Region Archives: Canada West

Opinion / EdiTOADial

BC Timber Pricing Equity – Time To Recognize The Tradeoffs Between Tabular Rates and Transformational Change

By David Elstone, Managing Director
Spar Tree Group
July 9, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Elstone

Five years after the Modernizing Forest Policy in BC paper signalled the province’s intention to address the “disparity” in stumpage rates among Community Forest Agreements (CFAs), Woodlot Licences (WLs), and First Nations Woodland Licences (FNWLs), the issue remains unresolved. The question should not simply be whether all these tenure types should use tabular rates; but rather how BC should fund transformational change in forest management. …In 2025, CFAs and WLs paid substantially lower stumpage on harvested timber than FNWLs, whose rates were more comparable to major tenures such as Tree Farm Licences and Forest Licences. …While CFAs and WLs use tabular rates, stumpage for FNWLs is determined using the appraisal approach and revenue sharing. All three tenure types are area-based and, at least in principle, are meant to support a more locally intense form of forest stewardship than typical industrial forestry.

That distinction matters. If lower stumpage is simply treated as a revenue loss to government, the debate will remain stuck. If it is treated as a policy tool to secure measurable stewardship, wildfire resilience, and community stability, the discussion becomes far more productive. …The better approach is to stop treating equity reform in rates as a narrow revenue problem and start treating it as a performance bargain. If tenure holders want access to tabular rates instead of higher appraisal-based rates, they should be prepared to commit to measurable stewardship outcomes. …That is the trade-off those at the policy table should be debating. Tabular rates should not be viewed as a giveaway, nor should they be dismissed as a loss of revenue. They should be designed as a trade-off: more flexible administration of pricing and potentially lower rates in exchange for measurable stewardship gains, wildfire resilience, and community benefits.

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New conservation initiatives must account for working forest areas and fibre supply

By Peter Lister, Executive Director
The Truck LoggerBC Magazine
July 8, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, Canada West

Peter Lister

On May 19, six First Nations and the federal and provincial governments signed a historic agreement to protect a large portion of BC’s Central Coast. …Meanwhile, the Ministry of Forests is moving forward with its Forest Land Planning (FLP) process with seemingly little to no coordination with the [conservation] work being done by the ministry of Water, Land and Natural Resource Stewardship (WLRS). …BC is currently harvesting less than half of its 60 million cubic metre allowable annual cut. The reasons are many and complex but essentially come down to poor prices and tariffs in the key US market, high industry operational costs resulting from a large web of new regulations, and a critical shortage of economically accessible fibre. These factors have resulted in mill closures, job losses, and dramatically reduced government tax revenue, all at a time when the province is facing large budget deficits and record debt.

We need government to take the forest sector crises seriously, and take urgent and decisive action to streamline regulation, reduce crippling industry costs, and provide the fibre supply certainty required to reattract investment in our province. Instead, we have a situation where the forests minister is mandated to increase harvest levels to 45 million cubic meters (with little progress), while our WRLS minister has a mandate to protect an additional 10% of our public land base, even though we already exceed 30×30 targets. This makes no sense and shows a lack of leadership from the premier, who is prioritizing the interests of environmental activists and urban voters over the real economic needs of working British Columbians. Our government’s lack of focus on the economy is driving away business investment, hurting British Columbian’s pocketbooks, and creating a welfare state saddled with debt. This is not a legacy our premier should be proud of.

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Business & Politics

Mosaic Outlines New Direction for Recreation Access After Independent Review

Mosaic Forest Management
July 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

NANAIMO, B.C. — Mosaic Forest Management is changing how it manages recreation access on its Vancouver Island and Sunshine Coast lands, following an independent review prompted by last year’s public survey. More than 7,600 people responded to that 2025 survey. Mosaic then brought in recreation and tourism specialists RC Strategies and Legacy Tourism Group to dig into what was working, what wasn’t, and what a better program could look like. “As demand for outdoor recreation on Vancouver Island has grown, so have the expectations placed on our private lands,” said Duncan Davies, President and CEO. …The review’s message: recreation on Mosaic’s lands has outgrown the program built to manage it. That’s showing up as inconsistent gate hours, unclear rules between user groups, and a system built to control access rather than support the people using it. Mosaic is responding on three fronts — making access more reliable, planning recreation more deliberately, and strengthening relationships with First Nations, governments and recreation groups.

