Region Archives: Canada West

Business & Politics

B.C. forestry workers, other sectors hurt by tariffs to get $70M in jobs training

By Wolfgang Depner
The Canadian Press in CTV News
March 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Pat Hajdu

Workers in BC’s softwood lumber industry and those in other sectors who have lost their jobs because of U.S. tariffs will benefit from almost $71 million in funding for retraining. Federal Jobs Minister Pat Hajdu and Sheila Malcolmson… made the joint funding announcement about the three year agreement. BC’s softwood lumber industry has been shedding hundreds of jobs as U.S. tariffs pile up along with the lack of fibre. “This new funding will help workers in B.C. build new skills, get back to work or take advantage of new opportunities in emerging in demand industries,” Hajdu said. “It also can help businesses retool their production.” …The federal government says 8,000 workers in BC will be eligible for the support if they have been laid off or if they are retraining to improve their job prospects. The new funding tops off existing agreements worth $400 million to support training  in BC for about 90,000.

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Western Forest Products begins loading first kiln at Chemainus value-added facility

By Western Forest Products
LinkedIn
February 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

CHEMAINUS, BC — The first batches of lumber are now being loaded into one of two continuous dry kilns scheduled for installation at our Value-Added Division in Chemainus. This milestone is another step in our ongoing commitment to our customers: consistent quality, dependable lead times and long-term supply reliability. The additional capacity will support increased volumes of kiln-dried products, including lumber used to produce glued laminated timber for mass timber applications. Investment in this long-term project is part of our ongoing focus on higher value products and reflects Western’s significant investments in our B.C. Coastal manufacturing operations — modernizing primary facilities, increasing kiln drying and planing capacity and expanding our engineered wood products and remanufacturing capabilities. A second continuous dry kiln will be installed later in 2026, further reinforcing these improvements. We look forward to sharing more details soon.

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Conifex restarts sawmill, secures loan under Softwood Lumber Guarantee Program

By Conifex Timber Inc.
Globe Newswire
March 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Conifex Timber announced that its wholly-owned subsidiary Conifex Mackenzie Forest Products has completed a $19 million secured term loan with the Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC) under the Softwood Lumber Guarantee Program. The loan has a maturity date of July 15, 2033. …The loan allows for interest-only payments until August 2028. A portion of the loan was used to repay a bridge advance from Conifex’s existing senior secured timber lender. The balance of the loan is available for working capital and general corporate purposes. Conifex also announced that it successfully restarted its sawmill in February. With the successful completion of the term loan, the Company is progressing toward normalized operations and currently anticipates sustaining two-shift operations in the second half of 2026, subject to fibre supply conditions.

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Musqueam deal will challenge overlapping Indigenous claims across Canada

By Justine Hunter
The Globe & Mail
March 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Musqueam First Nation’s agreement with Ottawa to advance the nation’s rights and title over an area that spans the western half of Greater Vancouver will force Canada to grapple with overlapping Indigenous claims, the boundaries of civic governance, and the principles of co-operative federalism. The deal acknowledges the existence of constitutionally protected Aboriginal title and creates a framework to implement Musqueam’s rights and title in their traditional territory. It is accompanied by two other agreements that create a framework for shared decision-making over fisheries, marine stewardship and land use. Just where that title will be recognized, and what rights will be affirmed, are yet to be negotiated. The Musqueam’s traditional territory has overlapping and shared territories with its First Nation neighbours. …Ottawa’s deal with Musqueam First Nation raises alarm about property rights in Vancouver area. …Cowichan decision leads to another claim on private lands in BC. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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MP to hold town hall in Cowichan on mill closures

The Cowichan Valley Citizen
March 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Jeff Kibble, MP for Cowichan-Malahat-Langford, will host a Forestry Workers Town Hall on March 5 to speak about the crisis facing workers and towns hit by mill closures. Forestry workers, union members, industry stakeholders, government representatives, and affected community members are invited to come together for the town hall, which will be held at Duncan Meadows Golf Course beginning at 6:30 p.m., and discuss the issues. The panel at the event will be chaired by Kibble, and leaders from government, industry and labour will join the discussion to listen directly to worker concerns, acknowledge the human cost of shutdowns, and work toward meaningful, community-driven solutions. He said the town hall will focus on real impacts, from job loss to community sustainability, and explore concrete steps forward, including support programs, policy reforms, and coordinated industry-government-union action.

