Region Archives: Canada East

Business & Politics

New Brunswick natural resources minister wants plan by April to save Irving jobs

By John Chilibeck
The Telegraph-Journal
March 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

New Brunswick’s natural resources minister says he’s working closely with Irving Paper to ensure a durable solution is in place to save jobs at its Saint John mill. John Herron said the need to protect the plant on Bayside Drive on Saint John’s east side was urgent, given the number of high-paying jobs – 143 – and economic activity at stake. …“It’s certainly not lost on me that the plant is very important to the regional economy and the provincial economy. …J.D. Irving, Limited, the mill’s parent company, announced early last week that it would shut down one of its two machines at the old plant because it said NB Power’s high industrial rate for electricity was making it uncompetitive in the global paper industry. …The machine that’s being shut down is the most energy intensive of the two.

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N.B. Power disputes JD Irving claim industrial power rates are uncompetitive

By Robert Jones
CBC News
February 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSICK — J.D. Irving Ltd.’s claim that “uncompetitive” electricity prices charged by N.B. Power is exclusively responsible for forcing it to close a production line at its east side Saint John paper mill has pushed the provincial utility and its rates into the spotlight. And N.B. Power is not taking the criticism quietly. …Dominique Couture said, “N.B. Power large industrial rates are lower than Nova Scotia, P.E.I., HydroOne (in Ontario), Alberta and are on par with Saskatchewan.” N.B. Power did raise industrial and residential rates 13% in the past year and has plans to raise them more than 9% again this year, beginning on April 1. Still N.B. Power disputes that has made electricity pricing uncompetitive in New Brunswick. …Quebec and British Columbia have substantial hydroelectric production and offer industrial power rates to mills between 10 and 28 per cent below N.B. Power’s subsidized rate.

Related coverage by the Telegraph-Journal Editorial Board: Power rates are a real problem. An Irving subsidy isn’t the solution

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Despite mill closure, Espanola ‘didn’t fold up and shut down’

By Hugh Kruzel
The Mid-North Monitor
February 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ESPANOLA, Ontario — Resource towns dot the Canadian landscape; they blossomed during the boom times of the last century. Lumber mills, plywood factories, and plants producing rolls of newsprint – with their signature aromatic plumes of smoke – defined many places on the Highway 11 or 17 corridor. …In the 21st century, no municipality relying on one industry can think itself safe from global change or distant corporate headquarters driven by the bottom line. Espanola, located about 71 km west of Sudbury, is another northeastern Ontario community where a mill closing sent ripples through the local economy. On Sept. 6, 2023, Domtar announced it would “indefinitely idle” its pulp and paper operations. …In a town of 3,986 (as of 2021), about 450 workers were affected almost overnight.. …”We are launching a process to establish an economic diversification strategy for the region. …It is only a matter of time before something establishes itself there.”

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Unifor ‘pushing and advocating’ for laid-off Irving Paper workers

By Isabelle Leger
CBC News
February 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jennifer Murray

Unifor says it won’t stop fighting for unionized paper mill workers receiving layoff notices this week from J.D. Irving Ltd. Jennifer Murray, Atlantic regional director of Unifor, said 100 of the 140 people laid off from Irving’s Saint John paper mill workforce are Unifor members. …Workers of these specialized jobs were notified Monday they would be laid off officially within 45 days, said Murray. …Murray said JDI was in discussion with Unifor regarding rising energy costs. Unifor had several meetings with the provincial government to find strategies to protect these jobs. …So far, JDI has said there may be opportunities for some of these workers to be put in positions elsewhere within the company. …Unifor had a meeting with Natural Resources Minister John Herron Tuesday on strategies to bolster the forestry industry in the province.

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With massive mill layoffs, the other shoe drops on NB Power

The Editorial Board
The Telegraph-Journal
February 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

It was only a matter of time before the folly of NB Power’s mismanagement would hit New Brunswickers where it hurts the most: their jobs. Irving Paper announced layoffs for about half its employees, 140 people, on Monday. The company was frank about the reason: uncompetitive power rates. There is no reason to think this is some kind of corporate bluster. New Brunswickers have seen for themselves what’s happened to their power bills. …Since the turn of the century, it has been clear NB Power was on a very bad financial path. That’s principally the fault of the utility executives and the board. …As NB Power tries to squeeze the lemon even tighter, it will drive more companies to either downsize, leave the province, or shut down altogether. J.D. Irving, Limited, the parent company of Irving Paper, understands this well.

