Region Archives: Canada East

Business & Politics

Environment ministry revoked penalties for Terrace Bay pulp mill

By Gary Rinne
Superior North News
September 4, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TERRACE BAY, Ontario — The owner of the shuttered pulp mill at Terrace Bay is off the hook for nearly $100,000 in penalties because government bureaucrats made a mistake in charging the company for releasing contaminants. Details of the case came to light in a decision released last month by the Ontario Land Tribunal. On March 1, 2024, about two months after AV Terrace Bay idled its equipment, the Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks (MECP) issued an order comprised of six penalties totalling $97,000. The order described six contraventions of provincial environmental regulations, and alleged that total reduced sulphur emissions into the air had exceeded prescribed limits. AV Terrace Bay filed an appeal with the Ontario Land Tribunal. …”The MECP concluded that the environmental penalties were not available for the discharges at issue and there was no legal authority for the EP order,” the tribunal noted.

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Blame Nova Scotia for billions Canada will pay in softwood lumber duties

By William Pellerin
The Globe and Mail
September 3, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The recent U.S. decision to increase softwood lumber duties to nearly 15% is a blow to Canada. …Since 2017, Canadian lumber producers have paid more than $9-billion in duties. Many Canadians would be surprised to learn that Nova Scotia bears a heavy portion of blame. …The province of Nova Scotia… invests considerable effort to produce the benchmark information that it then shares with the United States. …Few Canadians know that softwood lumber produced in Nova Scotia is exempt from the U.S. duties. When U.S. lumber producers petitioned the U.S. government for the duties, they presented data on Nova Scotia’s timber pricing to support their allegations that other Canadian provinces were subsidizing producers. While Nova Scotia has benefited from securing its exclusion from the U.S. duties, other Canadian provinces bear that heavy burden. …It sets a dangerous precedent where a Canadian province collaborates with a foreign government at the expense of other provinces. [to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

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J.D. Irving blasts NB Power for putting customers through rate shock

By John Chilibeck
The Telegraph-Journal
August 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — NB Power’s demand for stiff rate hikes will drive companies out of business, create job losses, and lead to the utility losing customers warns one of the province’s biggest firms. Glenn Zacher, a lawyer representing J.D. Irving (JDI), submitted a scathing report to the New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board and on the final day of rate hearings. He called the utility’s application “extraordinary” for its “sheer magnitude,” pointing out that the 9.25% hike this year and next year is an average only for all the customers who buy electricity. When combined with an increase to the rate rider this year – a special catch-up fee when NB Power underestimated how much money it needed the year before – residential customers are facing a 13.25%  increase this year, while big industry, such as JDI, is staring down a more than 15% hike. 

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Nova Scotia government once again approves aerial spraying of Nova Scotia woodlands

By Joan Baxter
The Halifax Examiner
August 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Nova Scotia Environment and Climate Change (NSECC) has once again issued permits for the aerial spraying of woodlands in Nova Scotia with herbicides laced with glyphosate, identified by the World Health Organization as “probably carcinogenic to humans. This year’s permits, issued to New Brunswick-based J.D. Irving and ARF Enterprises Ltd of Tatamagouche, allow for the aerial spraying of 1,837 hectares of private woodlands in six counties – Cumberland, Colchester, Hants, Queens, Annapolis, and Kings. This is an increase of 422 hectares (1,043 acres) over spray approvals for 2023. The NSECC press release says the proposed time frame for the spraying is between August 15 and October 31, 2024. …The NSECC approvals for the aerial spraying of glyphosate over Nova Scotia come just one day after the NY Times published an in-depth investigation into the mysterious degenerative neurological disease that has affected dozens of people in New Brunswick and may be linked with glyphosate.”

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Kevin Holland receives a new title – Associate Minister of Forestry and Forest Products

By Olivia Browning
Thunder Bay News Watch
August 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kevin Holland

THUNDER BAY – MPP Kevin Holland has joined the cabinet as the new associate minister of forestry and forest products as part of the ministry of natural resources. In an interview with TBnewswatch, Holland said around 60 per cent of the work he does in his riding is in some way related to forestry and mining. “When the premier phoned me on Friday morning and asked me to take over the associate minister role for forestry and forest products, I was humbled by it and immediately excited by the opportunities that he was providing for me. “Forestry is a huge component of my riding in Northwestern Ontario in general. “Being a minister and a member of cabinet now just affords me the opportunity to participate in cabinet meetings and speak more directly with my colleagues at the cabinet level . . . to provide that perspective for Thunder Bay and broaden it for Northwestern Ontario,” he said.