Additional coverage in the Campbell River Mirror, by Marc Kitteringham: Mosaic changing how it approaches recreation on Vancouver Island forest lands

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A Judge Recognized Aboriginal Title on Private Property. Panic Ensued

By Arno Kopecky
Maclean’s Magazine
July 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Malcolm Brodie

RICHMOND, BC — On a Thursday afternoon in August of last year, Malcolm Brodie, the mayor of Richmond, B.C., got a call from one of the city’s lawyers. He had news: the province’s Supreme Court had reached a decision in Cowichan Tribes v. Canada, the longest trial in Canadian history. The verdict wasn’t what Brodie wanted to hear. …B.C. Supreme Court Justice Barbara Young determined that the Cowichan title was “prior and senior” to private property and recognized the Cowichan people’s Aboriginal title—a unique mixture of property rights and governing authority—to 300 hectares of the city. …The situation metastasized into a crisis for B.C.’s NDP government, which had been a vocal supporter of Indigenous rights since coming to power in 2017. …Proving Aboriginal title in court is a monumental undertaking. That’s why only two nations, Tŝilhqot’in and Nuchatlaht, both in B.C., had done it successfully before the Cowichan.

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B.C. Conservative MLA Stamer talks trade, tariffs and border security with U.S. envoys

By Josh Dawson
Castanet
July 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

©Ward Stamer Facebook

Kamloops-North Thompson B.C. Conservative MLA Ward Stamer says he raised softwood lumber and tariff concerns during a meeting last week with senior U.S. diplomats. The forests critic was one of several B.C. Opposition MLAs to meet with Pete Hoekstra, the U.S. ambassador to Canada, and Vancouver-based U.S. consul general Shawn Crowley on July 4. …Stamer said the meeting was “very positive.” …“The president can say things that might sort of seem kind of contradictory to what we’re talking about, but at the end of the day the president is trying to have more manufacturing in his country, and that is why he’s pushing so hard in making some of these deals,” Stamer said. Stamer said he explained to the ambassador an example where a full log can be made into veneer in Kamloops, then shipped down to the U.S. where it’s then made into cabinets — a “win-win” for both countries.

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Northern Alberta wood, timber holds firm despite cyclical market

By Rob Brown
The Edmonton Journal
July 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Alberta’s forestry sector enters a second half of 2026 with cautious optimism, even as weak housing markets supply, U.S. tariffs and softwood lumber duties continue to weigh on the industry. Ken Greenway, Alberta Forestry and Parks’ executive director of strategy, policy and economics, said northern Alberta’s timber industry remains relatively stable compared to some other parts of Canada, where forestry communities have faced sharper contractions. “We haven’t seen huge disruptions,” Greenway said. “Pulp is a weak market and that’s an area of concern, but softwood products prices are slowly moving to the positive side.” …“It’s a cyclical market, we’re at the bottom of a cycle at the moment. The current contraction across Canada – we have not seen as much in Alberta. We hope to withstand this storm.” The industry is also becoming more involved in wildfire mitigation.

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Curtailment at Western Forest Product’s Cowichan Bay sawmill expected to last through September

By Adam Chan
Chek News
July 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Western Forest Products says a curtailment at its Cowichan Bay sawmill is expected to last until this fall. The curtailment began on May 11, affecting 54 employees. On Wednesday, WFP told CHEK News it currently expects the curtailment to remain in effect through September. The forestry company says the curtailment is due to “persistently weak market conditions” and that it is trying to mitigate impacts on employees by “providing work opportunities at our other operations where possible.” “Conditions are being monitored closely, and we will keep employees informed should the expected duration change,” said Western Forest Products. The curtailment in Cowichan Bay comes as an indefinite curtailment continues at the WFP sawmill in Chemainus. The Chemainus sawmill was curtailed in July 2025, affecting approximately 120 workers, and in January it was announced that the curtailment was expected to last for all of 2026. [END]

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Finance & Economics

Lumber cost decreases offset by operating cost gains

By Tommy Osborne
CTV News
July 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Canadian lumber industry saw enormous price spikes during the pandemic years of 2020-2022, with costs close to triple what they are today for some products. … “We saw prices skyrocket during COVID, but so too did the cost to operate,” said Aspen Dudzic, the Alberta Forest Products Assocation’s communications director. “And interestingly, post-COVID, we saw the market prices for lumber go down, but the costs to operate have not come down in the same way.” Even though lumber costs have seen a huge drop in prices in a vacuum, why haven’t these cost savings been passed on to the consumer? …“The supply chain is really complex,” Dudzic said. “Nothing we do operates in a vacuum, so there’s a lot of other compounding costs that we have to look at, like inflationary pressures, upticks in fuel and energy prices. …Top of mind is the ongoing trade war with the US.

