Region Archives: Canada East

Business & Politics

Terrace Bay Pulp Mill Workers Frustrated With Ontario Premier Ford

By Sandy Krasowski
The Chronicle Journal
July 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TERRACE BAY, Ontario — A call for an “urgent” meeting with Ontario Premier Doug Ford by the United Steelworkers (USW) union in Ontario earlier this month has gone unanswered leaving 400 displaced AV Terrace Bay Pulp Mill workers frustrated and in the dark. The pulp mill, which is considered the economic engine of Terrace Bay and nearby communities, is owned by the India-based Aditya Birla conglomerate and was indefinitely idled in early January. The employees and township were left wondering what comes next. Myles Sullivan, USW District 6 Director for Ontario and Atlantic Canada, said Aditya Birla won’t tell them if the mill is for sale, if the closure is temporary or permanent, or if and when they are going to reopen it. “If anybody can push (Aditya Birla) to give real answers to us that would be a key first step and the Ford government,” he said.

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Steelworkers’ union calls for urgent meeting with Doug Ford to save Terrace Bay’s largest employer

By United Steelworkers
GlobeNewswire
July 18, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — The leader of the United Steelworkers (USW) union in Ontario is calling for an urgent meeting with Premier Doug Ford to ramp up efforts to re-open the AV Terrace Bay pulp mill, the northwestern Ontario community’s largest employer before it closed six months ago. The pulp mill, owned by the India-based Aditya Birla conglomerate, was indefinitely idled in early January. The mill employed 400 workers, including 270 USW members, and was the economic engine of Terrace Bay and nearby communities. …Renewed efforts are needed from all stakeholders, in particular the Ford government, to re-open the mill, says Myles Sullivan, Director of USW District 6, which covers Ontario and Atlantic Canada. Sullivan has sent a letter to the Premier and to the government’s Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry, Graydon Smith, requesting a meeting “to discuss how we can revive the pulp mill, get 400 people working again and give their communities hope.”

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Union blasts company, provincial governments over layoffs at plant near North Bay

By Eric Taschner
CTV News Northern Ontario
July 17, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TEMISCAMING, Quebec — It’s been a devastating week for Temiscaming, a town in northwestern Quebec located on the Ontario-Quebec border. Rayonier Advanced Materials shut down the high-purity cellulose plant operations indefinitely Monday morning, laying off 275 employees. “The final sheet came off the dry machine in the specialty cellulose mill at around 6:30 a.m.,” said UNIFOR Local 233 president Stephane Lefebvre. …The company that owns the plant, Rayonier Advanced Materials (RYAM) headquartered out of Jacksonville, Florid, announced the layoffs in late April, citing sluggish sales. …“I don’t know what RYAM’s plans are. They won’t share anything with me and they won’t share anything with me about a sale,” Lefebvre told CTV News. The plant has an annual production capacity of 150,000 metric tons, with 30 per cent historically dedicated to specialty cellulose materials. High purity cellulose is used in a variety of products, from construction materials to food and pharmaceutical products. 

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CHAR Technologies Joins the Ontario Forest Industries Association

By CHAR Technologies
GlobeNewswire
July 15, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — CHAR Technologies announced its membership in the Ontario Forest Industries Association (OFIA). Founded in 1943, the OFIA is a provincial trade association whose members sustainably manage over 30 million hectares of public and private forests in Ontario. …“We are very excited to join the OFIA,” said Andrew White, CEO of CHAR Tech. “The organization’s focus on climate change mitigation and a net-zero economy aligns with our vision of driving waste-to-energy solutions. Being part of this vast network allows us to work closely with forestry organizations, identify their renewable energy needs, and provide innovative solutions for forest waste management.” 

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Irving showcases its pulp mill expansion plans to the public

By Andrew Bates
The Telegraph Journal
July 2, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — Irving Pulp and Paper, a subsidiary of J.D. Irving, offered one of its first chances for the public to learn about the proposed $1.1B expansion Thursday at the Lancaster legion branch. …The four- to six-year project, announced in May, involves the construction of a new recovery boiler said to increase production by approximately 66 per cent, installation of a new steam turbine to generate green energy and construction of a new lime kiln. This will allow the mill to jump from 1,000 air dry metric tonnes of pulp to 1,800 daily, according to its environmental impact assessment, while jumping from 30 MW of power generation to 140 MW, which it intends to sell on to NB Power. According to the environmental impact assessment, this means overall emissions, including from power generation, drop, while emissions from production will increase.

