Region Archives: Canada East

Business & Politics

Ottawa spending $229M to help tariff-hit Ontario workers obtain new skills

By Craig Lord
The Canadian Press in CBC News
March 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Patty Hajdu

The federal government will spend $228.8 million over the next three years to help Ontario workers in industries hit hard by US tariffs acquire new skills and adapt to the trade war disruption. The new Canada-Ontario Workforce Tariff Response will support workers and job seekers in the province’s softwood lumber, steel and automotive industries — areas still facing steep sectoral tariffs from the United States. The federal government says in a news release that workers in sectors affected indirectly by tariffs can also access the training and employment services on offer. Ottawa estimates 27,000 workers in Ontario will get training or other supports through the program. Federal Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu announced the funding on Tuesday alongside her Ontario counterpart David Piccini on Parliament Hill. On Monday, Hajdu also announced $94.5 million in spending over five years to improve data sharing on job opportunities in key sectors.

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Ont. government and Canada investing more than $228M to try and protect workers and key industries

By Minister of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development
The Government of Ontario
March 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

David Piccini

OTTAWA — The Ontario government announced that it is expanding training and employment supports for those impacted by tariffs and global trade disruptions. Through a $228.8 million investment from the Government of Canada over the next three years, Ontario will deliver the Canada-Ontario Workforce Tariff Response, reportedly helping up to 27,000 workers across the province retrain, upgrade their skills and stay competitive in key sectors of the economy, including softwood lumber, steel and automotive manufacturing. “Ontario’s workers are at the forefront of our economy, and our government will never shy away from helping them when it’s needed,” said David Piccini, Minister of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development. As part of this initiative, Ontario will reportedly deliver targeted programs through Skills Advance Ontario (SAO), which aims to help workers stay employed, upgrade their skills and move into more in-demand jobs, while trying to help employers retain experienced staff during periods of economic uncertainty.

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Ottawa accused of preferential treatment with coming rail subsidies for steel, lumber

By Nick Murray
The Canadian Press in the Times Colonist
March 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

OTTAWA — The federal government is being accused of creating an uneven playing field in Canada’s shipping industry, and critics claim the Prime Minister’s Office is unwilling to rectify it. Later this spring, Ottawa is expected to launch a federal subsidy program to help reduce the cost of shipping lumber and steel between provinces by 50%. But the subsidies — promised by Carney back in November — will only go to rail companies. “We support this initiative to give a boost to those Canadian industries. But what we were asking was for parity because many destinations and commodities, only maritime transport can handle that,” said Etienne Duchesne, business development project manager at Desgagnés, a maritime shipping company based in Quebec. …In the House of Commons last week, Bloc Québécois MP Claude DeBellefeuille said the government was creating “unfair competition between rail transportation and marine transportation,” putting jobs and supply chains at risk.

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Cascades invests $6.9 million in its Kingsey Falls uncoated recycled boxboard plant

By Cascades Inc.
Cision Newswire
March 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades announced it has invested $6.9 million in its Kingsey Falls uncoated recycled boxboard manufacturing plant (Papier Kingsey Falls) to increase its equipment’s production capacity and product quality. Since last September, Cascades has installed several new pieces of equipment to improve sheet quality control. …”This project will enable us to increase our capacity and remain a valued partner for our customers,” said Hugues Simon, President and CEO of Cascades. “It underscores our unwavering commitment to investing in our assets in Quebec to accelerate our growth.” Commissioned in 1972, this Kingsey Falls plant currently serves the industrial and food packaging markets. It currently boasts 68 employees.

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No word on the future of the Ear Falls sawmill

By Tim Davidson
Your Kenora.ca
March 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

EAR FALLS, Ontario — No news is not good news when it comes to the future of the sawmill in Ear Falls. Mayor of the community Kevin Kahoot says he’s supposed to talk with Interfor, the owner of the mill, this week. “We have regular conversations in the last few months…every couple of weeks,” says Kahoot. “It’s been kind of status quo recently. They keep pushing markets and tariffs and those kinds of things. But I don’t see a lot of movement maybe until springtime.” The sawmill shut down indefinitely back in October throwing 150 people out of work. [END]

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Holt government’s royalty rate change costs it $45M in revenue

By Adam Huras
The Telegraph-Journal
March 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

New Brunswick royalty revenues have plummeted by $45 million. It’s a figure that has forestry royalties on track to come in at an historic low in the current fiscal year. And it was a decision to significantly cut royalty rates made quietly by the Holt government last July that’s behind it. That’s as the government suggests it’s a move that’s successfully sheltered the industry from curtailments and closures that are being felt across the country. …The province moved to overhaul timber royalty rates in 2022 after acknowledging its former policy of charging forestry companies a flat rate for wood cut in public forests had failed to take advantage of a two-year explosion in international lumber prices. A new system created under the former Higgs government allowed for rates to rise and fall with the prices of various wood-based commodities. “As forest product markets improve in the future, royalty rates will index upwards,” Herron said.