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Irving Paper lays off nearly half its workers, blames New Brunswick’s ‘uncompetitive’ electricity rates

By Sam Farley
CBC News New Brunswick
February 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

J.D. Irving announced that it will permanently reduce operations at its Saint John paper plant, laying off 140 workers. Workers at Irving Paper were informed Monday morning that the layoffs will take effect immediately, according to a release from the company, which listed the plant’s total workforce at 310 employees. …”As New Brunswick manufacturers face more and more significant headwinds, it is becoming increasingly difficult to shoulder the impact of soaring electricity costs and remain competitive in an international market,” said Irving Pulp and Paper VP Mark Mosher in a statement. The move comes after J.D. Irving advocated last fall at the Electricity and Utilities Board hearing against changes to the way N.B. Power calculates charges. At the hearing, N.B. Power argued the move was a self-serving attempt by JDI to escape expenses the company wants others to pay for.

In related coverage:

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Buying power from Corner Brook paper mill isn’t a Hydro handout, mayor says

By Alex Kennedy
CBC News
February 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Corner Brook Mayor Jim Parsons says Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro isn’t providing a handout by buying Corner Brook Pulp and Paper’s electricity from Deer Lake Power. Hydro is buying power at 27.5 cents per kilowatt hour — nearly double the average domestic electricity rate — and it doesn’t need it to supply customers. ..But Parsons said they’re a very stable backup when they have problems elsewhere,” Parsons said. “Yes the rate is high, but it’s what you would pay for this kind of thing. So I think that yes, it is important that our government supports the mill in various ways, but I think it’s a mischaracterization to say this is a handout.” …”The paper industry is changing, and the mill needs change to remain current. And this is one of the ways in which they can remain current,” Goulding said. …Kruger employs 425 people with a deep trickle-down effect.

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Newfoundland Hydro propping up Corner Brook paper mill by buying its overpriced — and unneeded — electricity

By Terry Roberts
CBC News
February 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

CORNER BROOK — The provincial government, through its Crown-owned utility company, is helping prop up the struggling newsprint mill in Newfoundland and Labrador by buying unnecessary electricity from Corner Brook Pulp and Paper at an inflated rate. It’s power that Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro does not need to supply customers, according to the utility company. …N.L. Hydro has confirmed that it is buying electricity from Deer Lake Power, which energizes the paper-making machines at the Corner Brook mill, for 27.5 cents per kilowatt hour. That’s nearly twice the average domestic electricity rate — 15.3 cents, when the basic customer charge is included — on the island of Newfoundland. …The power purchase agreement is just the latest attempt to save the Corner Brook mill by both Liberal and Progressive Conservative governments. …Kruger has described Corner Brook Pulp and Paper as a “vital force” in western Newfoundland’s economy.

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Kruger secures Quebec support, invests $6.5 million in Wayagamack mill

By Kruger Inc.
Cision Newswire
February 14, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TROIS-RIVIÈRES, Quebec — Kruger announced a $6.5-million investment to implement an innovation project aimed at diversifying production at its Wayagamack Mill in Trois-Rivières. The initiative will enable the production of innovative label paper grades, reinforcing the Wayagamack Mill’s leadership in Québec and North America. …The project was unveiled in the presence of Jean Boulet, Québec Minister of Labour and Minister Responsible for the Mauricie Region, the Abitibi-Témiscamingue Region and the Nord-du-Québec Region… and Sylvain Bricault, General Manager of the Kruger Wayagamack Mill. …The initiative was made possible by a $2.5 million funding from the Government of Québec under the Programme Innovation Bois of the ministère des Ressources naturelles et des Forêts.

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Timber firms win right to appeal in massive Aboriginal title case

By John Chilibeck
The Telegraph-Journal
February 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — Three timber firms will have a chance to convince the New Brunswick Court of Appeal that a lower-court decision should be struck in the Wolastoqey Nation’s big Aboriginal title case. On Friday, Justice Ivan Robichaud granted J.D. Irving, Limited, Acadian Timber and H.J. Crabbe and Sons leave to appeal. They all appeared last month seeking permission from the appeal court, New Brunswick’s highest, to re-examine Justice Kathryn Gregory’s decision on motions they had filed to remove them from the massive lawsuit. As is customary in such decisions, Robichaud did not offer any reasons for granting their request. The companies didn’t like Gregory’s lengthy ruling in the Court of King’s Bench last November because, although the judge agreed that the industrial defendants and everyday private property owners must be removed from the Wolastoqey lawsuit, their land was still part of the title claim.