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After the Rupture: Positioning BC and Canada in a Changing Global Trade Landscape

By the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
March 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

March 19, 2026 | 6:30-9 PM | UBC Robson Square Theatre — Experts from the Allard School of Law (Ljiljana Biuković), Vancouver School of Economics (Torsten Jaccard), Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship (Harry Nelson), and Political Science (Stewart Prest) will explore the evolving Canada–U.S. economic relationship and what it means for Canada’s future. As the 2026 joint review of the Canada–United States–Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) approaches, Canada faces significant shifts in its most important trading relationship. From tariffs on steel to ongoing tensions in British Columbia’s forestry sector, long-standing trade dynamics are being tested and the era of predictable trade and stable multilateral rules may be coming to an end. Policymakers, industry leaders, and people interested in understanding the structural changes shaping Canada’s economic future are encouraged to attend. Panelists will examine emerging geopolitical realities and their implications for Canada, highlighting BC forestry as a case study on how international trade pressures are affecting local industries, workers, and communities.

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Musqueam say only federal lands in play under rights agreement with Canada

By Gordon Hoekstra
The Vancouver Sun
March 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Wayne Sparrow

Any land deals that result from a recently signed agreement between the Musqueam and Canada will not affect private property, or provincial or municipal lands, the First Nation says. “Because these discussions are between Musqueam and Canada, only federal Crown lands are ever considered for potential land transfers or other negotiations,” the Musqueam Indian Band said. The First Nation added that the rights recognition agreement signed on Feb. 20 does not provide the Musqueam legal title to land. It also noted that the agreements don’t constitute a treaty or land claims agreement. But in an interview Tuesday morning, Chief Wayne Sparrow appeared to say that municipal and private lands could be on the negotiating table within Musqueam territory, just not under the latest agreement. …Nearly two weeks ago, the Musqueam signed three deals with Canada that recognize the First Nation’s Aboriginal rights… in an area that encompasses Greater Vancouver.

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Musqueam sign Aboriginal rights deals with federal government

By Gordon Hoekstra and David Carrigg
The Vancouver Sun
March 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Musqueam Indian Band and the federal government have signed three deals that recognize the First Nation’s Aboriginal rights and increase its role in fisheries and marine emergency management in an area that encompasses Greater Vancouver. The federal government said the first agreement recognized the Musqueam have Aboriginal rights including title within their traditional territory and establishes a framework for “incremental implementation” and nation-to-nation relations with Canada. The Musqueam’s traditional territory encompasses a large area including Vancouver, the North Shore, Richmond, Burnaby, and parts of Delta and Surrey, and overlaps traditional territories of other First Nations including the Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh. Crown-Indigenous Relations Canada said the agreement provides general recognition the Musqueam have Aboriginal rights and title within their territory and established a framework for negotiations to define how and where those rights and title could apply. The federal government said private lands are not affected by the agreement.

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Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act head departs as Eby prepares to curb court fallout

By Rob Shaw
Business in Vancouver
March 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The head of B.C.’s Declaration Act Secretariat has left government on the eve of Premier David Eby’s move to change the landmark law to address court rulings that threaten private property rights. Jessica Wood, the province’s first Indigenous deputy minister, announced late last week she was departing the secretariat. “The Declaration Act was the first legislation in Canada to require consideration and alignment of provincial law with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in consultation and cooperation with Indigenous Peoples,” Wood said in a post on LinkedIn. …Her departure comes as the NDP government prepares to amend DRIPA this session, in response to court rulings that have led to a public backlash over its impact on other laws and private property rights. …Priscilla Sabbas-Watts, a former vice-president of the Nuu-chah-nulth Tribal Council, will move from assistant deputy minister to acting deputy minister of the secretariat starting Monday.

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B.C. forestry sector beaten to a pulp

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
March 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Twenty years after spinning out Canfor Pulp Products as a separate entity, Canfor Corp. plans to bring it back into the fold to prevent the subsidiary from sinking. …Since December, its stock has plunged to about $0.50 per share. A March 6 shareholder vote on a plan of arrangement is just one of the vital signs indicating how bad 2025 was for the forestry sector in general, and BC forestry companies in particular. …But B.C. has been particularly hard hit with sawmill and pulp mill closures due to its fibre constraints and higher operating costs. The most recent high-profile mill closure in BC was the Domtar  pulp mill in Crofton at the end of December. BC pulp mills rely on wood chips from sawmills to produce pulp. But so many sawmills have permanently shuttered in B.C. in the last few years that pulp mills now struggle to find enough fibre to run their mills.

