Region Archives: Canada West

Special Feature

BC forestry needs urgent action to survive potential US trade war

By David Elstone and Denise Mullen
Business in Vancouver
February 5, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Denise Mullen

David Elstone

The longstanding softwood lumber dispute, wherein the US persistently alleges BC subsidizes its lumber industry already has the Americans imposing a 14.4% duty on BC lumber, so an additional 25 per cent tariff could prove catastrophic, triggering layoffs, mill closures and economic turmoil in forestry-dependent communities. … Given the escalating risk of a full-scale trade war, BC must adopt innovative and assertive countermeasures to safeguard its forest sector. These measures are emergency response actions to address the regulatory and tax regime in BC and, while temporary, some could have long-term benefits after the tariffs are gone. …Given the potential for widespread sawmill closures, BC must actively seek alternative markets, particularly in Asia. Furthermore, in such extreme times as the province faces, consideration of less politically popular exporting opportunities may need to be explored.

These include temporarily eliminating fee-in-lieu charges on unmanufactured log exports… Eliminating the provincial sales tax where applicable on forestry-related transportation. …Repeal of the carbon tax and other fuel consumption-related taxes. …BC could look to pause, for now, the introduction and implementation of new environmental and forestry policies. …It is imperative to emphasize that… none of these proposals require direct financial handouts from the provincial government. Instead, the focus should be on targeted regulatory relief and cost reductions, ensuring business continuity and workforce stability. BC now faces a critical juncture — either accept mass unemployment and economic stagnation, or implement bold, temporary measures to keep the proverbial lights on for its forest sector. A decisive and calculated response is not just desirable, it is essential for the long-term sustainability of BC’s economy and the forest sector, in particular.

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Froggy Foibles

‘An unremarkable place’: One-star reviews of Vancouver’s iconic Stanley Park

By Brendan Kergin
Vancouver is Awesome
January 30, 2025
Category: Froggy Foibles
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver has plenty of highlights for locals and visitors to enjoy, but if you search for “the Jewel of Vancouver” online, there’s one clear result: Stanley Park. At the same time, you’ll find many people unimpressed by Vancouver’s awesome park. The vast majority of reviews are five- and four-star, but there are always going to be folks who disagree and drop one-star reviews on this not-so-hidden gem. So we went and read them on platforms like TripAdvisor, Yelp, and Google. Perhaps the most surprising (and to some, hilarious) reviews of the park were the ones who seemed to just not like it.

  • “Fairly boring if you’re looking for an outdoors experience,”
  • “All I can see it seems is more trees”
  • “Nothing spectacular to see, yeah, lots of trees but I didn’t get to see any wildlife except 1 squirrel,”

Another person on TripAdvisor (who has posted over 5,000 reviews) titled their review “Too many trees.”

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Business & Politics

New council on softwood lumber aims to help with U.S. economic protectionism

CFAX 1070
February 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The minister responsible for forestry and local MLA Ravi Parmar said a new council on softwood lumber will bring industry expertise together to help navigate the economic concerns with U.S. duties, and any potential tariffs that could be coming Canada’s way. While many people across the country have let out a sigh of relief about the pause on U.S. tariffs, Parmar said those in the forestry industry are still feeling the economic threat loom. “We’re already dealing with duties to the tune of 14.4 per cent. With tariffs on top of that—we could be dealing with 50 to 55 per cent duties and tariffs on our softwood lumber going into the United States,” he said, adding how that scenario would be devastating. …However, Parmar acknowledged the softwood lumber dispute with the U.S. has been a long-time problem, adding that his task of getting the industry back on its feet is made difficult by the duties.