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Premier Doug Ford shuffles his cabinet after Education Minister Todd Smith resigns

By Allison Jones
Yahoo! News
August 16, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Doug Ford

TORONTO — Ontario Education Minister Todd Smith resigned his seat and from cabinet Friday to accept a job in the private sector less than three months after being given the education portfolio, prompting Premier Doug Ford to shuffle his cabinet. Smith has served in cabinet since Ford’s government was first elected in 2018, but spent the longest amount of time in the energy portfolio. …Ford named Jill Dunlop as the new education minister. She moves to the portfolio after being colleges and universities minister for three years. Nolan Quinn, who was promoted to cabinet a little over two months ago as associate minister of forestry, takes over as minister of colleges and universities. Kevin Holland will move from the backbenches to become associate minister of forestry.

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Cochrane ‘looking tragedy in the eye’, turning it into opportunity after mill fire

By Marissa Lentz-McGrath
The Bay Today
August 14, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

COCHRANE, Ontario – A Cochrane company is looking at opportunities to restart a historic mill that a fire tore through last week, says the town’s mayor. At a Cochrane council meeting, Mayor Peter Politis talked about the Aug. 9 fire at the Rockshield Engineered Wood Products plant, which employs about 200 people. “They’re concerned. And my understanding is that they will try to have a plan in place by the end of the week once they have a better handle on where the insurance is, and once they’ve got a sense of how much can be salvaged and if there’s an opportunity to rebuild,” said Politis. …“Then we will focus wholeheartedly in joining them in a partnership, approaching all levels of government and turning it into opportunity.” …The mill has been the backbone of Cochrane’s economy, Politis said.

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Wood Manufacturing Council Expands Board and Efforts to Lead in Entry, Retention, and Advancement of People

By the Wood Manufacturing Council
Wood Industry Magazine
August 14, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Moncton, New Brunswick  — The Wood Manufacturing Council (WMC) continues to unite leaders in wood manufacturing to solidify its role as the premier advocate for human resource opportunities and challenges within the industry. …By bringing together various components of the wood manufacturing sector, the WMC aims to streamline efforts to inform government policy and program development. This collective approach allows for more effective advocacy and consultation on issues pertaining to human resources in wood manufacturing. …The newly appointed board members are: Mike Baker, Chief Executive Officer, Wood Manufacturing Cluster of Ontario; Audra Denny, National Executive Director, Architectural Woodwork Manufacturers Association of Canada; and Gilles Pelletier, Président directeur général, Association des fabricants de meubles du Québec/Quebec Furniture Manufacturers Association.

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Union leader wants RYAM to sell as layoffs begin

By David Briggs
The Bay Today
August 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The layoffs at Rayonier Advanced Materials (RYAM) in Témiscaming began over the weekend, explained Unifor Local 233 President Stéphane Lefebvre, who expects the first round to include 50 job losses of the pending 275. “The reality is setting in,” Lefebvre detailed. “RYAM clearly does not want to be here,” Lefebvre added, made clear by “shutting down half the mill and putting the other half up for sale.” …“For the whole of this site to be successful,” Lefebvre continued, “the best option is to find an operator to run the whole site.” There are “two solutions to our problem,” Lefebvre added. One is that “RYAM decides to partner up with the local group here and start the specialty cellulose back up and run the site as a whole.” The second solution is for RYAM to sell outright.

Related coverage in Sault This Week: Layoffs underway at RYAM today

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Fire at northern Ontario town’s historic plywood mill

By Marissa Lentz-McGrath
North Bay Today
August 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

COCHRANE, Ont. — No injuries have been reported after a fire at a historic plywood mill over the weekend. A fire broke out at the Rockshield Engineered Wood Products plant in Cochrane on Saturday, Aug. 10. It employs about 6,000 people, 200 being Cochrane residents. “The Cochrane Fire Department, along with Expedition Helicopters, and fire crews from both Iroquois Falls and Kapuskasing worked to keep the main fire to the pond and chip pile area, and to areas of the roof for the most part,” wrote Mayor Peter Politis in a statement on August 12. “The mill itself remains intact and damages while worrisome, were minimized. This is great news as Rockshield is not only the largest employer in town but the magnitude of the incident had the potential to be quite devastating to the area.” Politis said the plant has injected over $90 million into the local economy since restarting in 2015.