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Castlegar’s Kalesnikoff Lumber gets $5.5 million in federal tariff funding

By Betsy Kline
Castlegar News
March 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Canada’s minister of housing and infrastructure Gregor Robertson was in Castlegar to announce more than $13 million in investments for ten Regional Tariff Response Initiative projects across BC’s Southern Interior. The tariff response initiative is a $1 billion national program aimed at helping businesses adapt to tariffs and new economic and trade realities. …Kalesnikoff Lumber is receiving $5.5 million of the announced funding in the form of a “repayable investment” or interest-free loan. …The company will use the money to purchase new equipment to increase the manufacturing capacity of prefabricated components that can be used to build everything from multi-family housing to schools and commercial buildings.

  • Porcupine Wood Products, based in Salmo, will receive $583,000 to purchase new equipment that will speed production, improve product consistency and increase the value gained from each log.
  • Independent Lumber Manufacturers Association will receive $862,000 to deliver an AI and digital modernization program for its member mills.
  • Forest Product Association of Canada will receive $974,000 to develop a digital intelligence platform that will reduce transportation delays and improve supply chain reliability.
  • Axis Forestry ($590,000), Command Industries ($730,000), Heartland Economics ($644,000), Rapid-Span ($828,000), Simolo Customs ($1.56 million) and SKYTRAC ($762,000).

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Government of Canada strengthening industries and businesses in B.C.’s Southern Interior

By Pacific Economic Development Canada
Government of Canada
March 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

CASTLEGAR, BC — The Honourable Gregor Robertson, Minister of Housing and Infrastructure and Minister responsible for Pacific Economic Development Canada announced an investment of more than $13 million for ten Regional Tariff Response Initiative (RTRI) projects across BC’s Southern Interior. As part of the RTRI, these investments are in sectors that have been particularly affected by global trade disruptions – such as forestry, equipment manufacturing and value‑added wood manufacturing. The investments support individual companies as well as sector‑wide efforts to improve transportation reliability, supply‑chain visibility, and access to domestic and global markets. More details about all the investments announced today can be found in the backgrounder. …Chris Kalesnikoff, President and CEO, Kalesnikoff said “Today’s funding announcement will allow us to further expand our existing unique capacity to build and deliver modular timber housing, classrooms, commercial spaces and other buildings precisely, affordably and efficiently.”

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A timeline of the Crofton mill

By Eric Richards
The Discourse
February 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

On Dec. 2, 2025, Domtar announced it would permanently close Crofton’s nearly 70-year-old mill citing a lack of affordable fibre in BC and rising cost of materials. In response, the Municipality of North Cowichan created a Community Transition Table to coordinate union leadership, worker support and discussions on the future of the mill site. …The Discourse has compiled a timeline of major events at the Crofton mill to help understand the historical context of the latest mill closure. …1957: The mill opens and BC Forest Products (BCFP) told the citizens of Crofton it would employ 300 people and have an annual payroll of $1.5 million. Crofton was chosen as the location for the mill after an “extensive” three year survey by BCFP found the Cowichan River had adequate water supply for the mill. 1963: BCFP announced an $18.5 million expansion of the Crofton mill to expand the capacity to produce paper for its second newsprint machine.

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Squamish, 100 Mile House mayors want to save railway that connects South Coast to the Interior

By Tom Summer
CBC News
February 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The mayors of Squamish and 100 Mile House, B.C., want to see the railway linking their two communities preserved. CN Rail is responsible for the maintenance and upkeep of a portion of B.C.’s rail network between Squamish and Exeter, just northwest of 100 Mile House. In July 2025, the national rail operator said it provided notice of its intent to discontinue those operations. 100 Mile House Mayor Maureen Pinkney says her town is working with several other municipalities to make a business case for the railway, and have hired a consultant to research the details. The rail line goes through an industrial park in 100 Mile House, explained Pinkney, connecting industries like forestry. The town’s oriented strand board plant shut down in 2019 and West Fraser closed its lumber mill at the end of last year, but Pinkney said there’s still fibre that can be utilized for other wood products.