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BC lumber market is still challenging while log exports continue to hold steady

By Russ Taylor, President, Russ Taylor Global
Truck LoggerBC Magazine
July 8, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC has seen lower timber harvests and lumber and lumber exports. …BC exported 2.5 million m3 of softwood logs in 2025, a trend that has been in place since 2022. …BC lumber exports have always focused on the US market, with 64% of production and 76% of total exports directed at the US in 2025. But with US duties and tariffs totalling over 45%. the volumes started to drop in 2025 Q4. Total BC lumber exports in 2025 were 5.1 billion bf, a drop of 12% from 2024. Lumber exports to the US were 3.83 billion bf in 2025, a drop of 14.3% from 2024. …In the first quarter of 2026, total BC lumber exports were lower by 20.1% compared to 2025 Q1, with exports to the US down by a whopping 24.7% (the bite of US duties and tariffs is evident), lower to Japan by 17.7% but higher to China by 10%. It will be challenging for BC mills in export markets for much of 2026 unless demand improves or prices move higher—both unlikely until 2027.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Government of Canada invests over $8 million to help Surrey businesses boost productivity

By Pacific Economic Development Canada
The Government of Canada
July 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

SURREY, British Columbia — The Honourable Randeep Sarai, Secretary of State (International Development) announced over $8 million in RTRI funding for four Surrey businesses to help them diversify exports, grow locally, and compete globally – building prosperity for British Columbians and all Canadians. These investments support the Government of Canada’s measures to help businesses in sectors affected by global trade disruptions – such as forestry, manufacturing, and steel and aluminum – boost productivity, reduce costs, build more resilient supply chains, and reach new markets. … More details about these investments can be found in the backgrounder. …The investments include MTC Solutions – $630,250. MTC Solutions is an engineering company that designs and supplies the connection systems used in mass timber construction projects across North America. The investment will help MTC establish an advanced research and manufacturing facility, including acquiring new testing and machining equipment to develop Canadian-made mass timber hardware. 

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World Cup fans hosted under timber sky at new Freedom Mobile Arch in Vancouver

By Rebecca Keillor
Vancouver Sun
July 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

©PNE

At Hastings Park, the newly completed Freedom Mobile Arch is giving Vancouver a new kind of cultural landmark: a covered outdoor venue designed for concerts, festivals and public gatherings of up to 10,000 people. Completed in June, and host to the city’s FIFA Fan Festival, the amphitheatre is defined by a sweeping mass-timber roof that shelters audiences while preserving the feeling of being outdoors. It’s a civic room that frames the sky and North Shore mountains. For Venelin Kokalov of Revery Architecture, who designed this building, the finished venue closely reflects their original vision, but with one important difference: the atmosphere can now be felt. The amphitheatre’s defining gesture is its roof: a starburst mass-timber canopy spanning 105 metres, arcs rising 25 metres high. Comprising 60 arches arranged in six vaulted segments, it has the drama of a landmark, with the softness of a natural material.

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Funding for Alberta Manufacturers: Apply Before July 31

Canadian Wood Council, WoodWorks
July 14, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Attention Alberta Value-Added Wood Manufacturers and Associated Wood Suppliers: Applications Close July 31. The Alberta Value-Added Wood Products Program (AVAWPP) has launched the new Innovation Support Program (ISP), a capital investment funding opportunity designed to help Alberta’s value-added wood manufacturers and their wood suppliers scale operations, expand capacity, and accelerate growth. With funding available for equipment and manufacturing investments, the ISP builds on the success of AVAWPP’s previous Business Development Program and supports projects that create meaningful growth and innovation across Alberta’s wood products sector.

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From Forest to Frame: Technology is Changing Homebuilding in BC

By The Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
June 23, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

…emerging technologies like timber processing centres could help build homes faster and more affordably, particularly for multi-family dwellings. Timber processing centres, such as the Hundegger computer numerical control (CNC) machine, use remotely operated and automated saws and tools to transform timber into custom wood components used in, for example, building construction. …Value-added products like mass timber and prefabricated wood components for homes sourced from a variety of fibre types … are a big part of the vision for housing in the province. …In 2014, the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship (FES) at UBC was the first site in North America to install a Hundegger Robot Drive timber processing centre. …FES industry workshops, like its hands-on Design for Manufacturing and Assembly (DFMA) workshop, expose forestry professionals to advanced techniques using tools like timber processing centres, inspiring industry members to think outside the box about how this technology could be applied in real-world contexts. 

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Selkirk College partnership enhances mass timber education

By Betsy Kline
The Nelson Star
July 8, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

©BCIT

As Selkirk College increases its offerings in support of the mass timber industry, students in a micro-credential program got a unique opportunity thanks to a partnership with British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT). BCIT brought its Mass Timber Connections and Constructability Hub — a mobile mass timber training platform — to the Selkirk Technology Access Centre in Trail in May. The students benefited from direct, practical experience in mass timber construction and fabrication techniques including rigging and hoisting glulam posts and beams, assembling them using pre-engineered connections and custom steel components, and attaching cross-laminated timber (CLT) wall and floor panels. …Through Kalesnikoff, Spearhead, International Timber Frames and Hamill Creek Timber Homes, the West Kootenay is becoming a centre for mass timber construction, development and innovation.