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Athena Institute co-founder and LCA advocate Wayne Trusty passes away

By Jennifer O’Conner
Athena Sustainable Materials Institute
July 2, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Wayne Trusty

The Athena Institute is sad to announce that Wayne Trusty passed away on June 21, 2024 at the age of 82. Wayne had an interesting career that eventually led him to an advisory role on “the Athena project” in the early 1990s. This research effort looking into the environmental footprint of building materials became the Athena Sustainable Materials Institute, a non-profit co-founded and headed by Wayne. From the 1997 launch of the Athena Institute to his retirement as President in 2011, Wayne was a tireless advocate for life cycle assessment (LCA). He can be credited for putting LCA on the map in the world of sustainable design. …Wayne’s vision, leadership, support, and commitment left an everlasting impact. He was a shining light in the world of sustainability. Truly one of a kind, he inspired so many people and made the world a better place through his tireless work. And he always had a good story to tell. He will be missed. Condolence messages can be left here. A celebration of life on Sunday July 14, 2024 in Merrickville Ontario.

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GreenFirst Announces Plan to Spin-Out Kap Corporation

By GreenFirst Forest Products Inc.
Businesswire
July 2, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — GreenFirst Forest Products announced that it intends to complete a spin-out transaction of Kap Corporation, whereby the shares of Kap will be held directly by the shareholders of the Company. The Spin-out is expected to be completed in Q4 2024. …The Spin-out of Kap is part of the natural progression of the decentralization and deconsolidation of the newsprint mill that was originally disclosed by GreenFirst in the Fall of 2023. The Spin-out will enable GreenFirst to focus on its core business of being a pure-play lumber producer, offering shareholders a stake in any future upside from the development of Kap. …Kap Paper is the only chip consuming facility in Northeastern Ontario and the Spin-out provides Kap Paper with the potential to pursue new opportunities to support the green economy as part of a broader Northern Ontario forest strategy.

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Irving plans $1.1B upgrade to west side pulp mill

By Hadeel Ibrahim
CBC News
June 28, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Mark Mosher

Irving Pulp and Paper Ltd. is looking for approval of a $1.1 billion upgrade to its west side pulp mill. The project includes a new 20-storey boiler building to be constructed within four years. The goal is to upgrade the current 1970s boiler to increase pulp output by 65 per cent and generate enough energy to operate without buying off-plant power, said Mark Mosher, vice-president of Irving Pulp and Paper. Mosher said the mill has been getting gradual upgrades for years, including a 1990s upgrade to reduce odour and emissions. He said this new equipment is expected to reduce odour and emissions for each tonne produced. …The increased output would mean two trains out of the pulp mill a day, instead of one, and more incoming wood chips. …The company has filed its environmental impact assessment report and is awaiting approval.

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Expansion of Element5 will double its mass timber production in 2025

By Joe Konecny
The Hamilton Spectator
June 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ST. THOMAS, Ontario — Expansion of the Element5 manufacturing plant in St. Thomas, has firmly established the nine-year-old company as one of North America’s leaders in the design, fabrication and assembly of contemporary mass timber structures. Founded in 2015 in Ripon, Quebec, Element5 built a 130,000 square foot St. Thomas facility in 2020 on 40 acres of land in the city’s north end. It generates about 50,000 cubic meters of cross-laminated timber (CLT) a year. Work on the St. Thomas expansion started in 2023 and increases the Element5 footprint to over 350,000 square feet, set to produce another 50,000 cubic meters of glulam a year starting in 2025. …In February, The Hasslacher Group, of Austria, made a strategic investment in Element5 to fuel growth in the North American market and support the St. Thomas expansion. Element5 now calls St. Thomas its headquarters. Element5 recorded 2023 sales of about $30 million and the company is forecasting $40 million in 2024, and $100 million in 2030.

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Ontario Supporting Cascades’ Laid Off Manufacturing Workers in Belleville and Trenton

By Ontario Ministry of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development
The Government of Ontario
June 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

BELLEVILLE — The Ontario government is investing $445,252 in a new action centre to help the 180 workers impacted by the closure of Cascades’ manufacturing plants in Trenton and Belleville connect with services and training they need to get back to work quickly. David Piccini, Minister of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development, said “Our government is investing in the Cascades Action Centre to ensure that these workers have access to resources and opportunities to land better jobs.” Run by Unifor, the Cascades Action Centre will operate until April 2025 and support laid-off workers represented by Unifor Local 1470 and the Independent Paperworkers of Canada Local 7. The action centre will host workshops and seminars, provide peer-to-peer support and job search assistance, teach financial management and computer skills.