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Finance & Economics

Feds earmark $5.5M for new B.C. mass timber factory

By Jami Makan
Business in Vancouver
March 4, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada West

A large B.C.-based mass timber company is receiving $5.5 million in federal funding to expand its production capacity, the government’s latest support for prefabrication as a means to boost housing supply. Castlegar-based Kalesnikoff Mass Timber Inc. is receiving the funding from Pacific Economic Development Canada’s Regional Tariff Response Initiative. The initiative is investing more than $13 million in 10 projects across B.C.’s southern Interior, helping businesses impacted by tariffs, said a March 2 press release. Kalesnikoff is receiving a repayable investment of $5.5 million to help purchase new equipment to make prefabricated housing components used in multi-family housing, schools, daycares and commercial buildings, said the release. Kalesnikoff’s new mass timber facility in Castlegar, which went into operation last year, is ramping up production, said Andrew Stiffman, the company’s vice-president of construction services.

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Taiga reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $9.1 million

By Taiga Building Products Ltd.
Cision Newswire
February 27, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

BURNABY, BC — Taiga Building Products reported its financial results for the year ended December 31, 2025. …The Company’s consolidated net sales for the quarter ended December 31, 2025 were $359.6 million compared to $389.0 million in the same quarter last year. The decrease in sales was largely due to lower average lumber prices and a decline in sales volume during the quarter. Net earnings for the quarter ended December 31, 2025 decreased to a loss of $9.1 million, compared to net income of $6.6 million in the same period last year, primarily due to a $20.5 million non-cash write-off of goodwill and intangible assets related to Taiga’s subsidiary in Washington State. …The Company’s consolidated net sales for the year ended December 31, 2025 were $1,631.8 million compared to $1,634.4 million last fiscal year. Net earnings for the year ended December 31, 2025 decreased to $28.6 million from $47.6 million last fiscal year.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

University of British Columbia’s Gateway Health building centralizes student wellbeing

The REMI Network
March 2, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

VANCOUVER — UBC’s newest building, Gateway Health, is opening as a hub for student health, interdisciplinary teaching and collaborative research. The 270,550-square-foot building gives a purpose-built home to the school of nursing, consolidates kinesiology programs from eight campus locations, and centralizes student health and wellbeing services for the first time. …The six-storey mass timber building houses a mix of spaces such as lecture theatres and classrooms, wet and dry labs, clinical spaces, gym and fitness facilities and office and administration areas. Architectural elements include warm wood finishes, exposed timber, terracotta cladding and filtered daylight in the atrium. Gateway Health was designed to achieve net-zero carbon certification and meet LEED, WELL and Rick Hansen accessibility standards. Its hybrid mass-timber structure makes sustainability visible. The project was delivered with UBC Properties Trust, Perkins&Will, Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects and Heatherbrae Builders.

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Forestry

Low snow pack raises concerns about Cowichan Lake water levels

By Robert Barron
Cowichan Valley Citizen
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The lack of significant snowfall in the mountains around Cowichan Lake could be a problem for water levels during the upcoming dry season, according to Brain Houle, the environment manager at the now closed Domtar pulp mill in Crofton. While Domtar shut the mill down earlier this year, the forest company agreed to continue operations at the weir until the end of 2026. Houle said that while there is still time to accumulate more snow before the winter ends, it is possible that the weather will not bring more snow to the mountains before warm weather begins the annual snow melt. “With the Crofton mill now shut down and water withdrawals from the river significantly reduced, it is even more important to avoid the need to use pumps this year,” …Houle said that a stakeholder meeting was recently held … to discuss water issues related to the Cowichan watershed in 2026, including weir operations.

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Quadra Island community rallies to protect old-growth forests and watersheds

By Kari Fredheim
Campbell River Mirror
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Quadra Island Peaceful Grannies are calling on the community to join a peaceful rally on Friday, Feb. 27, taking place outside the post office at Quathiaski Cove. The gathering is a stand against the ongoing over-logging of Quadra Island’s forests and the growing threat to the island’s watersheds, wildlife and ecological integrity. According to the group, across Quadra’s watersheds, from Darkwater Lake and Assu Creek to Beech’s Creek and beyond, the pattern is consistent. Roads are punched into previously unroaded forests, logging proceeds into areas designated for protection and communities are left to fight for their water, their fish, and their safety after the fact. The Peaceful Grannies are calling on the Government of B.C. to make changes to several policies and protections including placing a moratorium on logging of remaining old-growth and mature forests on Quadra Island until proper conservation plans are in place.