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Forestry

British Columbia expands value-added timber program to include custom processors

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
July 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia is expanding the BC Timber Sales Value-Added Manufacturing Program by creating a new dedicated category that will secure fibre for custom cutters and processors. BC’s action builds on Canada’s Forest Sector Transformation Task Force, which was commissioned in response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s new duties and tariffs on Canadian wood products. The task force recommends strong support for value-added operators so Canada can build high-quality products at home. “British Columbia’s path forward for forestry can’t just be providing dimensional lumber to Americans. We have to make more in B.C.,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. …Custom cutters and processors are a group within the value-added wood-manufacturing sector without their own sawmilling facilities. …BC Wood Specialties Group Association’s chair, Kelly Marconi said “our custom cutting and processing members were part of the task force’s public consultation, so we are pleased to see this inclusive change.”

Additional coverage in the Campbell River Mirror by Mark Page: Specialty ‘custom cutters’ added to BC Timber Sales program

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The 2026 BC First Nations Forestry Conference Proceedings Report is Here!

BC First Nations Forestry Council
July 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

We’ve captured the 2026 BC First Nations Forestry Conference highlights, key takeaways, and memorable moments in our 2026 Proceedings Report, we invite you to explore and revisit the conversations that made this year’s event so impactful. The 2026 BC First Nations Forestry Conference was hosted on the traditional, unceded territory of the Syilx (Okanagan) Nation in Kelowna, BC. This year’s conference was guided by the theme Forest Nations Rising: From Strong Roots to Global Horizons, bringing together First Nations, industry, government, sponsors, and partners to shape the future of forestry in British Columbia. This year’s event reflected both the growing strength of First Nations leadership and the deepening relationships transforming how forests are stewarded, managed, and shared. The continued support of industry leaders, program partners, sponsors, and educational institutions, alongside the dedication of Nations and government, made this gathering possible and underscored a shared commitment to advancing the sector together.

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Approximately 45,000 hectares safeguarded for 10 years in new K’ih t̲s̲aaʔd̲z̲e Protection Area

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
July 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Approximately 45,000 hectares of Crown land in northeastern British Columbia has been protected for the next 10 years to help safeguard ecologically and culturally significant land within Treaty 8 territory. The interim measure is intended to safeguard the area’s ecological and cultural values while long-term land-use planning and protection discussions continue. On Friday, July 10, 2026, the B.C. government established the K’ih t̲s̲aaʔd̲z̲e Protection Area under the Environment and Land Use Act (ELUA), supported by a Forest Act (Part 13) designated area. The protection area will help conserve caribou habitat and boreal ecosystems and encourage ecological restoration while supporting ongoing collaborative land-use planning with Doig River First Nation. The ELUA designation will protect the area from new land and resource dispositions and industrial activity while allowing existing lawful activities to continue, provided no new disturbance of the land surface occurs. Forestry activities will be restricted in the same area for four years.

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Inviting residents of the Cranbrook region to help guide forest management

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
July 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Residents in Cranbrook, Kimberley, Fernie, Sparwood, Elkford and surrounding areas are invited to share their input about the development of the Cranbrook Forest Landscape Plan, to guide forest-management decisions in the area. The plan focuses on improving forest management for the 1.2-million-hectare Cranbrook Timber Supply Area. “Everyone deserves a say in how our forests are managed, and when we’re all at the table, we can deliver forest landscape plans with clarity and predictability for our workforce and for our environment,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “Forests are the foundation of creating opportunity at home and abroad. Over the last few months, we’ve made real progress on forest landscape plans throughout B.C. We need your feedback to ensure we get the Cranbrook Forest Landscape Plan right.” People can share their thoughts through a survey that will run from Monday, July 13 to Sept. 25, 2026. 

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Nanaimo resident pushes to save rare wetland from development

By Julie Chadwick
Victoria Times Colonist
July 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A resident of Nanaimo’s Rock City neighbourhood in north Nanaimo is speaking out against a development project she says threatens a unique wetland that is a “crown jewel” of the city. Tamara Brown has lived in the area for about six years and says she has extensively studied both the wetland and the proposed four-storey, 102-unit rental development, which would also have two storeys of parking. The heavily forested, sloped 1.52-hectare property at 3400 Barrington Rd. was rezoned for medium-density residential use four years ago. The current project was approved by the city in early January, although work has not yet begun. Critics are concerned that the removal of trees, bedrock blasting and excavation expected during construction would disturb the water flows of a rare ecosystem. …At a council meeting this week in Nanaimo, Brown raised other concerns, including the potential impact on the Garry oak ecosystem and breeding habitat for birds and amphibians.