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Canada built its forest industry for one customer. Northern Ontario knows the cost — and the way forward

By Jordan Solomon, president-CEO of Ecostrat
Northern Ontario Business
February 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jordan Solomon

Northern Ontario has lived the consequences of a forest sector built around a single customer and a narrow set of commodity products. From Kapuskasing to Dryden, mill closures and curtailments have forced communities into a cycle of reaction rather than renewal — responding to external shocks rather than shaping their own economic futures. … For decades, Canada built its forest economy around a single export market and a narrow set of commodity products. That strategy has now been exposed as dangerously fragile. …Ironically, today’s global uncertainty has created a once-in-a-generation opportunity. … Capital is mobile, and companies across the biofuels, biopower, renewable chemicals, and advanced materials sectors are actively looking for stable jurisdictions in which to build new production facilities. …Canada, and Northern Ontario in particular, should be well positioned to compete. …One of the most overlooked pieces of industrial infrastructure is investment-grade data and intelligence.

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OFIA’s 83rd Annual Convention – Hotel, Program, and Registration Reminder

Ontario Forest Industries Association
February 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

The Ontario Forest Industries Association is looking forward to welcoming you to our 83rd Annual Convention at One King West Hotel & Residence in Toronto, April 28 – 29, 2026. We are planning another high-impact event, and we want to ensure your visit is as smooth and enjoyable as possible. If you have not registered for the event, do so as soon as possible as limited spots remain. If you haven’t yet secured accommodations, we encourage you to do so as soon as possible. There are options at the One King West Hotel as well as several hotels within a short walking distance of One King West. The OFIA is a trade association representing Ontario’s sustainable forest industry and serves as a unified voice for forest products companies across the province — from timber producers to wood manufacturers — advocating on policy, market access, sustainability, and economic development issues. The Annual Convention is our flagship event, intended to bring together industry leaders, members, and stakeholders for networking, education, discussion, and celebration.

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Government of Canada launches $500 million in support for retooling Canada’s forest sector

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
February 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Tom Hodgson

TRACYVILLE, New Brunswick — In the face of unjust US trade measures, the Government of Canada is taking decisive action to give Canadian forest companies the stability they need to weather short-term shocks and retool for a stronger, more diversified future. …The Honourable Tim Hodgson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, launched a national Calls for Proposals under Natural Resources Canada’s forest sector transformation programs, supported by a $500-million commitment. Eligible businesses and organizations can now apply for funding through: The Investments in Forest Industry Transformation (IFIT) program. The Green Construction Through Wood (GCWood) program; The Indigenous Forestry Initiative (IFI);  and The Global Forest Leadership Program (GloFor). …In addition, Minister Hodgson announced $2.8 million in existing program funding through the IFIT, IFI, GloFor and GCWood programs, supporting seven projects that will help strengthen the forest sectors in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

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Quebec scraps annual royalty for sawmills in forest regime ‘mini-reform’

CBC News
February 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

The Quebec government says it will hold a “mini-reform” of the province’s forest regime to provide relief for sawmills and other businesses pressured by cumulative U.S. tariffs. Jean-François Simard, Quebec’s minister of natural resources and forests, said that the changes aim to prevent plant closures and job losses which have surged in recent months. Simard said in a statement on Tuesday that 60,000 jobs are at risk. Quebec’s forestry and logging industry is the second largest in Canada in terms of employment, according to Statistics Canada. The forest regime dictates how Quebec’s forests are managed and harvested. The announcement comes days after a group of Indigenous land guardians and First Nations hereditary chiefs filed a lawsuit seeking formal recognition of their rights over a vast stretch of Quebec. Their legal challenge aims to curb industrial logging and ensure the protection of their traditional way of life.