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Budget 2026 supports wildfire-resilient forests, communities

By the Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

More local governments, contractors and First Nations will take on wildfire-risk-mitigation roles in and around their communities thanks to a $30-million investment in training, equipment and FireSmart programs. “Through powerful partnerships with local communities, we’re doing the work to get ahead of wildfire season,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “We’re investing in local governments, contractors and First Nations to mitigate the risks of wildfire, protecting people and community. This is how we create jobs, support workers and build more resilient forests, restoring confidence in our sector.” The FireSmart Community Funding and Supports program is receiving an additional $15 million to continue prioritizing core FireSmart activities to protect the most vulnerable communities in B.C. The program is part of B.C.’s Community Resiliency Investment (CRI) program. Along with the Crown Land Wildfire Risk Reduction program, it reduces wildfire risk by funding planning, education, co-ordination and fuel-management activities on publicly owned and Crown land.

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BC’s Forests Minister on ‘Tough Days,’ Wildfire, Mill Closures and More

By Tyler Olsen
The Tyee
March 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

@Flickr

B.C. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar has begun imposing deadlines on some First Nations to try to speed up the drawn-out creation of new regional forestry plans. In a wide-ranging interview, Parmar told The Tyee that he has informed participants in two regional forest planning groups that they will be expected to complete work by the end of this year. Work on 15 forest landscape plans, or FLPs, began more than four years ago as part of an extensive effort to overhaul forest management practices in British Columbia. The plans are to be created after significant discussions with community members, industry representatives and local First Nations. But although B.C.’s former forests minister called the approach “transformational” four years ago, only one forest landscape plan — for a series of watersheds on Vancouver Island south of Port McNeill — has been completed so far. Now, Parmar said he has told some First Nations that discussions will need to produce results soon.

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Two properties near Prince George sold for forest thinning

By Matthew Hillier
Prince George Citizen
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Prince George is once again surpassing expectations with the sale of two commercial thinning areas in the region, says BC’s forests minister. The sales were made to Freya Logging, a contractor based in Prince George. The total volume between the two sales is 14,005 cubic metres in the West Lake and Greg Creek area. Freya Logging will undertake commercial thinning, a forest management process that removes a portion of trees in a 35-year-old or older stand to create space and provide more light and nutrients for younger trees in the area, while older trees are cut down and sold. The process is also known to decrease the risk of forest fires by reducing fuel loads and increasing forest resilience against pests. BC Forest Minister Ravi Parmar has been a strong advocate for commercial thinning in the province and considers these two sales a milestone for forestry in BC.

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Province of Alberta unveils plan to reduce wildfire risk

My Grande Prairie Now
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Alberta government has released a new wildfire mitigation strategy aimed at reducing wildfire risk and protecting communities, forests and critical infrastructure across the province. The Alberta Wildfire Mitigation Strategy outlines measures to improve preparedness and strengthen prevention efforts as wildfire seasons become more frequent and severe. Forestry and Parks Minister Todd Loewen said the strategy is intended to help communities better prepare for wildfire and reduce potential damage. …The strategy outlines six focus areas: improving knowledge of wildfire risks, strengthening community and Indigenous partnerships, reviewing legislation and policy, expanding the use of technology and innovation, integrating wildfire mitigation into landscape planning and prioritizing hazardous fuels management.

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Welcoming input on watershed plan

By the Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
March 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Members of the public are invited to an open house to learn about the development of a Xwulqw’selu (Koksilah) Watershed and Water Sustainability Plan, and provide input to help guide long-term approaches to water supply and ecosystem health in the area. The open house will take place on Wednesday, March 11, 2026, from 3-6 p.m. at The Hub at Cowichan Station, 2375 Koksilah Road in the Cowichan Valley. The B.C. government and Cowichan Tribes are leading the development of the plan, building on several years of engagement with community members, farmers and industry through local advisory tables, such as the Cowichan Tribes Guidance Group and the Community Collaborative Advisory Table.

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North Cowichan needs more water, wants province to speed up licensing

By Robert Barron
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
March 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

North Cowichan wants the province to expedite increases to water licences for the Cowichan and Chemainus aquifers. Council authorized Mayor Rob Douglas to write a letter to Randene Neill, B.C.’s Minister of Water, Land, and Resource Stewardship, asking the government to accelerate the licence process at its meeting on Feb. 18. The request came after a presentation by North Cowichan’s engineering director Clay Reitsma on key infrastructure constraints in the municipality. Reitsma said that increased growth and development demands, provincial housing targets, and the recent closure of the Crofton pulp mill have combined to create significant constraints and impacts on North Cowichan’s limited water and sewer servicing, and water-licensing limits. He pointed out that most of Crofton’s water currently comes from the now closed Domtar mill… Domtar has committed to keep the water flowing from the mill’s water systems to Crofton until the end of 2026, but no promises have been made beyond that.