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Finance & Economics

GreenFirst reports Q2, 2024 net loss of $14.5 million

By GreenForest Forest Products Inc.
Business Wire
August 12, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — GreenFirst Forest Products announced results for the second quarter ended June 29, 2024. Highlights include: Q2 2024 net loss from continuing operations was $14.5 million, compared to net loss of $13.4 million in Q1 2024. Adjusted EBITDA for Q2 2024 was negative $12.1 million compared to negative $3.5 million in Q1 2024. Both the lumber and paper operations had a negative contribution to Q2 2024 as a result of weak market conditions. Lumber sales volumes in Q2 2024 were lower than Q1 2024 due to the continued drag on lumber demand as housing affordability remains significantly impacted by high mortgage rates. …The Company plans to complete a spin-out transaction of Kap Corporation (“Kap”), the holding company of Kap Paper Inc.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

A 360 Solution for Light Wood-Frame Offsite Construction

By Quebec Wood Export Bureau
Arch Daily
August 15, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

In the construction industry, light wood-frame offsite construction has emerged as a game-changing approach, promising faster build times, higher quality, and reduced environmental impact. Member companies of the Quebec Wood Export Bureau (QWEB) have launched a digital tool that harnesses the benefits and potential of prefabricated light wood-frame products for projects. It all starts with the BIM environment. QWEB and its members have built a digital tool called Offsite Wood for professionals seeking to delve deeper into offsite wood construction. It offers a wealth of downloadable content, technical specifications, and case studies. It highlights the extensive use of BIM technology among QWEB members, showcasing how digital tools can streamline the prefabrication process and improve project outcomes. By leveraging these resources, industry professionals can stay informed about best practices and innovations in offsite construction.

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Ontario’s advanced wood in construction plan praised by stakeholders

By Don Wall
The Daily Commercial News
August 9, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Stakeholders in Ontario’s wood construction sector are praising the provincial government’s proposed action plan for the industry as comprehensive, far-reaching and a strong next step towards creating incentives for expansion. The province’s draft Advanced Wood Construction Action Plan was launched for public input on July 30. The plan is said to target growth in prefabricated and modular wooden building materials and more broadly the advancement of the diverse players in the field. During the event Ontario Associate Minister of Forestry Nolan Quinn announced the government was contributing $3.46 million towards Element5’s $23-million expansion, a project that will triple its production capacity. …“This is a great step forward,” said Steven Street, executive director of WoodWorks Ontario. …The plan has four objectives: support promotion, education and training initiatives; spur research and the advancement of codes, standards and regulations; stimulate innovation and advanced manufacturing; and demonstrate and display advanced wood construction.

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Forestry

Ontario Superior Court rejects $5-million claim in forest management dispute

By Bernise Carolino
The Law Times
September 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Superior Court of Justice of Ontario dismissed a $5-million claim brought against the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (MNRF) and ordered the plaintiff to pay the Crown $35,000 in costs. This case involved forestry operations performed by the MNRF’s subcontractor in July 2009 in the Lac Seul Forest in Echo Township, Ontario. …The subcontractor trespassed on the plaintiff’s property, which pushed debris and small trees onto his land. …A handwritten but unsigned document dated Aug. 6, 2009 proposed a settlement including restoration work by the subcontractor. …In November 2009, the plaintiff and others formed the Eco Bio-Regional Wilderness Council, which aimed to influence the management of forests in Echo Township. The plaintiff made claims on the council’s behalf. In 2016, the court determined that the plaintiff lacked the standing to bring these claims on the council’s behalf, including any public interest claims against the MNRF.

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Residents hope a road that threatened old-growth forest will be rerouted

By Moira Donovan
CBC News
September 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ron Cousins

NOVA SCOTIA — A resident of Kentville, N.S., who was concerned that the town’s plans for a future connector road to support the construction of new housing would result in the destruction of old-growth forest on his property is hopeful that the road can be rerouted… Last year, the Town of Kentville told Kentville resident, Ron Cousins it required nearly half a hectare of the land on that edge of his property to expand an existing service road into a connector road for new development — and that it would expropriate the land if necessary. After months of campaigning by Cousins and his advocates — attending council meetings, contacting politicians, and launching petitions — the town is considering other routes, a change Cousins hopes will mean permanent protection for the forest.