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B.C. forest sector on edge over tariffs: ‘Can’t just ignore it’

By Dean Stoltz
Chek News
February 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Elstone

Canadian lumber exports to the U.S. have been a source of conflict between the two countries for over a century – but the latest threat – potential 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian goods, including B.C. lumber, has the industry on edge once again. American duties are set to increase from 14 per cent now to 30 per cent later this year, so the recent and ongoing threat of a 25 per cent tariff as well has the industry on edge. …That’s because of Canada’s huge reliance on the U.S. market for its lumber alone, not to mention other products like pulp or veneer. …“When we think about exporting to Asia or other places, you know, you can’t just take 12 billion board feet and send it somewhere else, so it definitely is a concer,” said industry analyst David Elstone, managing director of the Spar Tree Group and publisher of the View from the Stump newsletter.

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West Kelowna sawmill preparing for potential tariffs

By Kathy Michaels
Castanet
February 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

WEST KELOWNA — Gorman Bros. Lumber knows how to weather an economic storm. For the better part of 50 years the sawmill has been fraught with tariffs or quota restrictions brought on by trade issues with the United States. “We don’t think it’s justified,” said Nick Arkle, CEO of operations. …Arkle fears that [Trump’s] approach to getting what he wants from Canada could seriously harm an already struggling industry. …In speaking with customers, the discussion is currently about how that tariff will be passed down to the end user. How long or how much the market can absorb, however, remains to be seen. …Gorman’s started diversifying everything from its customer base to the products they provide in the years that have passed — a strategy that more are discussing in recent days. Arkle estimated that 50 per cent of what it produces from its higher value products are US bound.

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U.S. tariffs: Diversify B.C. trade markets? It’s not that simple

By Gordon Hoekstra
Vancouver Sun
February 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Robert Tsumura

Kermode Forest Products has been shipping custom-cut wood products to Asia for three decades. With 25 per cent U.S. tariffs still a possibility despite a 30-day reprieve… Asian markets provide … a little peace of mind. …B.C. Premier David Eby says diversification is one of the strategies the province will use to combat the threat to the local economy. But that is not necessarily an easy undertaking, says Robert Tsumura, one of the company’s two partners. …but globalization and increased international trade has meant more competition. About half of Japan’s wood now comes from Europe, he said. …Nicolas Schmitt, an economics professor at Simon Fraser University noted that when trading with a country such as Japan, there can also be cultural, language and contractual barriers of the kind you wouldn’t see with the U.S. The province can help by having trade missions and offices in those countries to help match buyers and sellers, he said.

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Tariff Threats Add to BC Forest Sector Woes

By Isaac Phan Nay
The Tyee
February 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

If US President Trump carries out his threat to introduce tariffs next month, expect even more forest companies to leave the province, forestry experts say. …“Tariffs aren’t new, but in terms of the impact on our members, it’s terrible,” said Jeff Bromley, Wood Council chair for the United Steelworkers union. Bromley said the tariffs make it harder for forestry companies to make a profit on exports to the United States and thus harder for members to continue to earn a living in their communities. …Statistics Canada data shows that since the turn of the century, Canada has lost about 30,000 forestry sector jobs — about a third of which were in B.C. Christopher Gaston, an associate professor at the University of British Columbia… said “I can’t imagine any BC company will be able to ship lumber for any kind of a profit; it would be at a loss,” he said. “The big mills will close down.”

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Tariff uncertainty puts strain on cash flow, inventory management: Manitoba lumber business owner

By Nathan Liewicki
CBC News
February 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

MANITOBA — While he says a delay in possible U.S. tariffs is good news, a Manitoba lumber business owner says he’s been fielding questions about their impact from his locations — and he doesn’t expect that to stop. “Do we need to take this window now that we have with this pause and try to bulk up inventory as much as possible?” LumberZone owner Joel Hartung said Wednesday. …He’s also recently had inquiries from customers asking him to order materials now and keep them in stock for a few months before purchasing. “Lots of people are wanting to … lock in pricing for the project later, but they don’t necessarily want to pay for it or are unable to take delivery [immediately],” he said. “It puts a lot of stress on our cash flow and just our inventory management.”