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Sierra Forest Products, Upper Canada Forest Products announce two appointments

By Dakota Smith
Woodworking Network
February 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East, US East

Eric Larson and Jeff Floyd

CHICAGO — Sierra Forest Products and Upper Canada Forest Products announced the promotion of Eric Larson to Chief Operating Officer of Sierra Forest Products and Jeff Floyd to Chief Operating Officer of Upper Canada Forest Products, strengthening the Group’s country-specific leadership while continuing to operate as one integrated North American organization. The decision to appoint dedicated Chief Operating Officers for Canada and the U.S. sharpens the Group’s focus on the distinct dynamics of each market, while preserving the advantages of a unified platform for customers, suppliers and partners. This enhanced structure reflects a deliberate investment in long-term growth, leadership depth, and exceptional service.

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Mill manager eulogizes final paper reel in Thunder Bay, Ontario

Northern Ontario Business
February 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The last reel of newsprint produced at Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper on Feb. 19 became a photo op moment and a time of reflection for its manager of paper operations. Shane Moscrip eulogized the closing of an era that reaches back to the 1920s in the northwestern Ontario city’s industrial history. “For more than a century, this mill has converted wood, water, steam, and skill into paper. Generations have stood on five paper machine floors, listening to the cadence of the wire, the draw through the presses, the steady breath of the dryers. They measured their days by tonnage, quality, and uptime,” Moscrip wrote. “These paper machines have run through wars, recessions, ownership changes, grade transitions, rebuilds, and countless shutdowns and startups. It has been the industrial heartbeat of this town.” …The landmark mill, which dominates Thunder Bay’s skyline, will continue to operate as a single-line softwood kraft mill.

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Customs duties: mixed reactions in Quebec after Supreme Court decision

By Frédéric Lacroix-Couture
The Canadian Press in City News
February 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The decision by the US Supreme Court to invalidate many of President Trump’s tariffs has been met with mixed reactions in Quebec, as the steel, aluminum and lumber sectors remain subject to US tariffs. Economy Minister Jean Boulet said, “its effects for Quebec seem limited,” noting that Quebec exports in accordance with CUSMA were already exempt. “American tariffs on lumber and other key sectors remain in place,” Boulet stressed. …Stakeholders from Quebec’s economic and union sectors pointed out that Friday’s ruling is far from putting an end to the trade war with our southern neighbors. …“While this decision is great news for free trade, its impact on Canada remains limited and we are not out of the woods yet,” said senior public policy analyst Gabriel Giguère in a statement. Moreover, the review of the USMCA planned for this year still looms over Canada-US relations.

In related coverage:

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Shakeup at Nova Scotia Natural Resources intended to ‘modernize’ support for development

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
February 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston is shaking up the Natural Resources Department in what an internal memo describes as “a deliberate step” to align with the government’s priority of finding new ways to boost revenues. But one of the people affected by the changes says they will be “completely devastating to conservation” in the province. The changes were outlined by Natural Resources deputy minister Sandra McKenzie on Thursday in an internal email obtained by CBC News. …McKenzie’s email details “key changes,” including: The wildlife division is being renamed integrated resources planning, and will be grouped with integrated resource management, land administration, and surveys and research in a new land strategy and planning branch; The forest health division is being moved into the forestry branch of the department; and a new advisory function is being created within the associate deputy minister’s office to advance strategic priorities.

 

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Acadian Timber Corp. Announces Appointment of Malcolm Cockwell as Interim President & CEO

By Susan Wood, Chief Financial Officer
Acadian Timber Corp.
February 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Edmundston, NEW BRUNSWICK – Acadian Timber Corp. announced Malcolm Cockwell has been appointed Interim President & Chief Executive Officer, effective immediately. Mr. Cockwell succeeds Adam Sheparski, who has stepped down as President & Chief Executive Officer and as a Director of the Company to pursue other opportunities. “On behalf of the Board of Directors, I would like to thank Mr. Sheparski for his contributions to Acadian,” said Mr. Cockwell. “Looking ahead, Acadian will continue focusing on operational excellence within our existing timberland assets in New Brunswick and Maine.” Mr. Cockwell is a Registered Professional Forester, who has served as Chair of the Company since August 2019. He is the principal of Macer Forest Holdings Inc., the largest shareholder of Acadian, and holds a PhD in forestry from the University of Toronto.