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Parksville council endorses Community Wildfire Resiliency Plan

Parksville Qualicum Beach News
July 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Parksville council has endorsed a Community Wildfire Resiliency Plan — the first step towards integrating its recommendations into city plans and policies. Community Wildfire Resiliency Plans include wildfire threat mapping and follow the BC FireSmart framework and provincial wildfire risk reduction objectives, according to a report by Fire Chief Marc Norris, of Parksville Fire Rescue. The city hired Frontera Forest Solutions to develop the plan, using FireSmart grant funding. The plan found Parksville “is at an overall low risk of devastating wildfire igniting within the city, however pockets of medium and high-risk locations do exist within the city’s wildland urban interface.” The biggest risk was wildfires burning in “high-risk areas” could carry smoke or embers into Parksville. Vulnerabilities identified were seasonal increases in fire-related activity linked to human behaviour, including deliberate ignitions and an increased risk near people and infrastructure, potentially in areas in which ignitions are harder to access or detect.

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Campfire ban expands across much of B.C.’s coast starting Thursday

By Erin Haluschak
Chek News
July 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Most campfires will be banned across coastal British Columbia beginning later this week as the BC Wildfire Service expands fire restrictions in response to changing weather conditions. Effective at 12 p.m. July 16, Category 1, 2 and 3 open fires will be prohibited throughout the Coastal Fire Centre. However, Category 1 campfires will still be allowed in the Campbell River Forest District, North Island Central Coast Forest District, Haida Gwaii Forest District and Sunshine Coast Forest District …The BC Wildfire Service says the expanded prohibition is intended to reduce the risk of human-caused wildfires and protect public safety as fire danger increases in many coastal regions. The restrictions apply to all areas outside municipal boundaries within the Coastal Fire Centre, as well as provincial parks, recreation sites, ecological reserves, wildlife management areas and private managed forest lands. Municipalities may have their own fire restrictions, and residents are encouraged to check with their local government before lighting any fire.

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City of Powell River Council objects to forest ministry letter

By Paul Galinski
Coast Reporter
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

City of Powell River Council has directed staff to write correspondence to the ministry of forests, objecting to correspondence from the ministry regarding Powell River Community Forest’s new forest licence. …Acting mayor Cindy Elliot said the new BCTS plan came out with additional areas for planned forestry that overlapped the community forest’s new timber licence. …The response essentially says that they are not required to do what we asked and they would rather wait until the minister makes a decision before they change what they are doing.” …Councillor Rob Southcott said the community forest indirectly compensates for the loss of a lot of revenue from a major taxpayer due to the permanent curtailment of the paper mill. …“We don’t want BC Timber Sales coming in and starting to log in the area that we believe should be included in the community forest,” said Powell River Community Forest president Greg Hemphill

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Inviting input on watershed plan for Goat River

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

People are invited to share their input and help guide the development of recommendations and long-term solutions for water supply and ecosystem health in the Goat River watershed. The Province of British Columbia, in partnership with yaqan nuʔkiy (Lower Kootenay Band) and the Regional District of Central Kootenay (RDCK), has launched a tripartite working group to address growing water-scarcity challenges in the Goat River watershed and develop recommendations for long-term water management in the Creston Valley. As part of the process, a survey will gather insights from community members, water users, farmers, industry and other interested parties about their vision for the Goat River watershed. The survey is available until Aug. 1, 2026. …The Goat River Watershed Collective Conversations Working Group brings together representatives from the Province, yaqan nuʔkiy and the RDCK. It will serve as a recommendation-making body, developing joint recommendations for consideration by yaqan nuʔkiy leadership, the RDCK board of directors and provincial ministries. 

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Why the ‘backbone’ of B.C. outdoor recreation access is in jeopardy, groups explain

By Glenda Luymes
Vancouver Sun
July 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

…As some resource roads across the province fall into disrepair … outdoor groups are working to save them. A survey created by the Outdoor Recreation Council of B.C. opened last week to understand which roads matter most for outdoor recreation. No one is suggesting that every metre of the 600,000 kilometres of resource roads across B.C. can be maintained, said Louise Pedersen, the council’s executive director. But creating an inventory is the first step in a process that could eventually include discussions with the B.C. government about saving the most important. …Many of the roads British Columbians use to access the backcountry were created by resource companies … said Monika Bittel, advocacy chairperson with the Federation of Mountain Clubs of B.C. When the projects wrap up, the company continues to hold liability for the road and must follow a process to decommission it. “Their mandate is not recreation,” she said.

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Interview with Jason Krips, President and CEO of the Alberta Forest Products Association

Impact Reports
July 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jason Krips

In Alberta, we take great pride in managing our forests for future generations. Few industries can truly say they plan on a 200-year horizon and that long-term approach allows us to remain deeply rooted in communities across the province. Today, the forestry sector is active in around 70 communities, primarily in northern Alberta. We work closely with the provincial government to develop long-term forest management plans that balance a wide range of priorities, including healthy watercourses, wildlife habitat, recreation, Indigenous values, climate adaptation and wildfire mitigation. The sector supports approximately 30,000 direct and indirect jobs across Alberta. It is a substantive industry that continues to create value for both our economy and our communities. As AFPA approaches more than 80 years of history, I would group our legacy into three key areas: Our members, the public and students, and the global economy. 