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United Steelworkers welcomes BC government’s initiative to fast-track major projects, advocate for forest workers

By United Steelworkers
GlobeNewswire
February 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

BURNABY, BC — The United Steelworkers union welcomes Premier David Eby and the Government of BC’s decision to expedite major projects, representing an investment of approximately $20 billion, and for establishing a council to advocate for forest workers in the face of existing and pending duties and tariffs. The strategic move to advance critical mineral and energy products not only boosts the province’s economic resilience, but also ensures job security for USW members. …By accelerating these projects, the province is taking proactive steps to mitigate external economic pressures and reinforce that B.C. is a key leader in the sector. The advisory council to deal with potential impacts of increased duties and possible additive tariffs on lumber exports to the U.S. is equally important. The USW is pleased to be included in the council, which is working to get rid of the softwood duties.

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Trump’s tariffs would likely increase cost of rebuilding fire-ravaged Los Angeles

By Ted Clarke
Prince George Citizen
February 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kim Haakstad

The fires that ripped through Los Angeles last month destroyed at least 16,000 structures and many of those homes and office buildings will require wood or wood products to rebuild. …The United States market that for decades has been the bread-and-butter business driver of the West Fraser/Canfor lumber giants of the province will become a lot less certain if President Donald Trump follows through on his threat to impose a 25 per cent tariff on exports of most things, including lumber, from Canada to the U.S. …Kim Haakstad, chief executive officer of BC Council of Forest Industries said Prince George, with its pulpmills and sawmills and thousands of workers connected to the forest industry would be one of the hardest hit communities in the province if the tariff is applied after the 30-day pause Trump announced on Monday. …Haakstad said Trump’s threat has far-reaching implications that would be crippling, not just those in the forest industry.

Additional coverage by Ted Clarke at the Prince George Citizen: Brink Forest Products in Prince George could be hard hit by Trump’s tariffs

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Canadian Pacific Kansas City reaches tentative collective agreement with United Steelworkers

By Canadian Pacific Kansas City
Cision Newswire
February 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

CALGARY, AB – Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) today said it has reached a tentative four-year collective agreement with United Steelworkers (USW) representing clerical and intermodal employees in Canada. “We are very pleased to have reached another collective agreement at the bargaining table, our third tentative agreement this year in Canada,” said Keith Creel, CPKC President and Chief Executive Officer. “Working together with the United Steelworkers, we’ve come to a tentative agreement that is good for our railroaders and their families. With this and other recent agreements, we can continue our work safely and efficiently serving our customers, enabling growth and prosperity in the Canadian economy.” USW represents approximately 600 employees in Canada. Details of the tentative collective agreement will not be released publicly until the agreement has been ratified.

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B.C. businesses working on ways to combat potential U.S. tariffs: ‘There’s opportunity in it’

By Gordon Hoekstra
Vancouver Sun
February 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

[Companies] in B.C. and across Canada, were given a last-minute, one-month reprieve Monday afternoon after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke with U.S. President Donald Trump… The wood products sector sends $5.7 billion of products to the U.S., and another $962 million in pulp-and-paper products. On Monday, Interfor said it has been closely monitoring the U.S. tariff issue for some time, and as a diversified North American producer, comes into this new environment in as good a position as anyone in the industry.  “Our leadership team has been hard at work identifying ways to insulate our company from tariff exposure where possible and put us in the best position to continue to thrive,” said Svetlana Kayumova, Interfor’s vice-president of corporate communications and government relations. “We know there is a housing shortage across North America, and the lumber products we produce are a vital part of the solution.” Interfor has mills on both sides of the border.

