Region Archives: Canada West

Opinion / EdiTOADial

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

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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5 researchers at University of Northern British Columbia receive $866k

By Yashvika Grover
Penticton Western News
July 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Researchers at the University of Northern British Columbia (UNBC) have received a grant to conduct studies on earthquake-resilient buildings, food packaging, forest diversity and more. The $866,000 granted to five faculty members is being supported through the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) Discovery grant program. …Erin Crockett, ecosystem science and management assistant professor, is receiving $202,000 over the five years to examine “how tree species diversity and structural complexity influence forest growth and resilience in British Columbia.” …Fei Tong, assistant engineering professor, is receiving $190,000 over five years to develop “a new structural system for tall buildings in seismically active regions like Vancouver… The approach, which will be adapted for both conventional construction and tall mass timber buildings, aims to keep buildings safe, functional, and repairable after major earthquakes.”

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Judge’s refusal to reopen Cowichan case a chilling message to B.C. landowners

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
July 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC Supreme Court Justice Barbara Young sent a chilling message to BC landowners when she refused to reopen the case where she designated Aboriginal title over private land in Richmond. Montrose Properties argued it had never received any formal notification that its fee-simple title could be affected by the outcome. This being the first case where Aboriginal title was applied to private as well as Crown land in BC, the federal, provincial and Richmond city governments all supported reopening the application. …Young didn’t rule out that the Cowichan Nation might someday seek to take over all the private land included in the designation of Aboriginal title. …It will be months and maybe years before her findings and those of the New Brunswick court are reconciled. …In the interim, Young has put provincial landowners on notice that they… are at risk from a claim of Aboriginal title.

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Forestry Works for BC is hiring an executive director

Forestry Works for BC
July 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Forestry Works for BC is a grassroots nonprofit dedicated to improving public understanding of forestry in British Columbia. Through authentic stories, respectful conversations and community engagement, we help British Columbians better understand the role responsible forestry plays in healthy forests, wildfire resilience, sustainable communities and livelihoods. We’re entering an exciting growth phase and are looking for a relationship-driven Executive Director to lead the organization and significantly expand our membership across the province. This is a leadership role with a strong sales and business development focus. Growing Forestry Works for BC’s membership is the Executive Director’s primary responsibility and the organization’s number one strategic priority. Location: Remote within British Columbia (regular travel required) Open to: Residents of BC and Alberta Position: Full-Time Salary:  $125 – 185,000 annually, with the opportunity to earn the maximum through performance-based incentives tied to membership growth. 

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Canada and British Columbia strike new cooperative prosperity partnership

By Office of the Prime Minister
The Government of Canada
July 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Prime Minister, Mark Carney, and the Premier of British Columbia, David Eby, signed the new Canada-British Columbia Cooperative Prosperity Agreement. …Both governments share a fundamental belief that this is the moment to leverage our domestic advantages to build a stronger Canada. To that end, British Columbia and Canada agree to pursue a series of actions that grow the BC and Canadian economies. …Canada and BC commit to concrete and practical measures to stabilise, transform and strengthen the sector. That work will include measures to modernise operations, support simplified and efficient access to fibre, attract investment, expand the use of wood in construction, grow value-added production, and diversify export markets, while ensuring environmental sustainability and responsible forest stewardship. This work will be carried out based broadly on the objectives of the Final Report of the Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force, and Canada’s Action Plan to Transform Canada’s Forest Sector.

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Canfor completes acquisition of Calgary-based PinkWood Ltd.

By Canfor Corporation
GlobeNewswire
July 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC — Canfor Corporation announced it has completed the acquisition of PinkWood Ltd, Western Canada’s largest I-joist facility based in Calgary, Alberta. The acquisition, announced on June 9, 2026, complements Canfor’s existing operations in Alberta and British Columbia “We’re excited to welcome the PinkWood operation, its management team and its employees to the Canfor family,” said Susan Yurkovich, President and CEO of Canfor. “The acquisition represents a strong strategic fit for both companies and supports the continued growth of Canfor’s value-added manufacturing capabilities.” PinkWood will retain its name and operate as a wholly owned subsidiary of Canfor. The operation will add 120 employees, and 46 million linear feet of annual I-joist production capacity.