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‘There’s uncertainty’: Canadian forestry industry fears it will be next in Trump’s sights

By Antoine Trepanned
The National Post
February 13, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

QUEBEC — Steeve St-Gelais listened nervously on Monday as U.S. President Donald Trump listed industries he might target for tariffs. …“Will he wake up tomorrow morning and want to say, ‘Well, we’re going to do something specifically for wood’,” he wondered. St-Gelais is the president of Boisaco, a forest products company based on Quebec’s north coast that employs about 600 people and relies on the U.S. market for about 10 per cent of its business. The company’s $200 million in annual revenue isn’t enough to dominate the Canadian landscape, but it’s an economic superpower in the Sacré-Cœur community of just 10,400 people. The reason St-Gelais is so nervous is that since Trump took office four weeks ago, he’s seen a drop of about 25% in orders from Canada and the United States. His customers are buying just enough to cover their short-term needs, waiting to see if the president will take on the industry. 

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Quebec’s economy will never be the same, Legault says after meeting White House officials

By Philip Authier
Montreal Gazette
February 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

François Legault

QUEBEC — Premier François Legault has emerged from meetings with high-ranking Donald Trump officials convinced more than ever that the American-Canadian trade relationship will have to change, and that means Quebecers need to get used to the idea that their economy will never be the same. Pledging to nevertheless protect Quebec workers despite the challenges ahead, Legault said the two days of meetings he and the other Canadian premiers held in Washington convinced him the Americans are looking for long-term reassurances they can have access to Canadian minerals and resources. And Quebec companies, including those producing aluminum, steel and softwood lumber, are going to have to make concessions and diversify to develop new markets to compete. …“There were some very frank moments across the table,” added British Columbia Premier David Eby. “They urged us to take the president at his word.” …Legault said he’s “prepared to make compromises on aeronautics, on forestry.”

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Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper names Bill MacPherson CEO

The Net News Ledger
February 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Bill MacPherson

THUNDER BAY, Ontario — Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper , a northern bleached softwood kraft and northern bleached hardwood kraft pulp, paper, newsprint and directory producer, announced the appointment of K. William (Bill) MacPherson as Chief Executive Officer, effective February 10, 2025. …MacPherson brings more than 35 years of pulp and paper industry leadership experience to Thunder Bay, most recently serving as VP of Paperboard Manufacturing for Graphic Packaging International. Prior to Graphic, MacPherson was Managing Director at Mercer International, Canada, and Mill Manager for Domtar in Kingsport, Tennessee. …“As we begin our second century of operations, I look forward to working with Bill as we strengthen our operations and build our reputation in this new era as a steadfast driver of the local economy,” said Kent Ramsay, Thunder Bay President.

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Tariffs a concern for Ontario First Nations enterprises

By Sandi Krasowski
The Chronicle Journal
February 9, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jason Rasevych

THUNDER BAY, Ontario — The Anishnawbe Business Professional Association (ABPA) is “deeply concerned” about the proposed U.S. tariffs on Canadian exports and their potential to harm to the economic stability of Indigenous businesses in the oil and gas, forestry, mining, and electricity sectors. ABPA president Jason Rasevych, a member of Ginoogaming First Nation, said the business organization is urging the federal and provincial governments to work with treaty partners to ensure that Indigenous leaders are a part of the discussion to mitigate these impacts and support the resilience and prosperity of all Canadians. “Canada needs more than reactive tariffs or bailouts. We need a bold, forward-thinking strategy that makes us the obvious choice for global business,” Rasevych told The Chronicle-Journal. “That means reducing internal trade barriers and championing the strengths that set us apart.”