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Forestry students at Algonquin College receive their silver rings

By Jamie Bramburger
Pembroke Observer News
August 28, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Forestry is woven into the tapestry of the Ottawa Valley. For hundreds of years forests have provided a livelihood in an industry that is one of the largest drivers of Renfrew County’s economy. Not surprisingly, the Forestry Technician program is the longest standing full-time program offered at Algonquin College’s Pembroke Campus, having started in 1968… Since those early days, the Pembroke Campus has been among a small group of post-secondary schools in Ontario that have produced thousands of Forestry graduates. Recently, the class of 2024 completed its program of study and celebrated the occasion by receiving their silver rings from the Canadian Institute of Forestry. …During their silver ring ceremony, the students were reminded of the opportunity that has been presented to them to make a difference in their careers. …The ring comes with a commitment to live by a code of ethics for forestry professionals.

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Guilbeault’s decree to save caribou would turn Quebec village into ‘ghost town,’ mayor says

By Antoine Trépanier
The Canadian Press in The Montreal Gazette
August 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

QUEBEC — A Côte-Nord mayor heard by federal officials on a committee said Monday that a decree to protect caribou would be a “drama” for her community, while the chief of the Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador sees the measure as necessary to ensure the survival of endangered herds. …Lise Boulianne, mayor of Sacré-Coeur said the “development” of her community, which lies where the Saguenay and St. Lawrence rivers meet, “passes and will always pass through the forestry industry.” At her side, Steeve St-Gelais, president of Boisaco, said that 600 jobs would be lost with Ottawa’s proposed decree. …Quebec’s caribou population has been in decline for several years and the forestry industry is the main cause of the crisis. …Ghislain Picard, chief of the Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador, stressed that his organization supports the federal government’s intention to impose a decree on Quebec to force the province to protect caribou.

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Post-Fiona forestry report suggests changes for resilient forests

By Forests, Fish and Wildlife
Government of Prince Edward Island
August 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Updated analysis reveals further details on how post-tropical storm Fiona affected Island forests. The Post-Fiona Forestry Update shows 9.4% of PEI forest was affected by the storm overall, referring to areas where greater than 70% of trees were blown down. Impacts in certain areas varied, with 23.3% of forest impacted along the north shore. “Our most recent State of the Forest Report was the first report to include information on forest carbon storage. This new research gathered after Fiona’s impact sheds new light on the storm’s effect on carbon sequestration. …Up-to-date research like this is crucial to understanding our current carbon budget so we can design forestry and net zero programs to reach our goals,” said Environment, Energy and Climate Action Minister Steven Myers. …Currently, PEI’s forests absorb more carbon than they emit, helping to offset the province’s emissions. However, Fiona has reduced the amount of forest absorbing carbon overall.

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45,000 trees planted in Halton this season through Forests Ontario

Halton Hills Today
August 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jessica Kaknevicius

Forests Ontario has supported the planting of 45,000 trees in Halton this season as part of a national program that added 2.7 million trees to greenspaces across the country. To date, this brings the total planted in Halton to over one million and 46.5 million across the country, with support from Forests Ontario and its national division, Forest Recovery Canada. “Now, as we are facing the twin crises of climate change and biodiversity loss, it is imperative that we build these relationships across the country, so that we can make a difference in communities from coast to coast to coast. The organization say this re-planting is important in “creating diverse, resilient, thriving forests is one of the most effective, nature-based solutions to combat and mitigate the impacts of climate change, including extreme weather that can lead to drought or wildfires,” said Forests Ontario CEO Jess Kaknevicius.

 

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Forests Ontario supported the planting of 2.7 million trees across Canada this planting season – bringing the national total to 46.5 million

By Forests Ontario
Cision Newswire
August 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

BARRIE, ON – In an effort to encourage biodiversity, enhance wildlife habitat, support green job creation, minimize the devastating effects of climate change, and improve the health and wellness of our communities, Forests Ontario supported the planting of approximately 2.7 million trees across Canada this planting season. The 2.7 million trees planted includes over 700,000 outside Ontario – which is a new record for the organization and is thanks to the support of Natural Resources Canada’s 2 Billion Trees (2BT) program, individual and corporate donors, and new planting partners across the country. Through its national division, Forest Recovery Canada, Forests Ontario supported the planting of over 700,000 trees outside Ontario this planting season and into the fall, including 380,000+ in Alberta, 200,000+ in Nova Scotia, 70,000+ in British Columbia, 60,000+ in New Brunswick, and 5,000+ in Manitoba.