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Forestry still shapes B.C.

By Ian Biana
Resource Works
June 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Kurt Niquidet

Kurt Niquidet grew up in Williams Lake, a place shaped by forestry. When he speaks about it, it’s from the perspective of someone who knows. “I grew up in Williams Lake and really a forestry-dependent community,” he says. Kurt Niquidet is vice-president and chief economist at the BC Council of Forest Industries, with a career that bridges policy, academia, and central banking. He holds a PhD in natural resource economics and policy from the University of Groningen and has worked at the Bank of Canada and the University of British Columbia. He also serves as an adjunct professor at UBC’s Faculty of Forestry and has published widely on B.C. forest policy. Now, he is applying that perspective to new data on the sector’s reach across British Columbia. His latest report, Rooted in BC: Economic Impact of Forestry, tracks forestry’s economic footprint across the province. The findings challenge a common assumption. Forestry is not just a rural story.

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B.C. judge throws out property owner’s bid to reopen Cowichan lands decision

By Gordon Hoekstra
The Vancouver Sun
June 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — A BC judge has ruled against a Richmond company that sought to reopen the Cowichan Tribes Aboriginal title case. Last year’s landmark B.C. Supreme Court decision found the Cowichan held Aboriginal title to a swath of land in southeast Richmond, including privately owned lands. The application to reopen the case was brought by the Montrose companies, which owns warehouses, a Coca-Cola distribution centre and other facilities in the area. The company was not involved in the trial that led to the 2025 ruling, but said it affected the status of its property and, in one case, led to a potential deal being put on hold. In a decision dated Monday, BC Supreme Court Justice Barbara Young dismissed the company’s application. …She said the proper place for Montrose to make its case is through an appeal.

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Finance & Economics

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

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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BC Institute of Technology picks up two Environmental Awards from the City of Burnaby

By Ben Hill
British Columbia Institute of Technology
June 24, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

BCIT’s Tall Timber Student Housing Building has received a prestigious Environmental Award at the City of Burnaby’s 2026 Environmental Awards. …They collected their recognition at a special ceremony at the Burnaby City Hall on June 23. The Planning and Development category features developments that use green building technologies and innovative environmental features. BCIT’s Tall Timber Student Housing Building, used innovative mass timber technology, and prefabrication to meet the highest level of the BC Energy Step Code. As the first large mass-timber building in Burnaby we were grateful that the City supported this vision and we hope it can be an example of the kind of innovation that can be achieved.”

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Capilano University opens first student housing building with exposed mass-timber dining pavilion

By BC Ministry of Infrastructure
Government of British Columbia
June 29, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

NORTH VANCOUVER, BC — Students at Capilano University (CapU) now have access to more housing options with the opening of the first on-campus student housing building at the university’s North Vancouver campus. …The new six-storey student housing building named Treehouse reflects a shared vision of “a home in the woods. …The new student housing building provides 362 on-campus homes for students on the North Shore, helping them focus on their studies while easing pressure on the local rental housing market. The building includes a 250-seat, mass-timber dining hall connected to the student housing building will provide meal service to students living on campus, as well as faculty, staff and commuter students. The dining space will support student life and create additional opportunities for students to connect and build community on campus.

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Forestry

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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New Forestry Training Fund to Support Province-wede Workforce Needs

Northern Development BC
July 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. – Northern Development is announcing the first funding program available under its newest partner program, The Canada-B.C. Workforce Tariff Response Forestry Grant: Forestry Training Fund. The $6.9 million funding program is built to support workforce needs across the entire province by enabling the recruitment, training and retention of individuals with demonstrated labour market attachment, including those impacted by recent macro-economic transition. …A maximum of $1 million is available to each employer applicant, providing up to 85 per cent of eligible staff’s combined wage and training costs over the training horizon up to a maximum of $50,000 per employee. …The program is available to those operating in the forestry sector within Indigenous organizations and First Nations, corporations of any size (public or privately owned and incorporated) and not for profit organizations whose sole purpose is to create jobs and economic benefit in their industry (i.e. community forests). 