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Subsidies to New Brunswick pulp and paper mills increasing to soften electricity rate hikes

By Robert Jones
CBC News
June 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

New Brunswick Power’s application for a pair of steep rate hikes is forcing it to pay higher subsidies to pulp and paper mills this year and next year to help the plants cope with the increases. But the utility says it is not allowed to provide similar relief to any other customers who might be in need, including low-income households. …But restrictions on subsidising power costs do not apply in one case. In evidence presented at the hearing, N.B. Power has outlined plans to spend $26.3 million over the next two years to help pulp and paper mills with their electricity costs. It is a 36 per cent increase over the previous two years. The subsidy, called the Large Industrial Renewable Energy Purchase Program, involves N.B. Power buying renewable electricity generated by the mills at high prices and reselling it back at low prices.

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New Brunswick Power executives deny exaggerating nuclear troubles to justify large rate hike

By Robert Jones
CBC News
June 24, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

New Brunswick Power executives faced pointed questions early at a New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board hearing that is reviewing plans to raise electricity rates 20 per cent over the next two years, nearly half of which is already being collected from customers. N.B. Power president Lori Clark and CFO Darren Murphy both denied a suggestion from the forestry company J.D. Irving that the utility is exaggerating how poor performance at the Point Lepreau nuclear generating station is likely to be to justify raising rates more than necessary. “The performance metrics that N.B. Power is forecasting for Point Lepreau are not in fact improvements. It’s a forecast of worse performance,” said Glenn Zacher representing JDI. …J.D. Irving is N.B. Power’s largest private-sector customer. It is fighting a request by the utility to raise rates an average of 9.25 per cent this year and next year, including 9.8% on residential and large industrial customers. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Kitchener’s 55 Franklin project a sequence and CLT showcase

By Dan O’Reilly
The Daily Commercial News
July 16, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

KITCHENER, Ontario — Sequential construction and the use of cross-laminated timber (CLT) is speeding the erection of urgently needed housing in Kitchener, Ontario. …The original plan for 55 Franklin was to build four side-by-side buildings using a mix of different materials for each and then comparing the construction time and costs and the buildings’ performance. But then COVID-19 hit. …Financing issues were the catalyst for a sequential building process and those issues, combined with speed and energy/carbon performance, “pushed us to wood.” …The developer and project team partners were able to capitalize on Ontario Building Code changes, implemented in early 2023, permitting the use of wood stair and elevator shafts above four floors. CLT stair and elevator shafts were incorporated and the roof was also changed to that material. Not only did that switch reduce the number of plumbing stacks required, going with CLT shafts instead of poured concrete cut down construction times by eight-days-per-floor, says Maxwell.

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Ontario Investing Over $3.6 Million to Train Workers in Hamilton

The Government of Ontario
July 2, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

HAMILTON— The Ontario government is investing over $3.6 million through the Skills Development Fund (SDF) in four training projects and one building expansion project in Hamilton. These investments will provide free training for up to 3,800 apprentices, journeypersons and jobseekers, preparing them for careers in in-demand jobs such as millwright, welding and electrical trades. …United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America Local 1916 is receiving $248,338.86 for a project to build a new mezzanine level to improve Local 1916’s existing training centre in Hamilton. This will increase available training space by 15 to 20 per cent, growing Local 1916’s capacity for apprenticeship programs and training certifications for safety training and technical and leadership skills…

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Forestry

Quebec refuses to participate in federal consultation on caribou decree

By Stéphane Blais
La Presse Canadienne in the Montreal Gazette
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Quebec Environment Minister Benoit Charette and provincial Forestry Minister Maïté Blanchette Vézina have informed federal Environment Minister Stephen Guilbeault that their government will not participate in consultations on the development of an emergency decree to protect caribou. In a six-page letter sent on Wednesday, the provincial ministers reiterated that the emergency decree announced last month by Ottawa is a “unilateral and illegitimate decision by the federal government that is categorically rejected by Quebec.” Ottawa’s approach “constitutes an unspeakable affront and is in opposition to the respect for the sharing of constitutional powers between the levels of government,” the ministers contend. Not only will Quebec not participate in consultations to determine the scope of the decree, but “the federal government must fully assume the economic and social consequences of its decision,” the ministers warned. …The job losses (~2,000) would result from a forecast loss of permitted logging …the equivalent of 1.4 million cubic metres of lumber annually.