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First forest sector profile released in Prince Edward Island

Government of Prince Edward Island
August 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Feedback from the forestry sector will be used to help government with key decisions  as it reviews programs, policies, and legislation related to PEI forests. PEI’s first Forest Industry Capacity Report surveyed 61 individuals in the forestry sector who provided insight into harvested forest products and services. “Most PEI forests are owned and managed by 16,000 private woodlot owners, so the forest sector on Prince Edward Island is essential to sustainable forest management. Annual revenue from harvested forest products and services is estimated to exceed $36 million, making it clear that this sector has a big economic impact as well,” said Environment, Energy and Climate Action Minister Steven Myers. PEI has 250 full-time, part-time, and seasonal workers employed by the forest sector; most in rural communities. Softwood studwood and sawlogs are the primary products annually harvested on PEI and the 10 largest sawmills are responsible for 69 full-time and seasonal employees. 

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Nature Conservancy of Canada acquires Acadian seaside forest for new reserve in New Brunswick

Canadian Press in Global News
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A picture-postcard forest on the coast of the Bay of Fundy in New Brunswick is being turned into a nature reserve. Nature Conservancy of Canada said Wednesday it has acquired 2.3 square kilometres of land from the family of Ruby Brown of St. Martins, N.B., about 40 kilometres east of Saint John. The new Fundy Bay View Nature Reserve, located by the St. Martins Sea Caves and near an existing provincial conservation area, is an important location for migratory shorebirds to stop, feed and rest during their travels north and south, said the non-profit conservation group. More than half the forest is mature, coastal red spruce, with a mixture of balsam fir, red maple and white spruce, and it’s home to a diversity of wildlife, including bear, bobcat and moose, as well as bird species at risk.

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Provincewide Tree Planting Starts in Neighbourhoods Affected by Wildfire

By Natural Resources and Renewables
The Government of Nova Scotia
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Some neighbourhoods in Upper Tantallon/Hammonds Plains are getting new trees planted to replace many that were burned in the May 2023 wildfire. “We’ve committed to planting 21 million trees in Nova Scotia as part of a national effort to support biodiversity, carbon capture and quality of life in our communities. This work also supports ecological forestry and green jobs to boost our rural economy,” said Kent Smith, acting Minister of Natural Resources and Renewables. “Along with our federal partners, we’re funding tree-planting projects across the province. I’m very happy that some of the first are helping restore neighbourhoods that were devastated by last year’s wildfire.” These projects are among 23 around the province that have been approved to date. In total, more than 570,000 trees will be planted this fall with about $974,000 in funding. The trees are a mix of red and white spruce, white pine, tamarack, hemlock, red and sugar maple, yellow birch and red oak.

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Canada and Nova Scotia to Plant up to 21 Million Trees and Restore Ecosystems Affected by Wildfires

Natural Resources Canada
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

HALIFAX, Nova Scotia — The Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Canada’s Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, and the Honourable Tory Rushton, Nova Scotia’s Minister of the Department of Natural Resources and Renewables, announced a joint investment of more than $40 million to plant up to 21 million trees by 2031 on private and public lands in Nova Scotia. This funding will result in the planting of more than 21 trees for each resident of Nova Scotia. …The funding will strengthen Nova Scotia’s tree-planting supply chain, from seed collection to nurseries to tree planting and monitoring. This work will create hundreds of jobs across the forestry sector in Nova Scotia. Federal funding comes from the 2 Billion Trees program, part of the Government of Canada’s broader approach to nature-based climate solutions. 

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Steven Guilbeault is on a collision course with Quebec over caribou-protection measures. Will he blink?