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Category 1 Campfire Prohibition planned for the Kamloops Fire Centre

BC Wildfire Service
July 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

KAMLOOPS – Effective at 12 p.m. (noon) on Friday, July 10, 2026 Category 1 campfires will be prohibited throughout the Kamloops Fire Centre to help prevent human-caused wildfires and protect public safety. This campfire prohibition will remain in effect until October 9, 2026 at 12 p.m. (noon), or until the orders are rescinded. As of Friday, July 10, category 1, 2 and 3 fires are prohibited in the Kamloops Fire Centre: A campfire is defined as: Any fire no larger than 0.5 metres high by 0.5 metres wide (a fire larger than this is considered a Category 2 fire), Used by any person for recreational purposes or by a First Nation for a ceremonial purpose.

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‘We don’t want wood leaving this community’: Vanderhoof and Saik’uz First Nation call for forestry changes

By Hanna Petersen
CBC News
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Saik’uz First Nation and the District of Vanderhoof are calling for changes to how B.C.’s forests are managed. The two communities held a joint press conference on Tuesday calling for locally-harvested timber to stay in the region and for forests to be managed sustainably. Both Saik’uz First Nation Chief Priscilla Mueller and District of Vanderhoof Mayor Kevin Moutray said the region’s forests and forestry sector are facing a serious crisis. …The Saik’uz First Nation has spent several years developing a long-term land-use plan designed to restore forest health while maintaining a sustainable fibre supply for local mills and forestry workers in the region. “That work tells us that the remaining fibre supply is limited and must be managed carefully if we want healthy forests and a reliable forest economy into the future,” said Mueller. She said provincial forestry decisions continue to authorize harvesting levels that do not reflect the current conditions of the forests.

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North Cowichan closing forestry gates due to wildfire risks

By Adam Chan
Chek News
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Starting July 9, the municipality of North Cowichan will be closing forestry gates and restricting vehicle access to Mount Prevost, Mount Sicker and Grace Road, to help reduce wildfire risks in the area. The municipality notes that access roads to Mount Prevost will remain open for firefighting efforts, as a 2.23 hectare wildfire continues to burn on the west side of the mountain.  Access to the areas that have been closed by forestry gates will remain open to visitors using non-motorized means, such as hiking, biking and horseback riding. “Everyone is reminded to be extremely careful with campfires, vehicle exhaust, and other potential fire-causing activities,” said the municipality Tuesday. “Overnight camping, campfires, and fireworks are not permitted in the Municipal Forest Reserve at any time.” It’s unclear when the forestry gates will reopen, but North Cowichan says they are “typically reopened in the fall, once rain has returned and the fire risk is reduced.”

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New study finds clear‑cut logging can dramatically increase flood risk

By Spencer Pearson-Atkins, Xu Jian Yu and Younes Alila
The Conversation
July 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

…The 2021 floods in British Columbia’s Fraser Valley cost an estimated $14 billion in damages. Human activity that changes landscapes can make floods larger and more frequent. Our recently published study shows that clear-cut logging can dramatically increase flood risk, turning a 50-year event into a flood recurring every three years, with the largest and rarest floods showing the greatest sensitivity to forest disturbance. We studied a watershed on the west shore of Lake Okanagan near Summerland, British Columbia. Around 40 per cent of the site experienced logging. This watershed is no exception, as B.C.’s landscape has become dominated by clear-cut logging. …In our study, we found climate change is causing a reduction in flood risk due to reduced snowpack in the area. However, logging is not just compensating for that reduction, it’s also increasing the overall flood risk in the watershed. …The legal liability associated with logging and floods is significant. 

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Work underway on three conservation planning projects

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
July 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Province is working with First Nations and other partners on conservation-planning projects in Qat’muk (west of Invermere), Skagit Headwaters (in the Manning Park area) and Raush Valley (in the Robson Valley south of McBride). This work will address watersheds, ecosystems and wildlife over a combined 127,000 hectares. Feedback collected from the public during fall 2026 engagement opportunities will shape conservation recommendations. The proposed conservation measures would support the B.C. government’s goal of protecting 30% of land and inland waters in B.C. by 2030 (the “30×30” goal).