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Government of Canada investing $500,000 to support the growth of the forestry sector in Sturgeon Falls

By Federal Economic Development Agency for Northern Ontario – FedNor
The Government of Canada
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Sturgeon Falls, ON – Federal Economic Development Agency for Northern Ontario announced an investment of $500,000 by the Government of Canada in Sturgeon Falls Brush and Contracting Limited (SFB). The announcement will help SFB purchase a boiler system that will allow the company to dry lumber to the specific requirements of its clients in the cross-laminated timber industry. The boiler will use biomass from area mills as its heat source. This project is part of an ongoing expansion by SFB which will see the company grow to meet local market  demands. In addition to the purchase of the boiler, this investment will create three skilled positions, while also enabling SFB to sell kiln-dried lumber as a new product offering, increasing revenues for the company. Over the coming years, SFB’s expansion is expected to attract new businesses and investments in Sturgeon Falls.

Additional coverage in Northern Ontario Business: Sturgeon Falls contractor enters the kiln-dried lumber business

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Calling forest fire workers ‘heroes’ while not changing job conditions adds insult to injury

Letter by Lise Vaugeois MPP, Thunder Bay – Superior North
The Thunder Bay News Watch
July 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Lise Vaugeois

In response to the comments made in the July 18 Trillium article “Ontario proposes new ministerial powers to prepare for wildfires, steeper penalties for offenders“, I’m disappointed and puzzled to hear that Minister Graydon Smith’s proposals on Wildfire Management once again ignore the key issue of firefighter recruitment and retention. Wildland firefighters have repeatedly made the case that they need to be classified as “firefighters” in order receive the appropriate level of pay and benefits. Without this, the service cannot keep experienced firefighters and … fully staff their crews. On June 24, the Ford government made a promise to my colleague, Guy Bourgouin, and committed to reclassification… And yet, here we are again, with the Ministry now “studying” the reclassification issue instead of making the change they committed to make on June 24. …Calling people heroes, while enforcing unacceptable job conditions, is adding insult to injury.

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Climate change likely influenced forest fires in Labrador, says ecologist

By Abby Cole
CBC News
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Anthony Taylor

LABRADOR — A forest ecologist says abnormal weather is becoming more common and will likely cause more wildfires like the ones that threatened Labrador towns in recent weeks. Anthony Taylor of the University of New Brunswick told CBC News in a recent interview that climate change is a factor in the number and severity of forest fires this summer in Labrador. “You’ll see an increase in the frequency of years where you have big fires, and it’s directly related to the fact that you’re going to have an increase in the frequency of weather that’s more conducive to fires,” said Taylor, who researches how climate change affects forests. …Although there has been close to normal amounts of rainfall in Labrador, he said, higher temperatures cause increased evaporation and drier forests, likely contributing to conditions that are conducive to fire.

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Guilbeault goes to battle with another province. This time Quebec, and it’s over caribou

By Antoine Trépanier
Canadian Press in the National Post
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Steven Guilbeault

Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault has found himself in another spat with a province. For months, Guilbeault has been demanding Quebec adopt a new plan to protect the province’s woodland caribou from the impact of logging for industrial activities and road-network expansions, as herd numbers in the province appear to be dwindling. Now the federal minister is going over the province’s head, with an emergency decree ordering his own plan, outraging Quebec’s provincial government and the Bloc Québécois. …The emergency order, which could be implemented in August, is still at the consultation stage. If Quebec presents a new plan soon, Guilbeault says he will back down. …“Considering all the efforts made in recent years, the Quebec government considers the adoption of an emergency decree unjustified,” said a statement from Charette’s office. Quebec’s Forest Industry Council’s Jean-François Samray, said that if the decree is adopted, the industry could lose 6,500 jobs.

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Canada and New Brunswick to Plant Over 52 Million Climate-Resilient Trees

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
July 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONCTON, NB – Forests and trees capturing and storing carbon, offer habitats for wildlife, mitigate hot weather in cities and towns, ensure clean water and soil, and deliver essential spiritual, cultural and recreational benefits to Canadians from coast to coast. By planting two billion trees over a decade, the Government of Canada is taking a significant step forward in our country’s approach to tackling the dual crises of climate change and biodiversity decline. …Together, the Government of Canada and the Government of New Brunswick will provide more than $71 million to support progressive tree planting in New Brunswick, ensuring the right trees are planted in the right places so that the province’s forests can thrive in a changing climate. With this investment, the Province of New Brunswick aims to plant over 52 million climate-resilient trees on publicly managed land: the equivalent of planting over 60 trees for each resident of New Brunswick.