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The Root of It Podcast – What is environmental stewardship?

By the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
The Root of It
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Introducing The Root of It — the official podcast of the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship at UBC. In our debut episode, our host Forestry & Environmental Stewardship Dean, Dr. Rob Kozak, digs deep into the ideas, research and real-world impact shaping environmental stewardship today, with faculty members Dr. Janette Bulkan and Dr. Scott Hinch. From forests and climate to community and resilience, this is where bold conversations take root. This isn’t just a podcast about trees, it’s about the people, science and stories driving change for our planet.

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Sqomish Forestry looks to engage Squamish school kids in land stewardship, through cedar and log donations

By Ina Pace
The Squamish Chief
March 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Sqomish Forestry’s special projects superintendent Roger Lewis explained the motives behind the Indigenous company’s latest education initiative in Squamish; that is, to encourage school kids to plant cedar seedlings, and to carve a race canoe. Since 2019, Sqomish Forestry has operated under the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation) business arm Nch’ḵay̓. “Sqomish Forestry shared about 1,000 western red cedar and yellow cedar seedlings with our friends and community members at the Squamish Nation’s Nexwsp’áyaḵen ta Úxwumixw (Community Operations), Ta na wa Yúus ta Stitúyntsam̓ (Rights & Title), and Elders teams, the St’a7mes School, and Don Ross Middle School,” Nch’ḵay announced last month. …Nch’ḵay’s vice president of forestry and sustainability Molly Hudson explained that the Nation intend to use their donations of cedar seedlings to rehabilitate sites such as schools as cedar itself has cultural significance with Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation), and other coastal First Nations.

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Mission-area residents invited to reforest recently logged cutblock at public forest

By Mike Vanden Bosch
Fraser Valley Today
March 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

MISSION – Mission-area residents are invited to attend a CutBlock Party and help replant trees at the Mission Municipal Forest later this month. The City of Mission says the event will be held on Saturday, March 21 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The public is invited to help reforest a recently logged cutblock by planting trees for the future and better understand how the municipality’s sustainable forestry operations support the community. The free event invites community members to enjoy easy guided hikes, try their hand at axe throwing, climb into a massive rock truck and explore the history and future of the forest.

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Canadian Drinking Water at Risk Long After Wildfires

By the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
University of British Columbia
March 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Canada’s drinking water can remain at risk long after wildfires burn out, according to a global review by UBC Faculties of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship and Applied Science. It found water-quality impacts often emerge months or years later—not just immediately after a fire. Researchers analyzed 23 studies across 28 watersheds worldwide, comparing pre- and post-fire levels of sediment, nutrients, metals, organic carbon, ions and wildfire-fighting chemicals. Across climates, contamination often intensified over time, particularly when storms or snowmelt washed stored ash and debris into rivers. The findings carry particular weight for Canada, where wildfire activity has intensified. In 2023, over 15 million hectares burned, more than twice the previous national record. …“Canada is entering a new era of wildfire risk,” said Dr. Loretta Li, senior author and UBC civil engineering professor. “If we want to protect drinking water, we have to treat wildfire impacts as long-term, not short-term.”

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Drax UK exit sparks B.C. debate over forests, pellets, and jobs

By Dave Branco
CKPG Today
March 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE – Recent shifts in the global wood pellet industry have started a debate in BC about forestry, climate impacts, and local jobs. Drax, a UK-based energy company, plans to stop using wood pellets from BC at its power plant in England. Environmental groups believe this move will not affect BC much, but the province’s Forest Minister disagrees. Ravi Parmar, BC’s forests minister, says critics are spreading fear and insists the industry uses byproducts from forestry, not old-growth trees. Michelle Connolly from Conservation North says that although Drax stopping shipments to the UK seems important, the situation in BC is actually much more complex. …Forest Minister Ravi Parmar says BC uses some of the world’s strongest sustainable harvesting practices. He adds that pellet plants use leftover byproducts from logging, not valuable logs from primary forests. 