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Atco receives provincial perk to complete new production facility

By Timothy Schafer
Castanet
January 31, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A local forest-sector manufacturer is receiving a boost from the province to help grow its product line. Atco Wood Products — located in Fruitvale, 67 kilometres southwest of Nelson — is considered one of the top producers of softwood veneers and related by-products in the region. Through the B.C. Manufacturing Jobs Fund (BCMJF), the Government of B.C. will hand Atco $50,000 to complete planning for a new veneer-production facility, and purchase and commission new equipment to improve fibre utilization and optimize production. The company — which also manufactures veneer, ties, posts, wood chips, mulch and biomass — has evolved from its sawmilling roots, into a cutting-edge manufacturer of specialized softwood veneer and other wood products. As part of new support for forest-sector manufacturers throughout the province will help create jobs and boost local economies while diversifying the range of fibre sources used to manufacture high-value, made-in-B.C. forest products.

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New cabinet committee will protect B.C.’s economy from tariff threat

By the Office of the Premier
Government of British Columbia
January 29, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Premier David Eby is tasking a new cabinet committee with co-ordinating the whole-of-government approach to protect B.C.’s workers, businesses and economy against ongoing tariff threats from the United States. Ravi Kahlon, Minister of Housing and Municipal Affairs, will chair the committee, which will act as a day-to-day war room, co-ordinating actions across government to fight back on behalf of British Columbians and grow the province’s economy. “The proposed U.S. tariffs are a direct attack on B.C.’s families,” Premier Eby said. “This threat isn’t going away anytime soon – not while this president is in power. …Minister Kahlon brings deep experience in government to the table and is uniquely positioned to co-ordinate this work across government ministries.” The B.C. government has stepped up with a three-point strategy to fight back and protect British Columbians …The new committee will ensure that B.C.’s response is fast, tough and fully focused on protecting British Columbians.

Related news: Unifor ready to defend against Trump tariff threat – press release

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Finance & Economics

B.C. resource company stocks jolted by tariff news

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
February 3, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Stocks in B.C.’s three major publicly traded forestry companies were predictably down this morning (February 3), when stock markets opened after this weekend’s declaration of a trade war between the U.S., Canada and Mexico. U.S. stock markets were jolted, too, Monday morning, as was the S&P TSX composite Index. The Canadian dollar fell to $0.68 to the American dollar following Saturday’s confirmation that Trump will hit Canadian imports with 25 per cent tariffs, and 10 per cent tariffs on Canadian energy imports, beginning Tuesday. North American stocks fell sharply in early morning trading before recovering somewhat. Canadian companies that are highly exposed to the U.S. were jolted, with companies like West Fraser Timber, Canfor Corp and Interfor Corp. experiencing early morning drops of four, five and six per cent respectively, before correcting somewhat later in the morning.

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Forestry

Research could help focus efforts to restore habitat for threatened caribou

University of Alberta
February 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Colleen Sutheimer

University of Alberta research offers new guidance that can help recover habitat for woodland caribou in forests across the province’s Athabasca oilsands region. The study lays out a strategic method energy companies and provincial land managers can use to determine which seismic lines — narrow clearings cut into the forest for underground petroleum exploration — need human intervention to help regrow trees. Such restoration can help recover habitat for the caribou, designated as a threatened species. Knowing which of the tens of thousands of the lines crisscrossing the northern Alberta region need active restoration can help energy companies and land managers best focus their efforts, says study lead Colleen Sutheimer, a PhD candidate in the Faculty of Agricultural. …The research is the first to explore how long it takes for trees to start growing on Alberta’s seismic lines and how fast they grow once established, called growth trajectories.

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Loggers and provincial forestry branch pointing fingers at each other

By Howard May
The Cochrane Eagle
February 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The outdoor recreation and forest conservation advocacy group trying to protect the West Bragg Creek/Moose Mountain area from the loggers’ saws says it is being kept busy chasing its tail by the timber company set to clearcut this year, and the provincial department responsible for giving them permission. The loggers are telling them to talk to the provincial minister of forestry. The minister is telling them to talk to the loggers. Shaun Peter of Guardians of Recreational Outdoor Wilderness (GROW) said they are trying to convince the powers that be to commit to implementing the FireSmart program in the area, as a prudent protection, in light of the increase in wildfires across North America in recent years. To that end, GROW met with West Fraser Timber Company (formerly Spray Lake Sawmill in Cochrane) on October 11, and were told they can’t follow FireSmart guidelines without direction from the minister.