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Critical of forests minister

Letter by Kristi Chorney, Wildsight Revelstoke
Castanet
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Open letter to Premier David Eby, B.C.’s Minister of Forests, Ravi Parmar, spoke in Revelstoke about his hopes for sawmills, old- growth and caribou protection (recently). It is evident Parmar is misinformed about the issues critical to the Revelstoke community and other British Columbia residents, and is failing to act on your government’s commitments to climate action, environmental protection, and sustainability. When asked about protecting old-growth within the Revelstoke region, such as the Rainbow-Jordan Wilderness (RJW), Parmar stated: “What I wouldn’t support is just saving land for the sake of saving land and seeing mills close down.” That response demonstrated a lack of understanding of community priorities. …The minister’s comments also show a lack of understanding of the Old Growth Strategic Review, which your government commissioned and committed to implementing. Rather than perpetuating the volume-based resource extraction model, a shift to a value-added sustainable forestry is needed for the provincial economy and long-term employment opportunities.

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Mayor moves to protect tree funds and maintain record urban forestry investment

City of Winnipeg
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mayor Scott Gillingham announced today he will bring forward a proposal to City Council next week to maintain full funding for tree planting in the 2026 Urban Forest Renewal Program. The move follows public feedback about a proposed budget amendment that would have reduced 2026 tree planting work by $1.236 million to offset a provincial government change to the City’s Strategic Infrastructure Basket funding allocation. “Winnipeggers care deeply about our urban forest, and I’ve heard that clearly,” said Mayor Scott Gillingham. “The public wants this tree planting funding protected. I agree, and I’ll be bringing forward a plan to Council next week to do exactly that.” City Council adopted Winnipeg’s first Urban Forest Strategy in 2023, setting a long-term plan to protect, preserve, and grow the city’s tree canopy.

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Forest giants reveal harvesting plans

By Richard Froese
The South Peace News
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

ALBERTA — Harvesting plans for forestry companies operating in the High Prairie and Slave Lake regions were presented June 17 at a joint open house in High Prairie. Plans were displayed by West Fraser Timber that operates High Prairie Forest Products, Tolko Industries, and by Millar Western Forest Products that bought the Slave Lake Pulp Mill from West Fraser and became the owner in April 2024. No representative was present from West Fraser. Companies hosted the event to allow citizens to comment on the proposed plans. Tolko plans to have operations in the Sweathouse area south of Snipe Lake, Salt Prairie and Whitemud, says woodlands supervisor Callie Skellett. …Millar Western plans to harvest trees in three areas, forestry superintendent Stuart Adkins says.

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Tough watering restrictions threaten Metro Vancouver’s trees

By Douglas Todd
Vancouver Sun
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The average Metro Vancouver tree has a lifespan of less than eight years. That makes it even more important to preserve as many trees as possible. The startling statistic, from Brian Minter, a prominent B.C. horticulturist, serves as a deadly warning: Metro Vancouver’s unusually early and severe watering restrictions are a threat to the region’s trees. Given that so many young trees in Metro Vancouver do not reach their tween years — mostly for lack of watering — Minter has come to think of the metropolis’s relatively few older trees as rare and precious “gold.” …Because of lack of time, knowledge or concern, Bill Manning, retired director of horticulture for Vancouver parks said, many homeowners, tenants and strata councils don’t recognize that, though they’re not allowed to use sprinklers on trees, they are permitted to water trees by hand using a hose with a spring-loaded shut-off nozzle, a watering can, or drip irrigation.

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BC loggers innovate to scale up wildfire strategies

By Alice Palmer
The Truck LoggerBC Magazine
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Two BC communities are breathing a little easier, thanks to forward-thinking thinning operations by BC logging companies.  On the outskirts of the Xetólaçw Village subdivision of Mount Currie, Lilwat Forestry Ventures crews have thinned roughly 200 hectares of densely grown Douglas fir and applied cultural burning to reduce understory vegetation. If a wildfire were to reach this now-treated forest, it would travel more slowly. …In the Quesnel area, east of the Nazko First Nation community, Integrated Operations Group collaborated with the Nation to thin a beetle-killed pine blowdown stand, removing the dead stems and leaving the live stems standing. …Both projects were partly self-sustaining—the companies used revenue from the harvest and sale of a limited number of logs from the treated areas. …Logging contractors are increasingly taking on a greater diversity of projects. Not only are they adding wildfire mitigation to their offerings, they are also practicing different types of logging.