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Drax announcement won’t change what’s happening to B.C.’s forest – Conservation North

Prince George Daily News
March 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…“The decision to stop feeding the Yorkshire plant with BC pellets will change almost nothing on the ground in BC, unfortunately,” explains Conservation North director Michelle Connolly. “BC pellet mills mainly serve Japan, which has taken about 75% of the pellet export share over the last few years. This trend continues and will get worse if Asian markets expand.” … In 2022 BBC Panorama and CBC Fifth Estate investigations revealed that Drax was logging old growth and other natural forest in B.C. Throughout 2023, Drax obtained logs and chipped wood from the rarest old growth forests in the province. ….The BC government has a crediting system in place whereby logging companies get an equivalent volume of wood for every load of pellet-grade logs harvested and delivered to Drax. …According to Connolly: “As long as Drax is here, we lose the same amount of wildlife habitat whether our forests end up burning in the UK or elsewhere.”

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Commemorating a Decade of Building Healthier, More Resilient Forests Throughout British Columbia

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
March 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Wayne Clogg on right

Reflections from Forest Enhancement Society of BC’s First Board Chair, Wayne Clogg as FESBC marks its 10th anniversary… For decades, foresters across British Columbia (B.C.) within government, industry, and academia had been calling for increased public investment in forest management beyond basic reforestation obligations. “B.C. has world-class forest practice standards,” Clogg shared. “We ensure that harvested areas are replanted and planned appropriately, but there was no long-term program at the time to invest in improving forest conditions beyond that baseline.” …While FESBC was initially envisioned as fully independent, Clogg acknowledges that this structure proved impractical. “FESBC is, in reality, a Crown agency, delivering forest enhancement projects on behalf of the Provincial government,” he said. …As FESBC continues to steward government funding to invest in forest enhancement projects, Clogg hopes the public will continue to support sustained investment and recognize the Society’s ability to deliver high quality results with its many project partners.

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Focusing on the future of B.C. forests

By Rob Botterell, Green Party MLA for Saanich North and the Islands
The Peninsula News Review
March 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Rob Botterell

“Talk and log” old growth, mill closures, drought, wildfires, lack of value-added products from second-growth forests, and climate change have shaken … the forest sector in BC. NDP forestry initiatives, such as the Old Growth Strategic Review, have stalled. Nor is the province any closer to protecting 30 per cent of the B.C. landbase by 2030, implementing the biodiversity and ecosystem health framework, local watershed governance, and a paradigm shift to a sustainable industry… Out of the 2025 Green/NDP Accord, an independent body, the Provincial Forest Advisory Council, developed a road map to transform forestry management to a system that delivers stability to the sector that everyone can support. …For my part as the Green caucus forests critic, I will continue to press for immediate implementation of the PFAC report, as well as previous commitments, including full implementation of the Old Growth Strategic Review, 30/30, the biodiversity and ecosystem health framework, and local watershed governance.

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BC Wildfire Service staff welcomed home from Australia

By the Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
March 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

BC Wildfire Service (BCWS) staff have returned to B.C. after supporting Forest Fire Management Victoria in Australia for the past month with wildfire-fighting efforts. “Our world-class BC Wildfire Service has once again stepped up on the global stage,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “As we prepare for the 2026 wildfire season, our BCWS crews consistently demonstrate exceptional skills, courage and professionalism wherever they’re called to serve.” On Jan. 25, 2026, BCWS deployed 37 people to the state of Victoria to help respond to the Walwa River Road fire and provide support in the Tallangatta Incident Control Centre. The team consisted of a 15-person incident management team, a 20-person fire crew and two agency representatives. …Ahead of this year’s wildfire season, B.C. continues work to keep people and communities safe by focusing on all four pillars of emergency management: prevention, preparedness, response and recovery.

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Improving B.C.’s permitting processes through regulatory changes

By the Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
February 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Four regulatory amendments will make it easier and more efficient for people and businesses to get the natural-resource permits needed to rebuild homes from wildfire, begin new home construction and restore ecosystems. “We are making it easier and faster to start important projects, from rebuilding homes after disasters to restoring wetland habitat and industrial sites,” said Randene Neill, Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship. “Shorter timelines mean projects get started faster, more jobs are created, and we all benefit from a stronger economy.” Changes to the Water Sustainability Regulation and the Riparian Areas Protection Regulation focus on improving clarity and supporting people and businesses to reduce project timelines. Flexibility has been added for developments in low-risk riparian areas, including after a wildfire or for utility maintenance, to proceed following a streamlined process. …Local governments, First Nations and Crown corporations will be able to conduct stream-restoration activities more easily.

