logging industry as it reviews how forests are managed

By Benjamin Shingler
CBC News
December 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Quebec’s boreal forest — twice the size of France — is a vast expanse of wilderness rich in biodiversity that can lock up huge amounts of climate-warming carbon dioxide. It is also an economic driver for dozens of small communities. …But Indigenous leaders and environmental groups worry Quebec’s planned reforms would give logging companies too much power over what areas are allowed to be cut. …”Quebec has to be transparent about what their real intentions are,” Ghislain Picard, the chief of the Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador, told Quebec AM. …Last week, the environmental group SNAP Quebec called for an independent investigation into the ties between the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forests and the industry….Earlier this year, a study examining nearly a half-century of logging in Quebec and Ontario warned that logging practices have left forests in the two provinces severely depleted, putting caribou at risk.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Canada Invests in Climate Change Adaptation to Keep Communities Safe in Northern Ontario and Across Canada

By Natural Resources Canada
Government of Canada
January 29, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

OTTAWA — Across the country, the impacts of climate change are becoming more severe and more frequent with extreme events like floods, wildfires and heatwaves on the rise. …Marc G. Serré, Parliamentary Secretary to the Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, along with Member of Parliament Viviane Lapointe and Member of Parliament Anthony Rota, announced over $2.7 million in funding for five projects based in northern Ontario under Natural Resources Canada’s Climate Change Adaptation Program (CCAP). These projects aim to support professionals, decision makers and First Nation communities in northern Ontario and across Canada to advance the implementation of climate change adaptation plans and actions through the development and delivery of tools, training and resources. One of the projects will also identify lessons learned from previously implemented adaptation actions.

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Biodiversity in several Hamilton areas in ‘severe decline’ says botanist after conducting land survey

By Justin Chandler
CBC News
January 24, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Hamilton’s urban forests and woodlands may look nice and green, but according to a recent land survey commissioned by the Hamilton Naturalists’ Club, looks can be deceiving. The non-profit club says Hamilton’s biodiversity is in “severe decline.” In the spring, Hamilton field botanist Paul O’Hara went out to 11 natural areas in central and western Hamilton… To people living in the area today, it may seem very lush, but the region was once maybe a hundred times richer in biodiversity, O’Hara said. To people living in the area today, it may seem very lush, but the region was once maybe a hundred times richer in biodiversity. That “shifting baseline” is a problem when it comes to protecting our natural world, said Brian McHattie, program director at the naturalists’ club.

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Humboldt County supervisors to discuss ‘critical shortcomings’ in proposed wood pellet project

By Ruth Schneider
Times Standard
January 13, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Humboldt County Board of Supervisors will return to the topic of a massive wood pellet project… Fifth District Supervisor Steve Madrone proposes sending a letter with comments on the project proposed by Golden State Natural Resources that would create two wood pellet processing plants in Tuolomme and Lassen counties to harvest trees cut down in forest thinning projects, trucking the pellets to the Port of Stockton where they would be shipped to international energy markets. The proposed letter outlines various concerns about the project and urges more transparency… A critical complaint of the proposal is about the risk of Golden State Natural Resources partnering with Drax Global, a power generation company that has a history of environmental violation complaints both in the U.S. and abroad.

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First Nations get federal funding for green fuel project

By Gary Rinne
Northern Ontario Business
January 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

FORT FRANCES  — A corporation owned by 10 First Nations in the District of Rainy River is moving forward with a plan to produce low-carbon transportation fuels from wood waste. Wanagekong-Biiwega’iganan Clean Energy Corporation (WBCEC) has received $2.25 million from the federal government’s Clean Fuels Fund to conduct an engineering study for a commercial plant in Fort Frances. It would transform waste from the 1.5 million-hectare Boundary Waters Forest — such as bark, sawdust and logging debris — into airline fuel, diesel and naphtha, a type of fuel. …WBCEC has partnered with Vancouver-based Highbury Energy Inc., an energy technology innovator. …WBCEC has been working with lumber producers and other stakeholders in the district to secure feedstock for the proposed biorefinery.