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Ontario forestry industry braced for ‘period of pain’

By Ian Ross
Northern Ontario Business
February 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ian Dunn

Cross-border quarrels between Canada and the U.S. over goods and supply are nothing new, having its roots in the pre-Confederation days of the Jay Treaty of 1794, said Ian Dunn. The president-CEO of the 51-member Ontario Forest Industries Association (OFIA) calls the ongoing fight over exported Canadian lumber to the U.S. “probably the largest global trade dispute” since the close of the Second World War. “Tariffs are not a new thing for the lumber producers and our membership,” said Dunn. …About 97% of Ontario’s forest products exports annually – amounting to $7.7 billion of trade – heads to the U.S. in the form of lumber, pulp, newsprint and structural panels. Slap on a 25 per cent tariff and that’s close to $2 billion coming out of Ontario. …Should the combination of increased duties and Trump tariffs remain in place for an extended period of time, Ontario’s forest industry would be a shadow of its former self.

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Details on possible Liverpool Nova Scotia pulp mill expected in March

By Evan Taylor
CKBW News
February 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

LIVERPOOL, Nova Scotia — Domtar is nearing the final stages of its feasibility study for a potential new pulp mill in Liverpool, Nova Scotia. The company expects to make a public announcement in the first quarter of 2025, ahead of a court hearing in March. The decision to proceed with the project is contingent upon meeting a 14% return on investment over 20 years, as outlined in the May 2024 court-approved settlement agreement with the province. …Natural Resources Minister Tory Rushton emphasized the potential economic impact of the project. The project would also provide a market for low-quality wood and chips. …Domtar’s subsidiary company, Paper Excellence, entered into a settlement with the provincial government following the closure of the Northern Pulp mill in 2020. As part of the settlement, which resolved a $450-million lawsuit filed by Paper Excellence against the government over closure, Domtar agreed to explore the viability of opening a new mill in Liverpool.

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Forest products to be added to Nova Scotia Loyal program that encourages buying local

By Leigha Kaiser
CTV News
February 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NOVA SCOTIA — Forest products that are grown, harvested, crafted or manufactured in Nova Scotia will soon be marketed through the Nova Scotia Loyal program. The program, which launched last July, gives Nova Scotians more points on their existing loyalty rewards program for buying local goods. The Nova Scotia government says forest product producers can enrol in the program and will be automatically approved. “We want to make buying local easy and clear when it comes to our forest products,” said Minister of Natural Resources Tory Rushton. Products under the Nova Scotia Loyal program are labelled to help consumers easily identify them. …“Nova Scotia Loyal is a great opportunity to showcase these wonderful products and help people support our businesses across the province,” said Todd Burgess, executive director with Forest Nova Scotia.

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Companies argue judge should have shut door to expropriation in Wolastoqey Nation title claim

By John Chillbeck
CBC News
February 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — The Wolastoqey Nation’s title claim for more than half of New Brunswick was in court again Friday, this time because three timber firms are upset about a lower court ruling that did not explicitly state their land won’t be taken from them someday. J.D. Irving, H.J. Crabbe and Sons, and Acadian Timber each presented separate motions before the Court of Appeal of New Brunswick , asking it to revisit a decision by Justice Kathryn Gregory. Although Gregory agreed that the industrial defendants must be removed from the lawsuit, their land is still part of the title claim. She also wrote in her judgment that in the future it’s possible the Crown could expropriate their property and give it to First Nations communities. …”This is the most important case of our lifetime,” Hugh Cameron, lawyer for Acadian Timber, told Justice Ivan Robichaud. …Robichaud reserved his decision on the leave to appeal.

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Forestry sector will see a major impact from a trade war

By Clint Fleury
Thunder Bay News Watch
February 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ian Dunn

THUNDER BAY — Anxiety about tariffs still looms over the forest industry, despite the Canada-U.S. trade war being delayed 30 days. “There’s a great deal of concern. The 30-day reprieve is welcome, but effectively, it means nothing until it’s been resolved,” said Ian Dunn, chief executive officer of Ontario Forest Industries Association. …“Tariffs have – and duties are already having an impact. Sawmills in the area have had a reduction of shifts. There have been layoffs. In other regions of the province, there have been closures in the sawmilling industry. There’s also been the idling of very important anchor mills in Terrace Bay and Espanola,” Dunn said. “I think in a lot of respects the damage has already been done. If you’re a multinational company looking to invest, you’re going to sense a lot of uncertainty in the marketplace right now. You would lose a lot of confidence in the Canadian-U.S. relationship,” he added.