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Unifor seeks ‘urgent’ meeting with Kruger boss about future of Corner Brook paper mill

By Terry Roberts
CBC News
February 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Lana Payne

The union that represents workers at Corner Brook Pulp and Paper and Deer Lake Power is requesting an urgent meeting with top brass at Kruger Inc., as questions mount about the future of the newsprint sector, and Kruger’s ambitious plan to diversify its operations in Newfoundland and Labrador. In a letter to Kruger Inc. CEO Joseph Kruger that was obtained by CBC News, Unifor president Lana Payne expressed concerned about the “lack of clarity and transparency” from the company about its business plan for the century-old operation, and the future of the roughly 300 people who work at the newsprint mill. “It is critical that Kruger engages with mill workers and their union, the community of Corner Brook, and the provincial government,” Payne wrote. …Payne’s letter emerges as the company slowly restarts one of the two newsprint machines at the mill following an extended shutdown, during which all employees were receiving full pay.

Unifor press release: The future of Corner Brook Pulp and Paper Mill

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Northern Ontario town joins call to bolster steel, lumber sectors

By Eric Taschner
CTV News
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

A northern Ontario municipality is adding its voice to growing demands for the provincial government to fortify the region’s cornerstone industries as they brace for the impact of ongoing trade hostilities with the United States. Town council in Mattawa has unanimously passed a motion urging the province to introduce stronger protections for the steel and softwood lumber sectors. The move follows a similar resolution passed by the Township of Nairn & Hyman in early December, reflecting escalating anxiety among northern communities heavily reliant on these industries. Mattawa Mayor Raymond Belanger said the local economy remains deeply tied to forestry, making the threat of U.S. tariffs particularly acute. …Dave Plourde, president of the Federation of Northern Ontario Municipalities (FONOM) and mayor of Kapuskasing, acknowledged the deep-seated frustration among northern communities that were built on the back of these resources. …The forestry and lumber industry provides approximately 128,000 jobs…

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Irving Paper to get up to $45 million in Holt tariff relief funds

By Adam Huras
The Telegraph Journal
February 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — The Holt government is dipping into one of its tariff relief funds to provide Irving Paper with up to $45 million it says will maintain jobs at New Brunswick’s only remaining paper mill. It comes after the Saint John manufacturer of paper used for magazines, catalogues and newsprint announced roughly a year ago it was cutting 140 jobs, while criticizing the impact of “soaring electricity costs” and blaming “management issues” at NB Power. That’s while it suggested a subsidy wasn’t the answer as all New Brunswickers and the province’s industry were grappling with the challenge of climbing electricity bills. The money is part of a $54.3-million package for a total of seven New Brunswick companies announced by Opportunities NB. Last spring, Premier Susan Holt announced a $40-million “competitive growth program” that she said would be aimed at stabilizing larger New Brunswick companies that are export-intensive.

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Only one paper machine operating at Corner Brook mill after major shutdown

By Colleen Connors
CBC News
February 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

The last pulp and paper mill in Newfoundland and Labrador is partially operating again as of Tuesday after a significant shut down that started last fall due to extremely low water levels at Grand Lake. It was one of the longest shut downs in the Corner Brook mill’s history. Kruger Inc, the mill’s owner, indicated it would take weeks to ramp up operations, given the plant was shut during winter’s coldest months. But local politicians believe this partial re-start is an indication of big changes in operations and jobs. …”We will have some periods where we will run. Some work is then needed. That will stop operations, but that will continue to ramp as we go over the next couple of days,” explained Darren Pelley, vice-president of special projects with Kruger Inc. Pelley said Kruger will monitor water levels and continue to make paper when possible. 

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Several Local Leaders in Forestry recognized by Forest Nova Scotia

989 XFM
February 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

At the recent Forest Nova Scotia AGM, Antigonish County’s Ralph Stewart of RES Sustainable Forestry received a Forest Stewardship Certificate. A post on Forest Nova Scotia’s Facebook Page states the event help recognize the year’s leaders in safety and stewardship across the forestry industry. When asked why he made a career of forestry, Stewart said it stems for his childhood, working on the family farm and out in the woods with his parents and siblings. When working on the wood lot, he said they were always taught to think about what’s next for the lot and how to sustain it. Stewart said he feels the forestry industry is going in the right direction and working towards implementing the Lahey Forestry Report, which includes a number of forestry objectives.