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A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
PR Newswire
July 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

REGINA, SK — Today, the Honourable Nathalie Provost, Secretary of State (Nature), highlighted eight tree-planting projects across Saskatchewan. These projects represent a $24.5 million investment to plant over five million trees, helping to protect nature and biodiversity in Canada by restoring critical habitats for species at risk and advancing Indigenous-led forest planting and restoration efforts. Announced in March 2026, the $3.8 billion A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature is based on three pillars for action to harmonize nature protection and economic growth… Federal programs have made historic progress in restoring forests and building greener communities across the country as we work toward to our goals of protecting 30% of lands, waters, and oceans in Canada by 2030. Indigenous leadership is at the heart of protecting nature. Anchored in traditional knowledge and stewardship, it is critical to achieving our national and international commitments on nature.

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Vancouver Island: Less snow and rain leads to higher risk of wildfire this summer

By Eric Plummer
Ha-Shilth-Sa | Canada’s Oldest First Nation’s Newspaper
July 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Vancouver Island, BC — The Coastal Fire Centre reports a shift from warm, dry conditions to cooler, wetter weather over the first week and a half of July. However, previous weather conditions point towards a drier summer season for Vancouver Island. “Looking at the next seven days from a typical standpoint, we’re not elevating dryness specifically. But we’re also not bringing in much precipitation either. So, we’re essentially just keeping conditions generally steady,” said Ken Dosanjh, meteorologist with Environmental and Climate Change Canada, on July 2. In early July the Fire Danger Rating measure … shows much of Vancouver Island at the ‘low’ level, which entails easy fire start and quick spread but with minimal involvement of deeper fuel layers or larger fuels.  Port Alberni, Nanaimo and the Victoria area have a ‘moderate’ fire danger rating, with forest fuels drying and an increased risk of surface fire starting. 

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Woodlots Weekly – Woodlots BC Joins Canadian Forest Owners

Woodlots BC
July 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

There is strength in working together, and that’s why Woodlots BC has joined Canadian Forest Owners (CFO). As the national voice for approximately 480,000 private forest owners, CFO brings provincial organizations together to advocate for policies and programs that support sustainable forest management, healthy rural communities, and a strong forest economy. By joining CFO, Woodlots BC will help ensure the perspectives of British Columbia’s woodlot owners are reflected in federal discussions while benefiting from collaboration with like-minded organizations across Canada. …Woodlots BC members have access to Canadian Forest Owners’ exclusive group insurance program, designed specifically for private forest owners. Through our partnership with BrokerLink, the program offers coverage options that have traditionally been difficult to obtain, including forest damage insurance and vacant land liability coverage. …Private forest owners across Canada are invited to participate in the first national survey of private forest owners in more than 20 years.

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B.C. reduces allowable annual cut for the Kispiox timber supply area

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
July 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC’s chief forester has set the new allowable annual cut (AAC), the maximum amount of timber that can be harvested each year, for the Kispiox timber supply area (TSA) in the Skeena region. The new AAC is 496,000 cubic metres, a nearly 50% reduction from the previous AAC. Although the AAC has decreased, it is approximately 39% higher than the average annual harvest between 2019 and 2023, which was 356,378 cubic metres. …The TSA overlaps the territory of the Gitxsan Nation, Gitanyow Nation, Lake Babine Nation, Tsetsaut Skii km Lax Ha Nation, Kitselas First Nation, Wet’suwet’en Nation, and Witset First Nation. …The Kispiox TSA also partially overlaps with the Nass Wildlife Area and the Nass Area, as defined in the Nisga’a Treaty. The determination aligns with legislation defined in the Nisga’a Treaty and considers interests identified by First Nations, including the management of cedar, old forests, wildlife habitat and wildlife tree retention.