Related coverage in CBC: Ontario’s forestry sector can’t withstand more tariffs, says industry association

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Finance & Economics

Stella-Jones reports Q4, 2024 net income of $52 million

By Stella-Jones Inc.
GlobeNewswire
February 27, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTREAL — Stella-Jones announced financial results for its fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2024. Sales for the fourth quarter of 2024 amounted to $730 million, up 6% from sales of $688 million for the same period in 2023. …Net income for the period amounted to $52 million compared with $56 million in the corresponding period of 2023. …Sales for the year ended December 31, 2024 reached $3,469 million, up 5%, versus sales of $3,319 million in 2023. Net income in 2024 was $319 million, compared to net income of $326 million in 2023. Despite the lower net income, earnings per share in 2024 was higher at $5.66 versus $5.62 in 2023 due to the continued repurchase of shares. …Eric Vachon, CEO of Stella-Jones, “We achieved solid results in our infrastructure product categories, even in the face of softer market demand. We acquired new customers, maintained our expanded EBITDA margin of over 18%, and delivered strong operating cashflows.”

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Cascades reports Q4, 2024 net loss of $13 million

By Cascades Inc.
Cision Newswire
February 20, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades reported its unaudited financial results for the three-month period and fiscal year ended December 31, 2024. Q4 2024 Highlights include: Sales of $1,211 million (compared with $1,201 million in Q3 2024 and $1,138 million in Q4 2023); net loss of $13 million (compared to earnings of $1 million in Q3, 2023 and net loss of $57 million in Q4, 202). …On an adjusted basis, the Corporation posted net earnings of $25 million in the fourth quarter of 2024, compared to net earnings of $5 million in the same period of 2023. On an annual basis, Cascades reported full year 2024 sales of $4,701 million (compared with $4,638 million in 2023), Operating income of $95 million (compared with $40 million in 2023); Net loss per common share of ($0.31) (compared with ($0.76) in 2023).

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Goodfellow reports Q4, 2024 net earnings of $2.4 million

By Goodfellow Inc.
Globe Newswire
February 19, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

DELSON, Quebec — Goodfellow announced its financial results. For the fourth quarter ended November 30, 2024, the Company reported net earnings of $2.4 million or $0.29 per share compared to net earnings of $2.1 million or $0.25 per share a year ago. Consolidated sales for the three months ended November 30, 2024 were $124.2 million compared to $125.4 million last year. For the fiscal year ended November 30, 2024, the Company reported net earnings of $13.4 million or $1.58 per share compared to net earnings of $14.7 million or $1.72 per share a year ago. Consolidated sales for the fiscal year ended November 30, 2024 were $509.5 million compared to $512.8 million last year.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Eco Guardian Announces Upcoming Sustainable Packaging Manufacturing Facility in Ontario

Cision Newswire
February 25, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Eco Guardian, a leading innovator in sustainable packaging solutions is proud to announce the upcoming opening of its state-of-the-art manufacturing facility in Ontario, set to be fully operational in Q4 2025. This strategic expansion enhances Eco Guardian’s ability to produce high-quality, compostable, and recyclable paper cups and bowls in Canada, reducing dependency on foreign imports and reinforcing the ‘Made in Canada’ movement… Eco Guardian’s facility will produce 100% compostable and recyclable paper products, meeting the highest environmental standards. The company is committed to reducing carbon footprints by leveraging sustainable raw materials, cutting-edge manufacturing processes, and responsible sourcing practices.

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Quebec’s Cecobois launches wood building construction campaign

By Harold von Kursk
Sustainable Biz Canada
February 18, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Quebec-based Cecobois has launched an ambitious campaign to promote wood as a viable, low-carbon material for future construction projects in Quebec. This initiative – entitled Construction bas carbon avec le bois (Low-carbon construction with wood), or CBCB – encourages the province’s architects, engineers and property developers to increase the use of wood in new buildings as part of the effort to decarbonize the built environment. Cecobois, an independent, non-profit agency funded by the Quebec government, Natural Resources Canada and the wood industry, is committed to accelerating mass timber construction and the corresponding use of wood products. …Parallel to the announcement of the CBCB campaign, Cecobois was also awarded $1.2 million in new funding from the Government of Quebec as part of its Policy on the Integration of Wood in Construction. …Second only to B.C. as Canada’s leading softwood lumber producer and endowed with vast forest regions, Quebec is ideally positioned to harness wood as a natural, low-carbon renewable resource.