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Finance & Economics

Stella-Jones reports Q4, 2025 net income of $50 million

By Mike Crawley
CBC News
February 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTREAL – Stella-Jones announced financial results for its fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2025. …Sales for the fourth quarter of 2025 amounted to $727 million, compared to sales of $730 million for the same period in 2024. …Pressure-treated wood sales decreased $14 million, or 2% due to a decrease in railway ties volumes and softer residential lumber demand, partially offset by higher wood utility poles sales driven by stronger demand. Logs and lumber sales decreased by $15 million, mainly driven by less trading activity, compared to the fourth quarter last year. Q4 net income was$50 million compared to $52 million in Q4, 2024. …Eric Vachon, President and CEO of Stella-Jones, said “The acquisitions of Locweld and Brooks positions us to serve a broader transmission and distribution market. …Entering 2026, we are building on this momentum with an investment to expand our steel lattice structure business in the U.S. with the construction of a greenfield manufacturing facility.”

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Cascades reports Q4, 2025 net earnings if $37 million

Cascades Inc.
February 26, 2026
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, 2025. Highlights include: Sales of $1,197 million (compared with $1,238 million in Q3 2025 and $1,211 million in Q4 2024); Net earnings of $36 million (compared with $29 million in Q3, 2025 and -$13 million in Q4, 2024). For the full year 2025, Cascades reported sales of $4,776 million (compared with $4,701 million in 2024); and Net earnings of $70 million (compared with -31 million in 2024). …Hugues Simon, President and CEO, commented: our tissue operations did not meet efficiency and logistics execution objectives in the quarter. These effects were compounded by an unplanned power outage at one of our facilities that further impacted production levels, supply chain efficiency and added incremental operating costs of approximately $6 million in the period. The countermeasures we have already put in place to address these issues are generating positive traction. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Montreal conference celebrates building with wood

By Rich Christianson
The Woodworking Network
February 24, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTREAL — The 11th edition of the Cecobois Conference, attended by more than 400 participants, recently concluded at Hotel Bonaventure. The conference was held in conjunction with the 3rd edition of the Forum for Low Carbon and Bio-Based Construction, an event dedicated to reducing the embodied carbon content of buildings. Some 25 speakers presented various examples of large-scale projects built with wood and shared their expertise in sustainable and bio-based construction. …Jean-François Béland, of Quebec’s Natural Resources and Forests, announced the renewal of $3 million in funding to support Cecobois’ activities to promote and develop the use of wood in construction in Quebec. …Claude Guay, of Canada’s Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, spoke about Quebec’s Policy for the Use of Wood in Construction for public buildings. This recognition of wood as a strategic material will help stimulate local purchasing and reduce dependence on the US market.

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Construction begins on Berens River bridge, a key link for Frontier Lithium’s PAK project

By Ian Ross
Northern Ontario Business
February 24, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

©PattyHajduFacebook

The start of construction of the Berens River bridge in a corner of northwestern Ontario is welcome news for Frontier Lithium. For the Sudbury mine developer, driving a permanent road and spanning the Berens River is a much-needed critical infrastructure project for its PAK mine project north of Red Lake. On Feb. 23, Pikangikum First Nation and Indigenous-led Whitefeather Forest Community Resource Management Authority selected M.D. Steele Construction as the primary bridge contractor. …The span across the Berens River — its design years in the making — will be an engineered mass-timber bridge.

  • Ontario Government Press Release: Ontario Beginning Construction of Berens River Bridge Once complete, the bridge will be the first of its kind in Canada to integrate mass timber structural components into major transportation infrastructure, serving as a key connection point to Ontario’s remote northwest region. The project will create opportunities for harvesting wood in the Whitefeather Forest

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Ontario teachers union’s new mass timber HQ

By Rich Christianson
The Woodworking Network
February 17, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — The new headquarters for the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation is a state-of-the-art mass timber structure designed by Moriyama Teshima Architects. The 124,000-square-foot building prioritizes sustainability and wellness, utilizing abundant natural light and a structural connection to natural elements. The architectural approach allows the cross-laminated timber and glue-laminated timber to serve as the defining elements of the interior. A clean, monochromatic palette was chosen specifically to highlight the natural beauty of the exposed wood. Key design features include: Exposed Structure: To keep the wooden ceilings visible. …Interior finishes—such as neutral carpet tiles and stone-like textures—were selected to harmonize with the timber and evoke the surrounding ravine landscape. …Acoustic Detail: The design incorporates walnut slat ceiling systems with integrated absorptive material to manage acoustics while maintaining the wood-forward aesthetic.