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Coulson Aviation’s night vision firefighting helped battle summer fires on Vancouver Island

By Austin Kelly
Alberni Valley News
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©CoulsonAviation

…When it came to fighting two of the worst fires in Vancouver Island’s history, BC Wildfire Service took advantage of Coulson Aviation’s successful night vision aerial firefighting program. Almost 15 years to the day after testing how effective a helicopter could be dropping water on hot spots at night, the Wesley Ridge fire broke out between Port Alberni and Qualicum Beach. “The first trial was 22 targets and with 22 loads, we were able to extinguish it and put water in all 22 (targets) and that’s when we knew we had something,” said Wayne Coulson, CEO of the Alberni-based Coulson Aviation. …One of the other challenges for aerial night firefighting was filling the helicopters with water. …Coulson said government officials didn’t believe it was safe to hover fill at night so on a November night in 2017 a company aircrew spent three hours at the Alberni Valley’s Sproat Lake testing the process.

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Warming streams are pushing young salmon beyond their limits

UBC Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Scott Hinch

As climate change warms rivers across B.C., young salmon are facing increasing heat stress at vulnerable stages of their lives.  Researchers from UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship’s Pacific Salmon Ecology and Conservation Lab found that younger fish cope with heat differently than older fish, and that current methods may be underestimating the risks salmon face in warming waterways. We spoke with Dr. Scott Hinch, professor in the Department of Forest & Conservation Sciences, about what these findings mean for salmon conservation. Hinch told us: We examined how young salmon respond to warming water and whether current methods accurately measure heat tolerance. Most studies assess fish at rest, but juvenile salmon are constantly moving to find food and avoid predators, so we need to mimic real-world conditions. We also considered how age and prior temperature exposures influence responses. 

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New University of Alberta-led research found some species fail to recover even 100 years after clearcutting

By Sarah Vernon
University of Alberta
June 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

EDMONTON — Current clearcutting practices sometimes outpace the recovery times of vital boreal forest species, according to a groundbreaking global analysis led by University of Alberta researchers. The study was co-led by biologist Dr. Ellen Macdonald and ecologist Dr. Anne McIntosh. It is the first of its kind to examine an extended timeline for recovery and a wide range of life in boreal forests after clearcutting… Analyzing 190 datasets across North America, Europe, and Russia, researchers tracked how clearcutting affects birds, small mammals, insects, spiders, plants and lichens. While faster-growing broadleaf forests like aspen and birch often recovered within 30 years — soon enough to fall within typical 60- to 80-year logging cycles — recovery in mixed and coniferous forests took much longer. In these habitats, recovery took more than 55 years for small mammals like mice and voles, 85 years for flowering plants, 95 years for lichens, and more than 100 years for mosses.

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Town of Ladysmith calls for provincial intervention to protect watershed at Banon Creek Forest Service Road

By Justin Baumgardner
My Cowichan Valley Now
June 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Town of Ladysmith said immediate action needs to be taken along the Banon Creek Forest Service Road to address water contamination and wildfire prevention. A letter has been sent to the province asking for emergency enforcement and protection of the watershed. “The province has already acknowledged the severity of the risk by closing the road; it must now ensure this measure is supported by the necessary physical infrastructure, enforcement capacity and operational resources required to make the closure effective,” Mayor Deena Beeston said. “The town can’t continue to accept conditions that place residents of all affected communities and others at daily risk.” The town said conditions have continued to go downhill …criminal activity is increasing and causing conditions to deteriorate. …the watersheds are located outside the town’s boundaries and supply drinking water to 12,000 residents across the town, Stz’uminus First Nation, the Diamond Improvement District and the Saltair area. 