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Forestry

Sollum Technologies and Leaficient introduce the first plant-responsive dynamic LED lighting solution

By Sollum Technologies
Cision Newswire
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTRÉAL — Sollum TechnologiesanLeaficient are pioneering a breakthrough technology that redefines how LED lighting adapts to plant growth. Today’s traditional lighting strategies rely on Daily Light Integral (DLI) as the primary metric for optimizing plant growth, based on the premise that plants absorb and use light with the same efficiency throughout the day and at all growth stages. However, recent research has shown that plant productivity can change significantly based on a myriad of factors relating to the environment, resources provided and internal biological processes. In response, Sollum and Leaficient are collaborating to develop the first closed-loop, plant-adaptive dynamic lighting system, which adjusts lighting in real time based on plant productivity and growth rates.

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Domtar Joins Research Partnership Focusing on Quebec’s Boreal Forest

By Nathalie Guilbault
Domtar
February 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Domtar is joining forces with Boisaco and the Centre de recherche sur la boréalie (CREB) of the Université du Québec à Chicoutimi (UQAC) to support leading-edge research projects that will address the challenge of managing Quebec’s forests sustainably. The research partnership will allocate $430,000 annually over five years, totaling $2.15 million, with Domtar, owned by investor Jackson Wijaya, providing $350,000. UQAC’s research projects focus on a number of critical themes, such as climate change adaptation, biodiversity, carbon management and forest ecosystem regeneration. These initiatives aim to advance Quebec’s scientific knowledge and improve sustainable forest management practices.

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This sap-sucking bug could wreak havoc on Hamilton’s forests

By David A. Galbraith, Royal Botanical Gardens
The Hamilton Spectator
February 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

I’m writing to raise awareness of a newer challenge to our area’s forests. In 2023, Royal Botanical Gardens staff found that some eastern hemlock trees around Cootes Paradise showed the fuzzy telltale signs of a new threat: hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA). Hemlock woolly adelgid is a sap-sucking bug first detected in Hamilton in the early 2020s. The individual insects are just two millimetres long and are spread by birds. With climate change, recent warmer winters (on average) help them to survive. The arrival of the hemlock woolly adelgid means that eastern hemlock may join the sad list of magnificent trees in southern Ontario already seriously affected by invasive insects and diseases, like white ash, American elm and American chestnut. …Eastern hemlocks are important trees that create deep shade and habitat for birds and other animals. 

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Tree diversity is the key to forest survival

By Zack Metcalfe
The National Observer
February 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — Anthony Taylor is an associate professor with the University of New Brunswick specializing in the relationship between forestry and climate. He demonstrated the link between tree diversity and carbon sequestration in a 2023 paper published in the journal Nature, comparing these two metrics on 406 sample plots across the country. …Taylor has been expanding his research into the domains of drought and wildfires, both of which will become more common in coming decades. Here too, he’s found the diversity of trees in a given forest is a good indicator of how well they’ll weather a warming world, not only absorbing carbon, but holding onto it. …Maintaining a natural blend of coniferous and deciduous species in Maritime forests, therefore, would mean sequestering more carbon and suppressing more wildfires, but as Taylor outlined, regional forest management practices have been pushing in the opposite direction for decades.

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Thunder Bay Fire Rescue ready for 2025 wildfire season

By Matt Prokopchuk
The Thunder Bay News Watch
February 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

THUNDER BAY — Thunder Bay’s fire chief says the local service is taking steps to be as prepared as possible for a wildfire on the city’s doorstep, as the region is likely to become increasingly susceptible to forest fires. David Paxton said with disastrous wildfires over the past decade, it’s something fire departments are taking seriously. …Paxton said that means the department is actively reviewing its capabilities around things like value protection, where firefighters identify and use heavy sprinklers and other specialized equipment to attempt to defend critical infrastructure against an encroaching fire. …Referring to lessons the local department can take from high-profile disasters, Paxton said clear messaging and communication, as well as early awareness and preparedness, are key.

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Leaders promise support for northern Ontario forestry industry

By Randy Thoms
CKDR News
February 14, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The party leaders put a northern lens to their platforms during a debate held in North Bay on Friday. Forestry was among the topics raised. PC leader Doug Ford is promising protection to northern Ontario industries, suggesting the forest sector is at ground zero of his fight against the U.S. trade tariffs. He outlined investments of over $400 million in the sector that has created over 3,500 new jobs. “When it comes to the forestry sector, we’re going to support the forestry sector,” says Ford. “We’re going to protect them against Donald Trump’s tariffs. We’re going to protect their families, their jobs and their communities.” The opposition was critical of the Ford government’s support, drawing attention to mills in Terrace Bay, Espanola and Thessalon that closed or have been idled.