By Konrad Yakabuski
The Globe and Mail
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Steven Guilbeault

Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault has given Quebec an ultimatum to come up with a plan by next month to protect three endangered herds of woodland caribou or face a federal order that would ban logging in parts of the province. The unprecedented move by Mr. Guilbeault has drawn not just the ire of Premier François Legault’s government, which warns that 2,000 jobs could be lost if Ottawa moves forward with its threat of a federal order to protect the habitat of caribou populations in Val d’Or, Charlevoix and Pipmuacan, an area that straddles the Saguenay and North Shore regions. The federal Conservative Party and Bloc Québécois have also denounced Mr. Guilbeault’s move as a heavy-handed intrusion into provincial jurisdiction and called for the minister to appear before an emergency meeting of the House of Commons environment committee. [A Globe and Mail subscription is required for full access to this story]

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Climate change is pushing wildfires closer to urban areas. Firefighters say they’re not prepared

By Nicola Seguin
CBC News
August 28, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A new report from Halifax Regional Fire and Emergency sheds light on what firefighters faced over the nearly three-week operation to put out the fire that broke out on May 28, 2023, in Upper Tantallon, 30 kilometres from downtown Halifax (and burned more than 900 hectares, forcing more than 16,000 people to evacuate and destroying 151 homes), and points out how the urban, structural firefighters didn’t have the training, experience or equipment to deal with a wildfire. Structural firefighters are trained to combat fires in enclosed spaces, like homes, commercial buildings, industrial facilities and public infrastructure, versus their wildland counterparts, who work in forests and grasslands. Experts say that wildfires will encroach on urban areas more often, with climate change and urban sprawl, and municipal firefighters across the country may not be prepared. …Last year was the worst for wildfires on record, and those who study climate change and fires don’t expect much relief going forward.

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Ontario government says $17M will train over 36,000 workers mining, construction, energy and forestry

By Austin Campbell
The Timmins Daily Press
August 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The province is putting millions of dollars to train more people for jobs in the trades, specifically in northwestern Ontario. Premier Doug Ford and David Piccini, minister of labour, immigration, training and skills development announced the province’s nearly $17 million investment through the Skills Development Fund to train over 36,000 workers in the mining, construction, energy and forestry sectors. …The announcement includes the construction of new training facilities for Science North, Sheet Metal Workers Union Local 397, and Ironworkers Local 759. This funding also aims to boost training and accessibility for First Nations in the region, with $1 million going to Keewaytinook Okimakinak for training in carpentry and other building trades. …Finally, $580,000 has been dedicated to the Northern Centre for Advanced Technology (NORCAT) to deliver training programs focused on skills and safety knowledge across the forestry, mining, exploration and energy development sectors as well.

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Canada and Ontario Announce Major Investment to Purchase More Wildfire Equipment

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
August 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

OTTAWA, ON – The Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, with the Honourable Graydon Smith, Ontario’s Minister of Natural Resources, announced a joint investment of $64 million over four years through the Government of Canada’s Fighting and Managing Wildfires in a Changing Climate Program – Equipment Fund. This joint investment will support Ontario’s efforts to purchase wildland firefighting equipment such as trucks, community protection kits and fuel systems. By procuring and upgrading specialized wildland firefighting equipment and hiring and training more personnel, Ontario will be better prepared to respond to wildfires. This result will enhance safety for communities and firefighters and improve the sharing of resources across Canada. 

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Ontario Investing Nearly $17 Million to Support Workers in Northern Ontario

By the office of the Premier
Government of Ontario
August 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

THUNDER BAY — The Ontario government is investing nearly $17 million through the Skills Development Fund (SDF) to train over 36,000 workers in the North for in-demand careers in mining, construction, energy and forestry and build new training facilities. With this investment, the province is partnering with First Nations, labour unions, local employers and community organizations to tackle labour shortages in the North and to ensure Ontario continues to be a global leader in mining and manufacturing.

Additional coverage in the CBC News by Sarah Law: As Ontario’s EV push continues, Doug Ford announces funding for skilled labour training in northern Ontario

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Governments of Canada and Ontario Enhance Capacity to Plant Trees and Strengthen Ecosystems

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
August 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

GREATER SUDBURY, ON – Tree-planting efforts across Canada are playing a large part in tackling the dual crises of climate change and biodiversity loss. The Minister of Natural Resources announced a joint investment of more than $61 million to launch a new tree-planting program in Ontario’s Crown forestland through 2026. The program will see Ontario and Canada provide equal funding for silvicultural activities — including site preparation and tree planting — to strengthen ecosystems in areas with little or no tree cover, including areas disturbed by forest fires. This tree planting initiative complements trees planted by forest managers to regenerate forests following harvesting activities and should enable the planting of approximately 60 million trees by the end of the program, depending on the availability of suitable Crown forestland and the range of projects identified by Ontario’s forest managers.