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Ottawa’s plan to protect caribou would cut Quebec’s forestry land by 4%: report

By Stéphane Blais
Canadian Press in the Montreal Gazette
July 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Quebec’s forestry potential would decrease by 1.4 million cubic metres of wood per year in the three zones where an emergency decree would be imposed to protect the caribou, according to Quebec’s chief forester. At the provincial level, the decree would cause a drop of 4.1 per cent in the allowable area. This is the conclusion reached by Quebec’s chief forester, Louis Pelletier, in an analysis he presented to the Quebec government published Tuesday. As part of this analysis, the mandate of the chief forester did not include making recommendations, but was limited to informing the ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry. Nor did Pelletier have the mandate to estimate the consequences on jobs in the forestry industry. Logging companies that cut trees in caribou habitat in the Pipmuacan area would suffer the greatest impact if the decree comes to fruition.

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Quebec town hopes replanting the right trees will shield their community from future forest fires

By Rachel Watts
CBC News
July 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Last month, a dozen people hauled mulch and a thousand trees across the forest, walking trails and perimeter of Fermont in northern Quebec. The town near the border with Labrador planted what they hope will become a shield for the community, following last year’s unprecedented forest fire season. Unlike other replanting efforts, this one focused on deciduous trees, says Simon Côté, the head co-ordinator at Arbre-Évolution, the organization that helped back the planting project. “In the next year, it has to be something that every city will do,” said Côté. “It needs to be at least 30 metres like a shield of hardwood … in case of very extreme fire that cannot be controlled and that we know can happen.” …”The conifer, like the spruce, is full of organic oil that can ignite very, very quickly … like a forest of matches.”

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Wagner Forest Management Considers Alternatives To Carbon-Forward Property in Ontario

By Wagner Forest Management Ltd.
Cision Newswire
July 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

LYME, New Hampshire — Wagner Forest Management, a manager of timberland investments, announced that it is considering strategic alternatives, including the potential sale of 480,000 acres of timberlands in Ontario, Canada. This property offers a unique opportunity for an investor to develop one of the largest nature-based carbon removal projects in the Voluntary Carbon Market. The project is anticipated to generate millions of emission reduction and removal credits, significantly contributing to climate change mitigation through sustainable forestry and land use practices. The company has retained TAP Securities as its financial advisor. TAP is preparing marketing materials describing the property and the carbon opportunity. …Wagner manages over 2.25mm acres of timberland throughout Northeastern United States and Eastern Canada.

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Spruce budworm ‘trending upwards’ in Northwestern Ontario

By Gary Rinne
Superior North News
July 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

THUNDER BAY — Spruce Budworm, which causes severe damage to fir trees, is overdue for a big rebound in Northwestern Ontario, but its advance this year may have been slowed by hot weather last year. Although there are reports of impacted tree stands around the Thunder Bay area, “it’s a bit of a surprise” there hasn’t been more defoliation from the spruce budworm, said Taylor Scarr, director at the Great Lakes Forestry Centre in Sault Ste. Marie. The Eastern Spruce Budworm feeds mainly on balsam fir and white spruce, and to a lesser extent on red spruce and black spruce. Trees typically die after four or more years of severe defoliation. …The MNR doesn’t consider the current extent of the budworm infestation in the Northwest to be enough to warrant mitigation measures like insecticide. Large outbreaks tend to occur every 30 to 40 years – the last big outbreak was in the 80s.

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Ontario forest firefighters call for new job classification, better pay

CBC News
June 28, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The union representing Ontario’s forest firefighters wants their job titles reclassified, which they say could result in higher pay and bolster recruitment and retention among their ranks. Noah Freedman, the vice-president of OPSEU Local 703, says the province currently classifies forest firefighters as resource technicians. He says that role does not properly recognize the dangerous work forest firefighters do… nor allow them to recruit and train young firefighters for the long term. “If the government were to reclassify us as wildland firefighters, then we would be compensated appropriately for the dangers we face and toxins we breathe,” he said. The starting pay for resource technicians in Ontario is currently $25 an hour. …Caroline Mulroney, the president of the Treasury Board, said an organizational review of firefighting classification by the Ontario Public Service is currently underway.” No timeline for the review was provided.