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Lake Babine Nation breaks ground on forestry campus

By Dave Branco
CKPG News Prince George
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

LAKE BABINE NATION – Construction crews have started work on the new Lake Babine Nation Forestry Campus. Community leaders say this project is an important step for local education and sustainable forestry. The groundbreaking happened on July 6, 2026. Construction is expected to finish by March 31, 2027. The campus will be named Nadut’en Dij’akh Wighidlee Beyikh, which means “The House Where Nadut’en Takes Care of its Forestry.” …Lake Babine Nation Chief Wilf Adam says the centre will help young people learn about forestry and other areas. Elders will share their knowledge along with the instructors. …Monty Palmantier, who manages capacity development at Lake Babine Nation Forestry Services LP, said said the Nicola Valley Institute of Technology has been their main partner for accredited programs. He also said the campus will join a provincial network of over 40 First Nation education institutes through the Indigenous Adult and Higher Learning Association.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

As the world burns, the powerful deny and delay

By David Suzuki
Pique News Magazine
July 11, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Suzuki

We could be happier, healthier and more economically secure—if we were to act on the knowledge that many of our problems are related. …But we’re not only up against a “polycrisis,” we’re also facing varying degrees of denial. At its most blatant, the US president has labelled the clear and overwhelming scientific and observable evidence for human-caused climate disruption as a “hoax” and is promoting climate-altering fossil fuels over renewable energy. Denial in Canada may not be as blatant, but it’s still dangerous. Prime Minister Carney is arguing that climate policies are “too expensive for Canadians.” …It’s absurd. Record high temperatures and humidity are killing hundreds of thousands of people a year worldwide. …We’ve seen increasingly intense wildfires destroying entire towns. …But short-term profit for the sake of constantly growing the economy and gross domestic product outweighs concerns about the enormous costs of accelerating climate change. It’s suicidal.

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Building a Safer Wood Pellet Industry: Key Takeaways from the 2026 Wood Pellet Association of Canada Safety Summit

By Fahimeh Yazdan Panah
Wood Pellet Association of Canada
July 7, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada West

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC) and its Safety Committee are committed to fostering a safety culture across the forest products industry. One way we do this is by hosting safety events, including the 2026 Wood Pellet and Bioenergy Safety Summit, held in Prince George, British Columbia, last month. The Summit brought together 30 industry leaders, safety professionals, and regulators for two days of focused discussion, collaboration, and learning. Co-hosted by the BC Forest Safety Council and WorkSafeBC the event emphasized a shared commitment to advancing safety practices across the sector, with sessions covering technical hazard prevention, operational excellence, worker well-being and mental health. …The WPAC Safety Summit underscored that building a safer wood pellet and bioenergy industry requires a comprehensive and collaborative approach. …In the spirit of openness, the presentations for many of the Summit sessions are available on pellet.org.

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Health & Safety

Kevin Storie at Drax Smithers: Latest Wood Pellet Association of Canada Safety Hero

By Gordon Murray
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
July 13, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Kevin Storie

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC) is proud to recognize Operational Supervisor Kevin Storie of Drax Smithers as our latest Safety Hero for his consistent, hands-on commitment to keeping people safe and operations running responsibly. Kevin leads by example every day, leveraging his operational experience to lead his team to safe outcomes. He is involved in continuous improvement across the site, constantly challenging the team to think critically about how to make it even safer. “Kevin’s attention to detail and willingness to consider all facts openly make him a great asset to the Smithers plant team,” says Joel Martens, Plant Manager, who nominated Kevin. WPAC remains dedicated to recognizing those whose commitment helps ensure everyone returns home safely at the end of each day. 

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‘One of the biggest public health threats’: Why doctors say you need to take wildfire smoke seriously

By Andrew Johnson
CTV News
July 10, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Smoke from two major wildfires burning in British Columbia’s Fraser Canyon is leading to air quality warnings across parts of the province, with an emergency physician warning the health effects extend far beyond watery eyes and a scratchy throat. “It is considered to be one of the biggest public health threats that we face,” said Dr. Courtney Howard, who is also the president-elect of the Canadian Medical Association. … “The particulate matter in smoke that’s less than 2.5 microns can go all the way down into our lungs, and the ultrafine particles can actually cross over into our bloodstream,” she said. …Howard said scientists are only beginning to understand the long-term health effects of repeated wildfire smoke exposure because the research is still limited. “We don’t have good evidence on the long-term outcomes yet,” she said. But a small number of studies, according to Howard, have suggested possible links with high rates of brain cancer and lung cancer.