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Indigenous Seed Collection Program begins cross-country journey in Fredericton

By Avery MacRae
CTV News Atlantic
August 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Natural Resources Canada’s Indigenous Seed Collection Program has pulled out from Fredericton to begin their third cross-country tour. National Tree Centre coordinator Donnie McPhee has packed up an RV while his teammates pull a truck and trailer filled with tools and resources to a variety of Indigenous communities from New Brunswick to British Columbia. The goal of the trip is to work with Indigenous communities to develop seed collection strategies to preserve tree and shrub species for generations to come. …McPhee says there are around 600 different Indigenous communities across Canada, and this program is an important way to ensure seeds are kept safe in the case of extinction. …He says researchers are interested in getting the genetic information of various seeds as some found in one region may have the ability to thrive in another.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Prince Edward Island forests emit more carbon than they absorb after damage from 2022 storm

The Globe and Mail
August 29, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Prince Edward Island forests emit more carbon than they absorb, a consequence of the damage caused after post-tropical storm Fiona made landfall almost two years ago. …In a new report, the provincial government says all the fallen trees from the September 2022 storm are decomposing and releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. About 9.4 per cent – approximately 24,300 hectares – of forested area in the province was significantly impacted by the storm and it will take at least 50 years for forests to be restored to their pre-Fiona state. …Matt Angus, P.E.I. forestry inventory analyst, says the number of trees Fiona knocked down represents eight to 10 years’ worth of what the province’s logging sector harvests. He said the forest could return to a carbon sink by 2045.  But Anthony Taylor, a forestry and environmental management professor at the University of New Brunswick, said it is “pretty standard” for forests to become carbon sources after significant blowdown. 

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Nearly $3 Million In Federal Investments to Support Sustainable Wood Construction Technologies in Montreal Region

By Natural Resources Canada
Government of Canada
August 23, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

New, low-carbon construction materials and technologies allow us to build and use greener, climate-resilient homes in Canada. …The Government of Canada announced a federal contribution of more than $2.8 million to FPInnovations for three projects. The funding includes investments to support the use of low-carbon Canadian wood in the Canadian construction market and a project to support the use of zero-emissions vehicles in the forestry and commercial transportation sectors. These investments are provided through Natural Resources Canada’s Green Construction through Wood program and the Zero Emission Vehicle Awareness Initiative. …The FPInnovations research will enable the commercialization of various wood building systems and to generate the necessary data to enable these wood-based systems to be adopted in Canadian building codes. …FPInnovations will also develop resources to support the use of vehicles that are zero-emission or use clean fuels…

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Health & Safety

Resource crunch at federal emergency centre caused ‘significant staff exhaustion’

By Jim Bronskill
Canadian Press in the Victoria Times Colonist
September 3, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

OTTAWA — Budget and staff challenges have left overworked employees exhausted and sapped morale at the federal nerve centre for managing forest fires and other national emergencies, an internal memo reveals. The Public Safety Canada document also says the Government Operations Centre lacks both the capacity to fully modernize and the money for new digital tools. The Canadian Press used the Access to Information Act to obtain the May memo, prepared for the department’s deputy minister as the operations centre braced for the heavy demands of another wildfire season. The last four years have been the worst continuous crisis period for emergency management short of wartime due to fires, floods, COVID-19 and other events including the “Freedom Convoy”, the memo says. …The record-setting wildfire season of 2023 prompted activation of the operations centre’s event team for seven months, leading to considerable overtime for employees and redirection of resources from emergency management planning and exercises.

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Calls for improved employee training after worker died clearing forest

By Jim Wilson
Canadian Occupational Safety
August 29, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

QUEBEC — The Commission des normes, de l’équité, de la santé et de la sécurité du travail (CNESST) is urging farms across Quebec that carry out forest management work to improve employee training and equipment. This comes after one worker died in the workplace. The incident happened on Dec, 8, 2023, when one worker died while working for Ferme Noël Maheux et fils. On that day, the worker was at the company’s maple bush, thinning and clearing the forest with a chainsaw. When he started felling an ash tree, it became entangled with the top of a maple tree as it fell. …The worker was rushed to hospital, where he was pronounced dead. …The absence of an escape route from the ash felling area deprived the worker of any exit when the tree fell. Following the accident, the CNESST required Ferme Noël Maheux to train workers in directional felling, according to the report.