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Shuswap communities among nation’s top 10 for ‘high burn probability’: Report

By Heather Black
The Trail Times
February 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Chase council learned the community is in the line of fire after a report from FireSmart coordinator Michael Henderson. At the Jan. 28 meeting, Henderson provided a wildfire risk assessment that said after nearly a century of no-fire policy, climate change and the mountain pine beetle, “the area is primed for wildfire.” …Henderson also referenced a recent study that ranked Chase seventh in the top 10 for the highest burn probability among small communities across Canada, with Sicamous, Sorrento, Grindrod and Nakusp also making the list. …Henderson added that he and staff are looking into introducing a wildfire development permit area and related bylaws to ensure properties are built to FireSmart specifications from the start, which he said other communities such as Vernon already have. That would allow the village to enforce FireSmart measures among residents, who so far haven’t really embraced it.  

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Do your research, Minister Parmer

Letter by Kathy Code
Ladysmith Chemainus Chronicle
February 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Dear Minister Ravi Parmar: I am writing to you in reference to your recent Minister’s Statement regarding photos of tree spiking claimed to be of Fairy Creek, submitted to you anonymously and without verification.  I understand from the reporter who subsequently interviewed me that the purported sender was “Friends of Fairy Creek.”  My name is Kathy Code and I am a Fairy Creek Forest Defender. …Thus, I was dismayed to read your statement.  Not only are you giving public voice to unsubstantiated claims from an unknown sender, but the weight of your office gives some credence to the underlying accusations. …I ask on behalf of the citizens of BC that you withdraw your statement as a means of maintaining the dignity of your office.   

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Cheakamus Community Forest will test out divisive Whistler ecologist’s wildfire approach

By Brandon Barrett
The Pique News Magazine
February 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Rhonda Millikin

The Cheakamus Community Forest (CCF) will test a green fuel breaks recommendation from Whistler ecologist Rhonda Millikin who has lobbied the municipality to rethink its approach to mitigating wildfire. Millikin has argued against fuel-thinning and other FireSmart practices, believing it isn’t effective in Whistler’s wet, coastal rainforest, and is actually adding to the community’s fire risk. She advocated for rainwater catchments, sprinkler systems, and natural green fuel breaks. …It is the biggest breakthrough yet for the retired ecologist, whose research has been met with mixed reactions… Forester Bruce Blackwell, who helped author Whistler’s wildfire strategy, has criticized Millikin’s research, arguing her approach would have little impact on fighting a large-scale, out-of-control wildfire. …Millikin’s advocacy led to Forestry Professionals British Columbia issuing a cease-and-desist in December, following a complaint… prompting Phil Burton, a professor at the University of Northern B.C., to decry the FPBC’s “heavy-handed” response to Millikin’s work.

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Ecosystem Based Management: Sunshine Coast Community Forest’s operational ‘heart’

By Connie Jordison
The Sunshine Coast Reporter
February 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The overall goal is to have a working forest while sustaining ecological and cultural values so that future generations have access to forest areas just as diverse and healthy as those currently enjoyed. For Sunshine Coast Community Forest (SCCF) operations manager, Warren Hansen, ecosystem-based management (EBM), a tool introduced in its operations in 2021, “came from the heart” of what the community wants from SCCF. In his opening remarks at a Jan. 30 Community Advisory Panel and public information webinar, he noted that SCCF’s board and community advisory panel are committed to using EBM in stewarding its tenure by harvesting timber in a way that curbs losses of biodiversity. The overall goal is to have a working forest while sustaining ecological and cultural values so that future generations have access to forest areas just as diverse and healthy as those currently enjoyed. To do that, SCCF relies on advice from contractors including Laurie Kremsater and Anna Yuill, who presented an overview of EBM to about 35 people tuned into the webinar.