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Concrete’s competitor climbs nine storeys in Toronto

By Cloe Logan
National Observer
February 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

©WindmillDevGroup

The tallest residential mass timber building in Ontario is reaching completion. Soon, 60 apartments will be ready, surrounded by walls and framing free from emissions-intensive concrete. Large panels made of wood were shipped from the West Coast to construct the nine-storey Etobicoke build, which is heated and cooled with geothermal energy. In 2024, the Ontario government updated its building code to allow for mass timber buildings of up to 18 storeys, opening up a new market for tall wooden buildings. The pre-fabrication aspect is what makes buildings of this kind viable, said Stephen Savell of Windmill Development Group, which is leading the project, called Hälsa. Instead of the building being constructed completely on site, a British Columbia-based start-up got the timber panels ready to install: they arrived complete with windows, cladding and more. Once the pieces reached the site, they were hefted up by cranes and attached to the building frame, which was also constructed with timber.

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Forestry

From vandalism to fires, is a ‘social crisis’ growing in the heart of Quebec’s logging industry?

By Michelle Lalonde
The Montreal Gazette
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The president of a logging company says anti-logging activists are fuelling a “social crisis” in the Mauricie region by sabotaging his company’s legal and government-authorized forestry projects and he called on the Quebec government to take action to protect workers and restore order. Antoine Langlois, president and founder of Forex Langlois Inc., contacted The Gazette this week to denounce what he and police believe was an intentionally set fire in Lac-aux-Sables last month that destroyed two machines owned by his company. …Sgt. Valérie Beauchamp of the Sûreté du Québec said police believe the fire was set intentionally sometime during the previous night…. Anonymous activists did take responsibility for sabotaging a forest in the same region on Jan. 26. In a statement posted on the Instagram account of a collective called Soulèvements du fleuve, an “anonymous group” said they had inserted metal spikes in trees in the Mékinac forest north of Ste-Thècle.

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City fears Algonquin College cuts could harm recruitment efforts

By Cameron Mahler
CBC News
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The City of Ottawa says program cuts at Algonquin College could make it harder to recruit workers. An internal city analysis reviewed roughly 30 programs the college was thinking of suspending and ultimately did cancel after a unanimous board of governors vote on Monday. The city found that the elimination of nine programs would affect its ability to hire staff in the future. The programs flagged include: Nursery Operator – Forestry Services, Public Works and Nursery Worker – Forestry Services, Public Works. …The forestry services branch within the city’s public works department relies on graduates from Algonquin’s horticultural industries program to fill nursery operator and nursery worker roles. It also depends on design foundations program graduates for its traffic services branch, which hires sign designers, fabricators and supervisors.

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Prince Edward Island auditor general gives province failing grade on forestry management, biomass oversight

By Stu Neatby
The Guardian Charlottetown
March 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Three years after an audit found the P.E.I. government was failing to manage its public forests in accordance with its own laws and policies, a followup audit has found almost all recommendations remain unfulfilled. In a followup report to its original 2023 examination of the province’s forestry management practices, P.E.I.’s auditor general found only one of its eight recommendations have been implemented. The 2023 audit, which focused on publicly owned forested lands, found the province had not reviewed its forest policy since 2006 and had not established plans to manage public forest districts. The audit also found the province had not publicly released state of the forest reports every 10 years, as required under the Forest Management Act. The audit found that the province had not ensured wood used for biomass heating of public buildings was harvested in a sustainable manner.

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How New Brunswick’s online premier ‘throws out’ government proposals

By Jacques Poitras
CBC News
February 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Susan Holt

…An Instagram meme is an example of the Liberal premier Susan Holt’s approach to communicating and decision-making, a novel approach to transparency that combines putting out ideas only to abandon them, plus revealing her thinking on social media. …Holt took a similar approach earlier in February, after CBC News revealed that her natural resources minister, John Herron, was examining a proposal from large forestry companies including J.D. Irving, to swap some forest land for logging access to protected areas. …“A business proposed an idea, media wrote stories, and conclusions were jumped to,” Holt said in a Facebook exchange. Our government is not opening up protected lands, nor entertaining the idea.” In a full-page newspaper advertisement, co-CEO Jim Irving responded that J.D. Irving had worked on the proposal for more than a year “at government’s request.”