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Osoyoos Indian Band set to restore native plants, species in wildfire-ravaged forests

By Aaron Hemens
IndigiNews
June 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Osoyoos Indian Band is working to revitalize forests in its territories that have been ravaged by wildfires — turning them into fire-resistent zones full of biodiversity, wildlife and medicinal plants for its members. The band-owned Nk’Mip Forestry is planning to revive two woodlands located above the First Nation’s reservation in the highlands between Oliver and Mount Baldy — making up just over 40 hectares combined. The forest tenure where the project is located is approximately 50,000 hectares in size, and is co-managed between the Osoyoos Indian Band and Gorman Bros. The two forests — a drier douglas fir ecosystem with ponderosa pine, and a montane spruce ecosystem dominated by dense lodgepole pile further up the hill — were both impacted by the 2021 Nk’Mip Creek Wildfire, which is estimated to have burned just over 20,000 hectares.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

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

Balancing Ecological Benefits of Fire with the Health Risks of Smoke in Modern Forest Management

By Stephanie Cleland and Jason Fisher
BC Forest Professional Magazine
June 29, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Across BC, significant wildfires have become an annual occurrence, underscoring the need for forest management practices to reduce long-term wildfire risk. While activities such as prescribed burning are beneficial for fuel management, both wildfire and prescribed fires produce smoke that can pose significant risks to human health. Notably, the impacts of smoke often extend beyond areas directly affected by fire, as smoke can travel significant distances, exposing communities both near and far from the fires. While the health risks specific to prescribed fire smoke remain understudied, the impacts of wildfire smoke on human health are becoming more widely understood. Substantial evidence has linked short-term exposure, over periods of days or weeks, to an increased risk of mortality and a range of acute health effects, including respiratory issues such as asthma exacerbations, cardiovascular events, and impacts on cognitive function. Emerging evidence also suggests that repeated or prolonged exposure may contribute to reduced lung function, increased risk of chronic disease, and premature mortality.

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Forest Fires

Wildfires near Boston Bar, B.C., growing, more evacuations ordered

CBC News
July 8, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

As of Wednesday morning, the Brunswick Creek fire near Boston Bar, B.C., has grown to 2,623 hectares and has forced more evacuations as it burns out of control and threatens homes. The fire, which has been burning since July 2, is considered out of control. Several evacuation orders have been issued by the local regional district and nearby First Nations. Just across Highway 1 from the Brunswick Creek fire, the Ainslie Creek fire has burned 16,987 hectares as of 6:50 p.m. PT. An evacuation alert was issued at 7:00 p.m. PT on Wednesday for approximately 61 properties west of Spius Creek including Petit Creek Road and Prospect Creek Forest Service Road. About 230 B.C. Hydro customers in and around the Boston Bar evacuation zone have been without electricity since Tuesday afternoon. Highway 1 near Boston Bar is closed in both directions as a result of the two fires. Both fires are suspected to be caused by human activity.

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Trans-Canada Highway closed near Boston Bar as Fraser Canyon wildfires grow

By Tim Petruk
Castanet
July 7, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

© BC Wildfire Service

The B.C. Wildfire Service says a large column of smoke could be seen on Tuesday as hot, windy conditions increased fire behaviour at two wildfires burning in the Fraser Canyon. The Brunswick Creek wildfire is located on the west side of the Fraser River. Ainslie Creek, sparked by embers from the Brunswick blaze, is burning an estimated 695 hectares across the river to the northeast. “Hot, dry weather and windy conditions drove elevated fire behaviour and fire growth today. Wind and elevated fire behaviour are anticipated into this evening,” BCWS said. A thick blanket of smoke from the fires and falling ash blew into Kamloops on Tuesday evening. Air quality advisories have been issued. As of Tuesday afternoon, BCWS estimated the larger Brunswick Creek wildfire has now burned 1,800 hectares. …firefighters are working to prevent the wildfire from affecting nearby communities and the Trans-Canada Highway corridor, which was closed to traffic Tuesday afternoon.

Related coverage in CFJC Today: Smoke from distant fire darkens Kamloops sky to eerie hue

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One house lost in Fort Simpson wildfire, chief says

By Natalie Pressman
CBC News
July 6, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©NWT Fire

One home has been lost in Fort Simpson, N.W.T., as firefighters battle a wildfire that forced residents from their homes on June 28. …Fort Simpson Mayor Les Wright told CBC News on Monday afternoon that around 20 more people had left. The community of about 1,300 people was ordered to evacuate to Yellowknife, more than 600 kilometres away, over a week ago. …wildfire information officer Forrest Tower said the fire, which as of a Monday afternoon update was over 15,000 hectares in size, is expected to continue to grow this week, but that growth would be to the north — away from the community — and there is currently no threat to the village itself. Tower said winds are bringing smoke into town, making it challenging for crews to fly, but fire behaviour has diminished. Tower said another 25 firefighters are expected to arrive in Fort Simpson on Monday.