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Dan Macmaster receives Alumni Builder Award

By the Faculty of Forestry
University of British Columbia
February 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Dan Macmaster

UBC Forestry wishes to congratulate Dan Macmaster, MSFM’13, on being named a recipient of the 2024-25 Alumni Builder Awards. An exceptionally dedicated volunteer with the Master of Sustainable Forest Management Program, Dan Macmaster has consistently gone above and beyond in advancing the education of future forest managers. His extensive contributions range from serving on the Master of Sustainable Forest Management Advisory Committee and guest lecturing to volunteering at field camps and organizing multi-day field activities for students.

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Council of Forest Industries Convention coming to Prince George

By Andrew Snook
Canadian Forest Industries
February 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

Leaders from across the forest products sector will be descending on Prince George, B.C. from April 2 to 4 for the COFI 2025 Convention. Organized and operated by the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI), the convention offers attendees a wide variety of panels and presentations over two days, as well as multiple networking opportunities with leaders of B.C.’s forestry sector and beyond. “The 2025 COFI Convention in Prince George comes at a time when the forest sector is facing transformation and turbulence. Looking at where we stand along themes such as competitiveness and sustainability, this event will explore market diversification, industry innovations, and solutions to critical challenges like wildfire and fibre access. It’s the must-attend gathering to shape the future of B.C. forestry,” says COFI’s director of communications Travis Joern. 

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CFI Podcast: Chris Duncan of MNP reviews 2024 and previews 2025

By Canadian Forest Industries Podcast
Soundcloud
December 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Chris Duncan

Chris Duncan, partner and national leader of forestry and forest products at MNP unpacks the forest industry’s biggest challenges and successes of 2024 and look ahead to 2025. Topics include shifting markets, labour shortages, the threat of U.S. tariffs, rising fibre costs, and the impacts of wildfires and storms. They also explore how AI, automation, and sustainability trends are shaping the future, alongside key takeaways from BC’s 2024 election and recent regulatory changes. This podcast offers a must-listen year-end review and outlook for Canada’s forest sector.

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BC Wildfire Service crews welcomed home from California

By the Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
February 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC Wildfire Service (BCWS) crews have returned to B.C. after two weeks supporting the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) with wildfire fighting efforts in Los Angeles. “In times of need, we will always be there for our friends; that’s who we are as British Columbians and as Canadians,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “Firefighters don’t ask questions, they run into fires. I want to express my deepest gratitude to each of the crew members who made the trip south.” On Jan. 11, 2025, the BCWS deployed a senior management team of 13 technical specialists to support CAL FIRE’s efforts to control the fast-moving Palisades wildfire. Working directly alongside the American incident management team, B.C.’s team supported in planning, logistics, operations, aviation, fire weather and information roles.

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B.C.’s smallest First Nation has big plans for a ‘stewardship’ economy

By Rochelle Baker
The National Observer
February 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The West Coast’s smallest First Nation is taking great strides toward the creation of an innovative stewardship economy that puts sustainability and conservation first. The Kwiakah First Nation, led by munmuntle, Chief Steven Dick, consists of 19 members mostly based on Vancouver Island. …The nation intends to revitalize its lands and waters — much of which were badly damaged by logging and other resource industries. …After years of hard work, the nation successfully established the M̓ac̓inuxʷ Special Forest Management Area last May that covers 7,865 hectares of forested land within the Great Bear Rainforest. The Kwiakah SFMA bans logging in favour of regenerative operations aimed at bringing the forest back to its pre-industrial state. The nation also intends to expand its protected forest area to 56,000 hectares by purchasing other logging licences in its traditional territory, Frank Voelker, the nation’s band manager added.