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‘Horrible news for conservation’: Nova Scotia approach to land protection raises concerns

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
February 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©Parks Nova Scotia

The amount of land protected has increased, but the method is raising eyebrows. Nova Scotia’s environment minister revealed Thursday that his government has increased the amount of protected land in the province, but it’s not in a way that sits well with environmentalists or the interim Liberal leader. In response to an inquiry from Iain Rankin during question period, Tim Halman said the government has protected 14.55 per cent of the province, nearing its goal of 15 per cent by the end of the year. The minister also acknowledged the recent jump from 13.8 per cent was accomplished using something called other effective area-based conservation measures (OECM), which refers to land that isn’t suitable for forestry activity, such as steep slopes or buffer areas between watercourses and forestry operations. “That is a new shift that has never been seen in this province before,” Rankin said in the House.

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London isn’t just the Forest City anymore. It’s this year’s Forest Capital of Canada

By Jack Sutton
CBC News
February 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©City of London Facebook

London’s nickname as ‘The Forest City’ just became more official after the Canadian Institute of Forestry named it the 2026 Forest Capital of Canada. London was selected for leading the way in areas such as forest conservation and management, and environmental stewardship. “London’s urban forest is a defining part of our city and a source of pride for our residents,” said London Mayor Josh Morgan. “Being named the Forest Capital of Canada is an honour, and reflects the hard work, dedication, and passion of our community, city staff, and the many partners who help care for and grow our urban forest.” A commemorative Forest Capital of Canada plaque was unveiled at London City Hall on Wednesday. The Canadian Institute of Forestry gives out the designation annually, and requires communities to submit a business case proving its capacity to host “a 12- to 24-month celebration of forest resources,” according the organization’s website.

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Consultations ‘hollow’ without greater self-determination, Indigenous-owned forestry company tells government

By David Gordon Koch
NB Media Co-op
February 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The head of an Indigenous-owned forestry company in New Brunswick says that provincial government statements about consultation with Indigenous communities over forestry policy are “hollow” without efforts to increase self-determination. Annie Simoneau, owner of L’Puk’Tuwis Forestry — which is based in Natoaganeg, also called Eel Ground First Nation — says that most small Indigenous communities currently lack the capacity to cut and manage their own timber. “Many are forced to rely on large forestry companies or urban-based contractors to do the harvesting for them. Those companies decide the methods — and too often that means clear-cutting, followed by herbicide spraying,” she told the NB Media Co-op. “That’s not self-determination,” she continued. “That’s dependency created by decades of policy that withheld equipment, training, and access from First Nations, then turned around and said, ‘You were consulted.’”

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Canadian Institute of Forestry hosting event at Sault College

The Soo Today
February 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The Canadian Institute of Forestry (CIF-IFC) Northeastern Ontario Section is hosting an in-person presentation regarding Indigenous Conservation and Ecological Corridors: A Knowledge Exchange on Tuesday, March 3 at Sault College. This networking and learning event will explore the National Program for Ecological Corridors through two Northeastern Ontario case studies, highlighting collaborative, Indigenous-led approaches to conservation, land stewardship, and ecological connectivity. The evening will begin with a social and pizza dinner from 6 to 6:45 p.m., followed by the knowledge exchange presentations from 7 to 9 p.m. A virtual attendance option will also be available for those unable to attend in person. Featured presentations include: Sault Ste. Marie / Garden River First Nation Ecological Corridor – presented by Aaron Jones, Garden River First Nation & Emily Cormier, The City of Sault Ste. Marie, and Height of Land Ecological Corridor – presented by Elena McCulloch and Stevie Luzzi from Wahkohtowin Development

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Atikamekw and Innu leaders file lawsuit over ancestral land rights in Quebec

CBC News
February 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Nearly 40 Indigenous land guardians, alongside hereditary and traditional chiefs, have filed a lawsuit seeking formal recognition of their rights over a vast stretch of Quebec. Their legal challenge aims to curb industrial logging and ensure the protection of their traditional way of life. The application, filed in Quebec Superior Court last week, covers a territory spanning between the St. Lawrence River, the Saint-Maurice River valley and the forested areas of northern Mauricie, according to the document. The plaintiffs are specifically asking the court to declare all supply guarantees and intervention permits granted to forestry companies null and void. This legal move follows a summer of tensions marked by numerous blockades across the ancestral lands of several Indigenous nations. These actions were spearheaded by MAMU First Nation — a collective of land guardians from the Atikamekw and Innu nations — to protest a proposed overhaul of the province’s forestry regime.