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Evacuation orders, air-quality warnings near Boston Bar, B.C., as wildfire rages

CBC News
July 6, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BC Wildfire Service

Environment Canada has issued an air quality warning Monday for the area around Boston Bar, B.C., where a wildfire is burning for its fifth day. The Brunswick Creek wildfire, located about 55 kilometres north of Hope, was estimated at 12.3 square kilometres (1,230 hectares) in size on Monday and was burning in steep terrain, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS). The wildfire did not grow overnight, though the BCWS noted aviation operations have been restricted due to poor visibility and high winds, which pose a risk for responder safety and can affect air operations. Fire information officer Sam Bellion said embers from the fire had also sparked three new spot fires, two of which were under control while the other had grown to 73 hectares in size. Weather conditions are also challenging. “Relative humidity continues to drop today, with elevated winds on Tuesday and Wednesday gusting of up to 40 to 50 kilometres per hour,” Bellion said.

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Brunswick Creek wildfire balloons to 1,200 hectares, forcing evacuations near Boston Bar, B.C.

By Shaurya Kshatri
CBC News
July 5, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BC Wildfire Service

An aggressive wildfire burning near Boston Bar, B.C., has grown sharply and has forced evacuation orders and alerts in some communities in the Fraser Canyon. The Brunswick Creek wildfire has grown from about 100 hectares on Saturday to more than 1,200 hectares, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service. It is now listed as a wildfire of note — the only fire categorized as such in the province. The wildfire service uses that category for fires that are creating an increased level of public interest and to make response information easier to find. Officials detected the Brunswick Creek fire on July 2 burning near the community of Boston Bar, along Highway 1. It is believed to have been sparked by human activity. The Fraser Valley Regional District has issued an evacuation order for the entire community of North Bend and the surrounding area extending north along Chaumox Road, affecting about 146 properties.

Additional coverage in the Vancouver Sun by Tiffany Crawford: Evacuation order issued for out-of-control wildfire near Boston Bar

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First Nation in Manitoba orders residents to leave due to evacuation of nearby town

Canadian Press
June 28, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

LYNN LAKE – A First Nation in northern Manitoba is evacuating its residents due to a wildfire that’s threatening a nearby town. Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak (MKO), an Indigenous advocacy group, says the Marcel Colomb First Nation has ordered the evacuation because it relies on critical infrastructure and resources from Lynn Lake, a town about 25 kilometres to the west whose residents have already left. The statement says Lynn Lake, which began evacuation flights on Saturday, serves as a key supply and service hub for the First Nation and that it would be unsafe for its people to remain. …the Manitoba government’s wildfire information page said the fire was over 50 square kilometres in size as of Saturday. …Further east, the MKO statement says O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree Nation is under a state of emergency and is evacuating priority residents, which includes people in need of medical assistance.

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Residents of Fort Simpson, Northwest Territories, ordered to evacuate

By Jessica Davey-Quantick and Katherine Barton
CBC News
June 28, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©NWT Fire

Residents of Fort Simpson, N.W.T., have been ordered to evacuate due to a nearby wildfire. The Village of Fort Simpson issued the evacuation order at 7:10 p.m. MT on Sunday. Residents are advised to head for Yellowknife. …An evacuation alert was issued Friday evening warning people to be prepared to leave on short notice, after a fire was detected about 10 kilometres from Fort Simpson’s airport. As of Sunday, the fire was about seven kilometres away. A fire information officer told CBC News the fire is not expected to reach the community overnight. The Village of Fort Simpson also declared a local state of emergency on Sunday evening. It said on Facebook that gas stations will remain open 24/7… The community of about 1,300 is approximately 600 kilometres, or a 7-hour drive, from Yellowknife, and requires crossing a ferry at the Liard River. …the ferry is running 24 hours so people can drive out.

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