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Ontario needs more forest firefighters and Ford is sitting on his hands while fires rage

Ontario NDP
June 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

QUEEN’S PARK – Wildfires are raging in Ontario, and the province is short-staffed by 25%, but Doug Ford and his government are backing away from an earlier commitment to reclassify Wildland Firefighters to Firefighters. “It’s peak wildfire season and the province doesn’t have enough forest firefighters to send to each burning location. That means we are choosing which fires to put out and which will keep burning, risking nearby communities,” said NDP MPP and critic for Natural Resources and Forestry Guy Bourgouin (Mushkegowuk—James Bay). Along with OPSEU, NDP MPPs Bourgouin, WSIB and Injured Workers critic Lise Vaugeois (Thunder Bay—Superior North), and Labour critic, Jamie West (Sudbury) have repeatedly called on the government for this change. This reclassification will make them eligible for better wages and benefits that match the risks and responsibilities of this essential and dangerous job. 

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How forest fires also have an impact on lakes

By Jean-François Lapierre and Mathilde Bélair
The Conversation Canada
June 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

What are the effects of forest fires on lakes? One way of fighting fires is to use large quantities of water, often drawn from lakes and transported by air tankers. Although effective, this method can disrupt the physical structure of the lakes (water level, disturbance of deep-seated sediments). …Yet few, if any, scientific studies have documented the effect of this phenomenon on lakes themselves. …Smoke plumes ring large quantities of nutrients, metals and minerals that can be deposited on the surface of lakes and can also capture a large proportion of the sun’s rays, which disturbs aquatic organisms that photosynthesize. …Every square metre of burned land will be drained by an aquatic ecosystem, often a lake. Quantifying the fate of terrestrial carbon in lakes following forest fires will provide a better understanding of the extent to which lakes amplify or mitigate a possible feedback loop between forest fires and climate change.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Ojibwe community eyes biomass as ticket to emissions-free future

By Lindsay Kelly
Timmins Today
July 12, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Bingwi Neyaashi Anishinaabek’s (BNA) years-long journey toward biomass adoption has been marked by a series of starts and stops. But this fall, the northwestern Ontario Ojibwe community expects to be closer than ever to helping its residents establish themselves as leaders in the area of alternative energy. Discussions around the use of biomass in the community, whose traditional territory is situated along the southeast shores of Lake Nipigon, began well over a decade ago. But it wasn’t until 2017, when the community launched Papasay Value Added Wood Products, operating as Papasay Sawmill, that their work got underway in earnest. …The sawmill was Bingwi Neyaashi’s first real step into biomass, Hatton noted, but the community wanted to do more to reduce its reliance on other power sources. Next up in the plans was a district heating biomass program that would expand to the entire community.

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Atikokan is on the upswing: mayor

By Clint Fleury
Northwestern Ontario News Watch
July 11, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

ATIKOKAN – Owned by Ontario Power Generation, the Atikokan Generating Station is part of the province’s commitment to phase out coal and create economic stability in the region. This year the Atikokan Generating Station’s contract with the Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO) was set to expire on July 23. Todd Smith, the Minister of Energy before Premier Doug Ford shuffled his cabinet, directed the IESO to negotiate a new five-year contract. The mayor of Atikokan, Rob Ferguson, said he’s very excited. …Atikokan Generating Station produces 205 megawatts of biomass electricity, making the station one of North America’s largest biomass facilities and consumers of industrial wood pellets in Canada. Without a new contract, the facility would have likely been decommissioned. In its absence, the economic impact would be catastrophic.

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Belledune likely to survive the end of coal in 2030, N.B. Power hearing told

By Robert Jones
CBC News
June 27, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — Testimony at N.B. Power’s rate hearing suggests the utility believes it will be able to economically repurpose the Belledune coal fired generating station to burn wood pellets and avoid its closure in 2030 under federal carbon policies. On Thursday, Larry Kennedy, a U.S. based expert in utility depreciation issues, testified there is no need to shorten Belledune’s expected useful life for accounting purposes from 2040 to 2030 because it is likely it will be refitted to burn wood, which carries no carbon costs. …Fear the plant might have to be shuttered has hung over the region since Canada announced in 2018 a series of climate policies that include plans to end power generation from coal by 2030. …Brad Coady said the issue is still being evaluated, but converting Belledune to burn wood pellets has emerged as a leading option, largely because it allows the existing plant and infrastructure to continue in service.