Related coverage:

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Canada and New Brunswick Announce Major Investment in Wildfire Equipment and to Improve Community Resilience Against Wildfires

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
February 14, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONCTON, New Brunswick –– The Honourable Ginette Petitpas Taylor, on behalf of  Jonathan Wilkinson, and the Honourable John Herron, New Brunswick Minister of Natural Resources, announced a joint investment of $40.1 million over four years through the Government of Canada’s Fighting and Managing Wildfires in a Changing Climate Program (FMWCC) – Equipment Fund and the Resilient Communities through FireSmart (RCF) Program. This joint investment is supporting the purchase of equipment such as tanks and pumps, drones, trucks and heavy equipment. …This joint investment will also support wildfire preparation through the application of FireSmart practices in New Brunswick.

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Reconciliation continues in forestry

By Sandi Krasowski
Fort Frances Times
February 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jason Rasevych

Progress is being made in the forestry sector for First Nations reconciliation in Northern Ontario. Jason Rasevych, president of the Anishnawbe Business Professional Association (ABPA), attended the Prosperity Northwest conference in January and delivered a keynote on the urgent need for deeper, more respectful collaboration between First Nations communities and the Northern Ontario forestry sector. He said many forestry companies are taking steps to engage more respectfully with First Nations, and there are growing examples of successful partnerships and joint ventures. “However, the pace of change is still slow, and much more needs to be done,” Rasevych said, pointing out that the Crown Forest Sustainability Act is outdated and needs reform and the Forest Tenure Modernization process that was announced by Doug Ford in 2018 has not moved. “We need to pick up traction in these areas and develop a provincial loan guarantee program for forestry.”

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Nature Nova Scotia responds to Premier Tim Houston

Letter by Nature Nova Scotia
The Halifax Examiner
February 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Dear Premier Houston, On January 21st, you sent a letter to your caucus addressing potential actions your government could take in response to US President Trump’s threat of tariffs, later made available in the Chronicle Herald. We are extremely concerned with some of the content of your letter …as well as the disrespectful way you have described the interests of Nova Scotians and the environmental groups that represent them, referring to opposition voices to unsustainable resource extraction activities as “special interest” groups. …we are left wondering if your term “special interest” group refers only to organizations based in Halifax, or urban areas in general, or perhaps only to organizations led by scientists and other experts in environmental fields. In this case, where does Nature Nova Scotia fall? Our staff and board are rural Nova Scotians, some of us woodlot owners, and foresters, but we are also scientists, and we are certainly environmentalists. 

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WildFireSat: $72 million for critical Canadian space infrastructure for wildfires

By Canadian Space Agency
Cision Newswire
February 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

LONGUEUIL, Quebec — Canada’s boreal forest is vast and experiences some of the world’s largest and most intense wildfires. About $1 billion is spent each year in Canada to combat wildfires. …Satellite Earth observation is the only way to provide daily data on all active wildfires spanning the entire Canadian territory. …Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change announced that exactEarth Ltd., a subsidiary of Spire Global Canada, was awarded a contract of $72 million for the design of Canada’s WildFireSat constellation. …WildFireSat will consist of seven microsatellites tailored to monitor active wildfires across Canada on a daily basis. This mission will provide essential data to fire managers and other responsible authorities. This data will enable them to track fire behaviour, identify high-risk wildfires, and make informed decisions. WildFireSat data will also be used in air quality forecasts.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Once a high-profile emitter, Port of Belledune wants to be a green energy hub

By Jennifer Sweet
CBC News
March 2, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

…”We’re focused on … looking at clean fuel for the power plant, and attracting industries that use clean fuel to produce a value-added product,” said Denis Caron, the president and CEO of the Port of Belledune in New Brunswick. …The Conservation Council of New Brunswick is “first and foremost … happy” the port wants to transition away from fossil fuels to more renewable technologies, said Moe Qureshi, director of climate research and policy. But it’s “not very happy” about the biomass plan for N.B. Power’s Belledune generating station. Burning wood isn’t an efficient way to generate electricity, Qureshi said, and it would be difficult to regrow trees at the rate they are burnt up as wood pellets. …N.B. Power is looking at using black wood pellets at Belledune, Caron said. These are more energy dense and similar to coal, and may not require any refitting or capital spending at the power plant.