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University of Toronto forest conservation winter field camp marks 30 years with return to the woods

The Bay Today
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — The origins of one long-running University of Toronto field course trace back to a moment when debates over logging and white pine forests drew national attention. What began as a response to high-profile forestry protests south of Temagami in the mid-1990s has become an annual rite for forest conservation students: getting into the woods to see management practices firsthand. Thirty years on, the annual U of T Master of Forest Conservation Winter Field Camp still honours its original purpose: bringing students into the forest to learn from the land, forest professionals, and the connected communities. The 30th anniversary camp runs from today to Feb. 22 this year and will be based at the Mattawa Adventure Camp, near Mattawa. …At the time, concerns about forestry practices led to an invitation for local North Bay foresters to speak in Toronto. Instead of presenting there, North Bay foresters advised people to visit the site.

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First Nations chiefs file lawsuit claiming title over forest land in Quebec

By Matt Gilmour
CTV News
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

QUEBEC — A group of First Nations chiefs has filed a lawsuit claiming Aboriginal title over three large tracts of land. They say it’s to have more control over forestry but the implications go much further. For months, First Nations land defenders have been disrupting the logging industry on their traditional lands. It started in protest of Bill 97, the controversial forestry reform bill that Quebec scrapped in September. Nitassinan hereditary chief Dave Petiquay says the group of hereditary chiefs — from the Haute-Mauricie and Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean regions want the power to decide who can log on their lands and where. Lawyer Frédéric Bérard argues the Canadian constitution gives them that right. …The lawyer says, if successful, the suit would have repercussions for hereditary chiefs across the country and could impact future major infrastructure projects. The chiefs say they are willing to go all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada.

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Robin Hood-style activist group strikes again — this time in a forest

By Michelle Lalonde
Montreal Gazette
February 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Montreal — An activist group calling itself Les Robins des ruelles has followed its recent Robin Hood-style grocery store heists in Montreal with a claim to have sabotaged planned logging operations in a forest in the Mauricie region. …Translated as the Robins of the Alleyways, the group’s name is intended to evoke the legendary English folk hero who robbed from the rich to give to the poor. The group says on social media that although it delivered the booty to community kitchens and low-cost housing complexes, the grocery heists were political statements against the current economic order. …The latest such move by the group seems to be an action intended to discourage logging in some old-growth forests of Mékinac, in the Mauricie region. In a statement … the Robins say they have “armed the forest by driving steel bars through the trees on the site.” …The president of Forex Langlois Inc., said he is taking the sabotage claims “very seriously” 

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Boreal forest tree-planting efforts would pay big dividends, new research finds

By Thomas Kent
The Fort Frances Times
February 12, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada East

Strategically planting trees along the northern edge of Canada’s boreal forest could remove multiple gigatonnes of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by the end of the century, according to a new study led by researchers at the University of Waterloo. The research, published in Communications Earth & Environment, provides one of the most detailed estimates to date of the carbon that could realistically be sequestered through reforestation and afforestation in northern Canada, accounting for fire, climate, vegetation loss, and land suitability. Using satellite data and probabilistic modelling, the researchers found that planting trees on approximately 6.4 million hectares of land along the boreal–taiga boundary could remove roughly 3.9 gigatonnes of CO₂ by 2100. Expanding planting to all highly suitable areas increased the estimated removal potential to around 19 gigatonnes. Canada currently emits just under 0.7 gigatonnes of CO₂ per year, meaning even the lower-end estimate represents several times the country’s annual emissions.

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Health & Safety

Newfoundland and Labrador Provincial Government Enhancing Emergency Services

By Executive Council Forestry, Agriculture and Lands
Government of Newfoundland and Labrador
February 23, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada East

The Provincial Government is enhancing the way it helps residents prepare for, respond to, and recover from emergencies and disasters. The Department of Forestry, Agriculture and Lands is assuming responsibility for emergency services in Newfoundland and Labrador to better align with the Provincial Government’s commitment to ensure people live in safer communities. This also includes the responsibility for the Conception Bay North Response and Recovery. Previously housed under the Department of Justice and Public Safety, the Emergency Services Branch is responsible for developing and implementing Newfoundland and Labrador’s emergency management response. This move better aligns with the ongoing work of the Department of Forestry, Agriculture and Lands’ wildfire suppression program. The Emergency Services Branch will continue to assist citizens, communities, partners and governments in preparing to mitigate, respond to and recover from emergencies and disasters, while maintaining a modern and robust emergency management system in the province. 

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