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Health & Safety

These are the top diseases for Ontario forestry, mining, pulp and paper workers

The Timmins Daily Press
January 2, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — Workplace Safety North and the Occupational Cancer Research Centre released the top occupational disease risks for 2023 in the forestry, mining, and pulp and paper sectors. Rankings were based on data from the Occupational Disease Surveillance System, which monitors disease outcomes among over two million workers in Ontario. …In the forestry sector, workers face unique health risks related to outdoor work and specific industry processes. Here are the top occupational disease risks in the forestry, logging, and wood industries: Carpal Tunnel Syndrome… Laryngeal Cancer… Asthma… Oral Cancer… Acute Myocardial Infarction… Lung Cancer… COPD… and Raynaud’s Syndrome. …In the pulp and paper sector, specific risks are associated with the materials and processes involved. Noise-induced hearing loss is also a top disease based on approved WSIB claims. Here are the top occupational disease risks for pulp and paper mills, paper box and bag manufacturers, and miscellaneous paper converters: Asbestosis… Carpal Tunnel Syndrome… Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis… COPD… Acute Myocardial Infarction… Raynaud’s Syndrome… and Colorectal Cancer.

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Canadian medical journal issues warning about wildfire smoke

The Bay Today
July 8, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

NORTH BAY, Ontario — The Canadian Medical Association Journal is suggesting that it might become necessary for some Canadians to wear N95 or KN95 respirator masks to offset the harmful effects of wildfire smoke this summer. An article in the most recent edition of the Journal said exposure to wildfire smoke is associated with adverse health outcomes. …Wildfire seasons are getting longer and more severe in Canada. Wildfire smoke caused 710 emergency department visits for respiratory conditions and 250 for cardiac conditions in 2017, said the article. During days with wildfire smoke in the United States, asthma-specific hospital visits increased 10.3 per cent and nontraumatic deaths increased one per cent to two per cent in 2006–2017. …The Environment Canada website includes air quality listings for most Canadian cities including North Bay.

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Forest Fires

Ontario forest fire season quieter than anticipated

By Elaine Della-Mattia
The Timmins Daily Press
July 24, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

The wildfire season in Ontario has been a little quieter than anticipated this year. That’s likely because forest fires are a weather driven phenomenon and Ontario has seen significant rainfall since the spring, with some rain experienced every few days, said Evan Lizotte, fire information officer for Ontario’s Northeast region. The anticipated increased forest fire season came after a relatively dry winter with less snow cover than expected. …after a hot and dry summer in 2023 and low snowfall in the winter, that could have made a high wildfire season this year. …Meanwhile, throughout the season, Ontario’s crews have assisted with larger fire seasons experienced west of Ontario, including Manitoba, Alberta and now British Columbia. To date this year there have been 173 fires in Ontario, down from 470 fires during the same timeframe in 2023. The 10-year-average is 414 fires, the data shows.

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Evacuations end for Labrador City a week after wildfire forced out thousands

The Canadian Press in CTV News
July 22, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

Labrador City residents will soon be returning home after a wildfire forced an evacuation last week. Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey has said the evacuation order officially lifts at noon Monday, though essential workers and their families were allowed to return over the weekend. Furey said in a statement Saturday the gradual return would “allow residents of Labrador City to return home in a safe and orderly manner.” More than 7,000 residents of Labrador City were ordered to evacuate last week after a sudden shift in conditions reignited the once-smouldering fire and it moved toward the town. Labrador City Mayor Belinda Adams said the fire that had threatened the city is now “very low risk,” and rain was helping crews who are working to put out hot spots.

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Ground assault begins on Labrador City wildfire that forced thousands to evacuate

The Canadian Press in Victoria Times Colonist
July 18, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

LABRADOR CITY, N.L. — Firefighters began attacking a fire near Labrador City from the ground Thursday, marking a new stage in the effort to get the roaring wildfire under control. Crews have been dousing the flames from above using water bombers and helicopters, but Jeff Motty, the province’s forest fire duty officer, said adding a ground attack is an important step forward in the battle against any forest fire. “Once it’s safe for us to put firefighters on the ground, that’s how a fire actually gets put out,” he said in an interview. “It’s the boots on the ground that ultimately put the fires out.” Labrador City is home to more than 7,000 people and they were ordered to evacuate last week after a sudden shift in conditions sent the once-smouldering fire roaring back to life and moving quickly toward the town. 