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Canada investing $2.5 million towards proposed biofuel refinery in town

By Ken Keller
Fort Frances Times
January 8, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Marcus Powlowski

The federal government is investing more than $2 million in a project that could see a revolutionary new industry take root in Fort Frances. In a media event held yesterday, Thunder Bay-Rainy River MP Marcus Powlowski made an announcement of $2.5 million that will be going to Wanagekong-Biiwega’iganan Clean Energy Corporation (WBCEC). The investment from the federal government will help fund the Front-End Engineering Design (FEED) phase of a project that is working to establish an industrial plant that will turn local wood waste into low-carbon fuels. WBCEC is an entity made up of the ten local First Nation communities in the southern end of Treaty #3 working in partnership with Vancouver-based Highbury Energy Inc., who made the announcement of their partnership and plans to establish a biofuel refinery in Fort Frances in December 2024.

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U.S. company offers its Northwestern Ontario timberlands for carbon removal project

By Gary Rinne
TB Newswatch
January 7, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

THUNDER BAY — An American company that controls some large patches of forest northwest of Thunder Bay is considering the potential sale of its timberlands for use as a carbon offset initiative. “I think it’s very exciting that we could see a big carbon offset project in Northwestern Ontario,” said Nancy Luckai, a registered professional forester and professor emerita in natural resources management at Lakehead University. Wagner Forest Management – based in New Hampshire – owns 480,000 acres (195,000 hectares) of forest in eight former Abitibi-Consolidated freehold blocks located roughly between the Dog Lake area, Graham and Sioux Lookout. …She said these projects require more than just leaving a forest intact. …”So there has to be some investment into the property to ensure that the rate of growth, the rate of carbon sequestration, is actually greater than what would happen under natural conditions.”

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U.S. company offers its Northwestern Ontario timberlands for carbon removal project

By Gary Rinne
NWOnewswatch.com
January 7, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

An American company that controls some large patches of forest northwest of Thunder Bay is considering the potential sale of its timberlands for use as a carbon offset initiative… Wagner Forest Management – based in New Hampshire – owns 195,000 hectares of forest in eight former Abitibi-Consolidated freehold blocks located roughly between the Dog Lake area, Graham and Sioux Lookout. It purchased the blocks from Abitibi in 2005 in a bidding process in which the Ontario government also participated. Last July the company extended an invitation to investors interested in the potential development of its holdings as “one of the largest nature-based carbon removal projects in the Voluntary Carbon Market.”.. Wagner’s forest management practices are currently certified through the Sustainable Forestry Initiative.

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Forest Fires

Minister says dozens of firefighters from Alberta and B.C. to deploy in California

The Canadian Press in The Chronicle Journal
January 12, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

OTTAWA – Emergency Preparedness Minister Harjit Sajjan says dozens of firefighters from Alberta and British Columbia will help fight wildfires in California, and the federal government is co-ordinating efforts with the provinces to deploy resources. Sajjan says in a social media post that 60 firefighters from the two provinces will be deployed as soon as Monday, and that Canadian officials are working to identify and prepare more resources to send in the days ahead. He says in the post that, “Our American friends have asked for help to fight the wildfires in California and Team Canada is responding,” and he concludes with, “Neighbours helping neighbours.” A spokeswoman for Sajjan confirms in an email that Canada has received and approved an official request for help. Alberta announced last week that it is sending up to 40 wildland firefighters with more personnel, waterbombers and contracted night-vision helicopters ready to deploy.

Additional coverage from CBC News: Ontario sending 165 firefighters, supplies to support fight against California wildfires

Government of Canada: Canadians are grateful for the support and solidarity extended to Canada by the United States during our own challenging wildfire season last year. Team Canada stands ready to reciprocate that support during this time of need.

ABC Eyewitness News: Firefighters from Southeast Texas head to California to help battle ongoing wildfires

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