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Liberal bill would require considering wood heat for Nova Scotia public buildings

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
February 25, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Liberal House leader Iain Rankin says a bill his party tabled last week at Province House would create new markets for the forestry industry while helping to heat public buildings with something other than oil. The Wood Chip Heating Systems in Public Buildings Act would require Nova Scotia government officials to consider wood heat systems in all new public buildings or in cases of major retrofits, including for schools and hospitals. In an interview last week, Rankin said there would be multiple benefits to the initiative. “For the climate, because it is a renewable resource. It could be a cost savings to the province because of the volatility of oil prices — so it’s displacing oil — and it creates a good economic advantage to areas of the province that are predominantly rural.”

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Growing climate change adaptation in Canada’s forestry sector

By Jordan Ross
University of Winnepeg
February 19, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Bullock and Lamoureux

A research team at The University of Winnipeg has secured federal funding to help small businesses in Canada’s forestry sector adapt to a changing climate in ways that make financial, logistical, and environmental sense. Project Lead Dr. Ryan Bullock and Senior Research Associate Bryanne Lamoureux are overseeing the three-year research project, entitled “Maximizing Pathways to Forest Sector Adaptation by Reducing Barriers for Small Enterprise.”.. Forestry might bring to mind big names like Weyerhaeuser, but small and micro-sized companies account for 99 per cent of Canada’s forestry enterprises, making them the “front line” for implementing adaptation strategies, Lamoureux said… Lamoureux listed several aspects of forestry and logging that could unlock workable solutions with the right research behind them. “What if we take the mill to the woods?”

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Forestry research organization names new lead

Northern Ontario Business
February 14, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Thunder Bay’s Centre for Research & Innovation in the Bio-Economy (CRIBE) is welcoming a new leader to its ranks. The organization announced on Feb. 11 that Scott Jackson has been tapped to become its next CEO. As of Feb. 18, he’ll be replacing Chris Walton, who had served in the role for the last seven years. CRIBE said in a social media post that the change was “part of a planned transition with the board of directors.” Jackson has spent more than 25 years in the field of forest management and natural resource policy. Most recently, he was the director of conservation biology at the Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC). Previously, he was the manager of forest products for the Ontario Forest Industries Association (OFIA). He holds a bachelor of science degree in environmental biology from Queen’s University, as well as a master’s degree in forest conservation from the University of Toronto.

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Health & Safety

Pictou Landing First Nation seeks judicial review of Boat Harbour cleanup plan

By Taryn Grant
CBC News
March 1, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

NOVA SCOTIA — Pictou Landing First Nation has asked the Federal Court to overturn Ottawa’s approval of a plan to store contaminated sludge from Boat Harbour in an enclosed structure on nearby land. The Mi’kmaw community in northern Nova Scotia has filed for a judicial review of the decision from federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault. Guilbeault said last month that the proposed remediation of Boat Harbour, which for decades received wastewater from a kraft paper mill, “is not likely to cause significant adverse environmental effects.” …The submission mentions insufficient consultation, interference with treaty rights and violations of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, among other grounds. …Community members have said they were duped into the deal with false assurances that the effluent wouldn’t be harmful, but they soon noticed major environmental changes.

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Forest History & Archives

Old Mill Heritage Centre to celebrate 100th anniversary

By Tom Sasvari
The Manitoulin Expositor
February 19, 2025
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada, Canada East

With the Old Mill in Kagawong celebrating its 100th anniversary this year, museum curator Rick Nelson said a couple of events will take place to commemorate this milestone. The museum board is also endeavoring to have a tabletop pictorial book on the history of the building published. “The Old Mill is celebrating its 100th golden anniversary this year and we are making plans for several celebrations to take place,” said Mr. Nelson… Construction of the two-storey pulp mill in Kagawong began in the spring of 1925. At that time, it would have been the only pulp mill on Manitoulin Island. By December of that year the first pulp was produced, ground from spruce and shipped by boat to Wisconsin to be made into paper for Sears-Roebuck catalogues. Spruce was abundently available and was needed to give the Sears-Roebuck catalogue pages a shiny finish.

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