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Fort Nelson community forest uses salvageable lumber funds for replanting

By Ed Hitchins
Energetic City
February 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

FORT NELSON, B.C. — A joint operation by First Nations and the Northern Rockies community gave an update regarding salvageable lumber within the northeast. The Fort Nelson First Nation (FNFN)  and Northern Rockies Regional Municipality Community Forest is a joint entity to assist manufacturing companies in the Fort Nelson area, according to its general manager Percy Wright. Wright added it is a 50-50 partnership between both parties. …Being a community forest with a volume-based licence, it means the company is not allowed to harvest lumber outside a specific area. During the winter of 2025-26, Wright says the team at the community forest was able to recover salvageable wood from the wildfires of the past several years. …Salvaged wood was able to be sold to West Fraser Timber and sent to mills in Chetwynd and Quesnel. Funds went back into the reforestation of the area.

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Forest Genetics Council of BC February Newsletter

Forest Genetics Council of BC
February 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The February 2026 FGC eNewsletter highlights several key developments in forest genetics across British Columbia and beyond. It introduces Dan Nadir, RPF, as the new Executive Secretariat for FGC, succeeding Brian Barber, and outlines his forestry background and experience. The newsletter promotes an upcoming BC Seed Orchard Association webinar on March 12, featuring presentations on seed extraction and orchard management from Quebec and New Brunswick. Recent events where forest genetics featured prominently are covered, including presentations on seed planning in a changing climate at the Western Forestry Contractors’ Association conference and FGC’s participation at the Forest Professionals BC conference. The update also highlights a new national report identifying challenges and solutions for improving Canada’s tree seed supply chain. Finally, it lists upcoming meetings and conferences in 2026, such as tree improvement workshops and international seed orchard conferences, encouraging engagement and continued professional development.

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February Rumour Mill RoundUpDate

By John Betts
Western Forestry Contractors’ Association
February 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

In this newsletter you will find:

  • Poll Finds Industry Members Unclear About WFCA Role: A recent WFCA survey found that many forestry sector contractors and staff may not be certain what the WFCA does. The WFCA is now developing a communications strategy for its members, the public and politicians. The goal is for the reforestation-restoration community to be recognized for their necessity to the wood products sector, their reliability as a supply chain, youth employment opportunities, growing role in recovering from and mitigating climate change, commitment to reconciliation, boon to rural economies, skill in growing seedlings and plants, example-setting in workplace safety and training, and their remarkable and skilled workers and their stories. 
  • If a Restoration Economy is the Future of Our Forestry Sector, What Is It? “What is the restoration economy?” was the central question at last month’s WFCA Conference. 
  • Forestry Service Providers Compensation Fund Gets $5 Million

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How the hell did the B.C. Forest Industry get here?

By Jim Stirling
The Logging and Sawmilling Journal
February 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

How the hell did we end up in this situation? It’s a question that everyone involved in BC’s wood products business has asked themselves during the last few years. The question doesn’t have a simple answer. Instead, there are several contributing factors that have steered the forest industry into its current mess. But two problems are of critical importance now: securing reliable fibre access and dealing calmly with the international uncertainty triggered by US President Donald Trump’s lust for world trade dominance and military supremacy. But the BC forest industry has deep roots and some of the issues which began long ago have now come home to roost. All at the same time. They’ve created a confluence of concerns. That’s evident in the silent sawmills, the scattering of a skilled workforce—and communities in crisis throughout the BC interior.

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Health & Safety

Truck driver fatigue is costly – and can be reduced

BC Truck Loggers Association
March 3, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Transport truck drivers have the most injury claims for work-related crashes of any occupation in BC over the last 10 years. And driver fatigue is a contributing factor in many crashes. Developing a strategy for reducing driver fatigue is smart business. It can help save lives and reduce the risk of injuries. It can also help you meet your legal responsibilities. Use Road Safety at Work’s no-cost resources to create or enhance your fatigue management strategy. Transport truck drivers account for nearly one-quarter of all injury claims from work-related vehicle crashes in our province, according to WorkSafeBC. …A successful fatigue management strategy depends on an effective safety culture and employee engagement. Encourage drivers to report fatigue and to pull over for a short rest when they feel it. Discuss it at safety meetings. Make fatigue part of your fit for duty assessments. Emphasize the importance of adequate sleep.

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