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Mayor Welcomes Rain as Crews Continue to Battle Forest Fire in Labrador City

VOCM News Now
July 17, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

Belinda Adams

It is raining in Labrador City, which comes as welcome news as crews battle an out-of-control fire that continues to threaten the town. Mayor Belinda Adams says she has never been happier to stand in the rain. Adams says the fire is currently listed as a Category 1, but that doesn’t mean the town is out of the woods yet. She says the fire is still very hot and is listed as out of control, meaning it is not safe for anyone to return yet. Adams says suppression efforts went well yesterday, and she hopes they can get some crews on the ground today. She says the waterbombers and helicopters do great work, but its the ground crews and mother nature that will put the fire out. Efforts continue to fight the forest fire from the ground and the air. 

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Ontario wildland firefighters sent to Western Canada

By Randy Thoms
Kenora Online
July 16, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ontario is lending support to the forest fire suppression efforts in western Canada. Over 160 personnel with the Ministry of Natural Resources Aviation, Forest Fire and Emergency Services are working in Alberta, Manitoba and British Columbia. The province last week deployed 21 staff to Manitoba, consisting of five four-person initial attack fire ranger crews and an agency representative. A separate contingent of 100 fire rangers, 19 fire management personnel and a 24-person incident management team was sent to Alberta Wildfire with their suppression efforts. Spokesperson Chris Marchand says equipment is also loaned. “An Ontario air attack package that consists of two CL 415 water bombers, a bird dog aircraft and an air attack officer also left the province en route to British Columbia in response to a request for assistance from the BC wildfire service,” says Marchand. One-hundred and fifty hose packs were also loans to Alberta.

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Weather created an ‘extremely aggressive inferno’ as crews continue to battle fire near Labrador City

By Arlette Lazarenko
CBC News
July 13, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

The wildfire near Labrador City is still posing challenges on Saturday as residents continue to evacuate. In an update Saturday afternoon, Premier Andrew Furey said the fire is about six kilometres northwest of the community and about one kilometre from the landfill. “It was basically deemed fully under control, if not fully out, on Monday and Tuesday this week. Essentially, yesterday morning it started to smoulder a bit and gain some momentum,” Furey told reporters during a virtual news conference in Happy Valley-Goose Bay. “Around mid-day the weather conditions changed with what is the perfect fire condition, if you will, for spread.” The fire had spread from what was 600 hectares and “fairly controlled” to over 10,000 hectares. It moved 21 kilometres in just four hours, Furey said. “Just an extremely aggressive inferno just outside of Labrador City and led to a very quickly and rapidly changing situation for the residents,” he said.

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Hydro employees slowly start return to Churchill Falls, fire threat diminishes

CBC News in the Weather Network
June 28, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

As rainy and humid weather take a favourable turn in fighting raging forest fires threatening Churchill Falls, a Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro crew has been able to return to the plant. “We are turning our attention to planning and preparing for residents to return to the community,” Hydro said in a statement posted on its website early Thursday evening. About 750 people were ordered on June 19 to flee Churchill Falls, a company town that exists to keep Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro’s generating station running. The remaining skeleton staff were forced to leave this Tuesday, after a raging forest fire jumped the Churchill River and moved closer to the town and its power plant. Hydro’s evacuation order remains in effect, but plans are underway for when people could return to the town, the Hydro statement said. 

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Wildfire in Labrador jumps Churchill River, hydro generating station evacuated

Canadian Press in CTV News
June 25, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

CHURCHILL FALLS, N.L. – The Labrador wildfire threatening the town of Churchill Falls jumped the Churchill River on Tuesday, prompting the emergency evacuation of the hydroelectric generating station about seven kilometres away. The river had acted as a natural fire break since the wildfire’s rapid spread on June 19 led officials to order the evacuation of most of the company town’s 750 residents and workers. But a skeleton crew was kept on at the massive station, which supplies electricity to Labrador and Quebec. “From Day 1, we hoped and prayed the fire would stay on the correct side of the river,” Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey told a news conference in St. John’s. “It’s what we were all hoping wouldn’t happen …. There’s a heightened level of risk of fire propagation on the community side of the river.”

Additional coverage from CBC News: Evacuee returns to ‘eerie’ Churchill Falls as an essential worker keeping town running

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