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Four Quebec Paper Excellence Group Mills Recognized in 2023 Health and Safety Rankings

Paper Excellence Group
August 27, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTRÉAL — Pulp & Paper Canada recently named four Quebec-based Paper Excellence Group mills at the top of its annual health and safety rankings. These honors reflect the company’s overall efforts to ensure a safe working environment at our sites. Domtar’s Windsor paper mill was named safest mill in category A – facilities with more than 80,000 worker hours per month. Resolute mills took the top three spots in category C – facilities with less than 50,000 worker hours per month. The Saint-Félicien pulp mill finished in first place, while the Alma and Dolbeau paper mills finished in second and third place respectively. Richard Tremblay, president of the Paper Excellence Group’s Pulp and Tissue business unit. “Our goal is zero injuries at every location. This is an area where we will not compromise. We should be proud of this recognition.”

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Campaign calls on province to ban glyphosate spraying

By Jim Moodie
Timmins Daily Press
August 19, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

First Nations elders in the Sudbury-North Shore area are demanding an end to what they call “poison raining from the sky.” Last week a ceremony was held in Sagamok to launch a campaign on the harms of glyphosate-based herbicide use in forestry and hydro projects. Twenty billboards stating Glyphosate Kills All, with a moose illustration, will be erected throughout the Robinson-Huron Treaty lands in coming weeks. Elder Raymond Owl, cofounder of TEK (Traditional Ecological Knowledge) Elders, addressed those gathered last Wednesday in both Anishinaabemowin and English, stating “the time for meetings has come and gone, and action is now required to protect the forest for future generations,” according to a release. …Since glyphosate has been applied as an aerial herbicide, elders “have observed dramatic changes in moose, deer, muskrat and other forest life, as jack pine plantations began replacing mixed forests,” according to the release.

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Forest Fires

Air quality statements issued for parts of northern Ontario due to prairie wildfire smoke

CBC News
August 12, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

Environment Canada has issued special air quality statements for six northern First Nations in Ontario as wildfire smoke drifts into the parts of the region. In the statement issued Monday morning, Environment Canada said high levels of air pollution have developed due to smoke from forest fires burning in the northern prairies and parts of northern Ontario. The special air quality statements have been issued for Pikangikum, Poplar Hill, Macdowell, Sandy Lake, Weagamow Lake, and Deer Lake First Nations. …As of Sunday night, the wildfire hazard ranges from low to moderate across the northwest. Ontario’s Aviation, Forest Fire and Emergency Services is reporting some pockets of high hazard conditions near Thunder Bay, Fort Frances, Red Lake, along with northern Areas of the province.

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Wildfire south of Timmins more than doubles in size

Timmins Today
August 11, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

A forest fire south of Timmins and west of Temiskaming Shores has more than doubled in size. Kirkland Lake 5 has been burning since Saturday about 80 km west of Latchford, 5 km southeast of McKee Lake. Yesterday, officials reported it as being about 387 hectares in size. In its Saturday update, Aviation, Forest Fire and Emergency Services says, due to an increase in fire behaviour Friday afternoon, the fire has now been remapped at 889 hectares. It is not yet under control. …There are 22 other active wildfires in Ontario’s Northeast Region, one is being held, two are under control and 19 are being observed. “The fire hazard is mostly low to moderate in areas of the region located north of Timmins and Sault Ste Marie, as well as south and east of North Bay and Lake Nipissing,” Aviation, Forest Fire and Emergency Services added.

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Ontario wildfire activity in 2024 well below average

CBC News
August 8, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

The number of wildfires across Ontario has been well below average in 2024. The province has seen just 257 fires between Jan. 1 and Aug. 5 of this year, well below the 10-year average for the same time period, which is 526 fires. Ontario saw 615 fires across the province during the same period in 2023. “The province of Ontario has seen a predominantly zonal flow through the first half of the fire season, typically with a few days of warm seasonal weather, followed by a few days of significant widespread precipitation, and so on and so forth,” said Isabelle Chenard, a communications and media relations specialist with the ministry. “This general trend has caused the fire hazard to rise and promptly fall regularly. Significant widespread rain events have kept forest fuels from drying out for extended periods of time, making the forest less likely to be impacted by lightning.”

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