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Forest Fires

Fire on Anarchist Mountain east of Osoyoos, B.C., triggers evacuation alert

By Darryl Greer
Canadian Press in The Kelowna Daily Courier
July 13, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

OSOYOOS – The Regional District of Okanagan-Similkameen has issued an evacuation alert for dozens of homes and properties that are being threatened by a fire on Anarchist Mountain east of Osoyoos, B.C. Residents on Cougar Court and the Sasquatch Trail should be ready to leave as crews battle a blaze on the mountain. The Anarchist Mountain Fire Department says that as of 4 p.m. the fire was being held, but people are being told to avoid the area “to allow emergency personnel to work safely and efficiently.” The local firefighters are battling the blaze with the help of the BC Wildfire Service and the South Okanagan Task Force, and the cause is under investigation. …Elsewhere in B.C., crews fighting out-of-control wildfires near Boston Bar, B.C., were taking advantage of favourable weather to attack the blazes directly, before fire activity was expected to pick up after tempered behaviour over the weekend.

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B.C. wildfire crews brace for uptick in fire activity as weather heats up again

The Canadian Press in CBC News
July 13, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

Crews fighting out-of-control wildfires near Boston Bar, B.C., were taking advantage of favourable weather to attack the fires directly, before fire activity is expected to pick up after tempered behaviour over the weekend. The size of the Brunswick complex of wildfires, consisting of the Brunswick Creek and Ainslie Creek wildfires, has changed little since last week with a combined size of more than 188 square kilometres after a weekend of rain and cooler weather. The B.C. Wildfire Service said in an overnight update that crews were also working to protect structures near Boothroyd while establishing fire lines on the southwest flank of the Ainslie Creek wildfire. …An evacuation alert covering 61 properties near Merritt remains in effect, issued by the Thompson-Nicola Regional District, while the Nooaitch Indian Band had also told residents of its main reserve to get ready to leave on short notice last week.

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Highway 1 reopens in Fraser Canyon, but twin wildfires remain out of control

By Simon Little
CBC News
July 11, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BC Wildfire Service

Officials reopened Highway 1 through British Columbia’s Fraser Canyon on Saturday, but warned that active wildfire operations continue in the area. The route had been closed since July 7, as the Brunswick wildfire complex near Boston Bar expanded rapidly in size. As of Saturday morning, the Brunswick Creek wildfire on the west side of the canyon was burning at 28.36 square kilometres and the Ainslie Creek wildfire on the east side was burning at 158.47 sq. km. Both fires remain out of control, and multiple evacuation orders and alerts remain in effect. …while Highway 1 had reopened, there was only one lane active in each direction… No stopping is permitted in the wildfire zone, and drivers are urged to watch for signage and crews. [Prior to the closure] “we had issues with numerous folks pulling over at pullouts to take pictures and videos of the fire,” said B.C. Wildfire Service fire information officer Julia Caracni.

Additional coverage in CBC News: Wildfire sparks East Kootenay evacuation alert, weather helps firefight near Boston Bar

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Evacuation alert for East Kootenay wildfire, Brunswick Creek fire grows: officials

The Canadian Press in Global News
July 12, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BC Wildfire Service

Dozens of properties in British Columbia’s East Kootenay region are under an evacuation alert as another out-of-control wildfire burns. The Regional District of East Kootenay placed 72 properties in the Premier Lake area under an evacuation alert after the Lussier River fire grew Saturday. It’s the latest B.C. wildfire notice asking people to be prepared to flee since twin blazes near Boston Bar in the Fraser Canyon evacuations. Information from the BC Wildfire Service shows one of the two fires has grown since Friday. …The wildfire service is also asking the public to stop behaviours that could hinder their work. An overnight statement from the agency says that since Highway 1 reopened Saturday, between Boston Bar and Jackass Summit, drivers have been speeding through the fire zone and even stopping to film the ongoing firefighting efforts.. … a drone was also seen flying near the Brunswick Creek wildfire while emergency aircrews were fighting the blaze.

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BC Wildfire Service crews continue to see ‘challenging’ conditions on Boston Bar-area wildfires

By Tim Petruk and Josh Dawson
Castanet Kamloops
July 9, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWS

The BC Wildfire Service will continue battling the Brunswick complex overnight with night-vision helicopters dropping water and crews conducting direct attack and patrols. “We are operating 24-hours a day on the complex fires,” the wildfire service said in an online update. The complex includes the 2,621-hectare Brunswick Creek wildfire and the Ainslie Creek fire, now estimated at 15,497 hectares. While down from an earlier estimate of 16,987 hectares, the Ainslie Creek fire has grown significantly since earlier this week. The Brunswick Creek fire, which started July 2, sparked the Ainslie Creek blaze after embers crossed Highway 1, which remains closed through the area. Strong south winds of up to 40 km/h fuelled aggressive fire behaviour Wednesday and are expected to continue overnight, according to an online BCWS update. …The BCWS said fire activity increased Thursday along the west and south flanks of the Ainslie Creek fire. 

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