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BC extends old growth deferral in Fairy Creek

By Sidney Coles
The Capital Daily
February 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC government has approved a legal order to extend temporary protections in the Fairy Creek watershed until Sept. 30, 2026. It applies to the same forest lands that were deferred in June 2021. The deferral protects almost 1,200 hectares—all the Crown land in the Fairy Creek watershed. The watershed falls within the Pacheedaht and Dididaht First Nations’ territory. The extension feels like a small bit of clearing in a forest of uncertainty. … “The [added] time provides the Pacheedaht FN the opportunity to do the extremely important work of developing their resource management plan,” Forestry Minister Ravi Parmar told Capital Daily. …The forestry sector in BC has struggled in recent years with a reduction in access to fibre and the sawmills to process it. The slowdown has led to numerous mill closures and the loss of thousands of jobs across the province.

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Logging pause won’t affect parcels sold

by Emma Maple
Peninsula Daily News
January 31, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

PORT ANGELES — The recent pause on some older tree sales in state-managed forests will not affect parcels that already have been approved or auctioned, despite some environmentalists’ hopes. When Dave Upthegrove was sworn in as the state’s public lands commissioner on Jan. 15, he immediately enacted a pause on the approval for auction of state-managed “legacy forests,” a campaign promise. …Some environmental activists had hoped the pause also would apply to legacy forests that already had been approved for auction, or those that had been auctioned but not yet logged. …However, after reviewing his administrative options, Upthegrove said he “do[es] not see a successful path forward for me to unilaterally stop them.” “It’s always incredibly difficult to unwind an action after it’s been approved and implemented, and the legal and procedural challenges of administrative action here make it virtually impossible,” he said in a statement.

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Lil’wat Forestry offering six-week, fully funded wildfire course

By Luke Faulks
The Pique News Magazine
February 2, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Stillwater Consulting and Lil’wat Forestry Ventures (LFV) have partnered to deliver two fully funded, six-week training programs on wildfire and community resilience at the Ts̓zil Learning Centre in Mount Currie. Students will learn from LFV staff, Lil’wat elders and a dozen instructors brought in by Stillwater over six weeks of training in forestry and wildfire mitigation. Those hours will be split between class time and hands-on experience. “It’s set to get people ready to work in the field,” LFV general manager Klay Tindall told Pique. “It’s not to get them ready to work in an office, that’s for sure.” …The program also expands beyond core wildfire fighting skills with additional certifications involving working safely under power lines, bear safety, danger tree assessment, and natural resource field studies like silviculture and tree planting. Tindall said the broader approach is meant to ensure students are employable outside of the fire season. 

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The power of forests: North Okanagan climate advocate

Letter by Eli Pivnick, Shuswap Climate Action Society
Vernon Morning Star
February 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

One of the biggest policy changes needed in B.C. is to forestry policy. B.C. policy for the last 50 years has resulted in a rapid clear-cutting of a large part of our forests even as all the research indicates that: Within a 60-80 year time span, only 20-30 per cent of forests can be cut in any one area without harming the hydrological cycle. On this basis, most BC commercial forests have been severely over-cut making a mockery of the Annual Allowable Cut. …Clear-cutting results in increased risk of forest fires up to 30 years when replanted. …Re-planting is a form of green-washing giving companies cover for the forest damage they do. …Due to the increase in forest fires partially due to logging, BC forests have [become a] carbon source. …The Power of Forests: Protecting Communities and Nature with a New Forest Act effort was launched by the Boundary Forest Watershed Stewardship Society.

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Land Act sounds like ‘Land Back’ to wary B.C. voters

By Tom Fletcher
The Western Standard
February 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

It’s been almost a year since the B.C. NDP government moved to snuff out a growing political brush fire sparked by the latest and largest step in its bid to implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People across the province. Changes to the province’s little-known Land Act were abruptly withdrawn by the government in February 2024 after a series of opposition town hall meetings brought out big crowds demanding answers on the implications. Premier David Eby’s promise of more consultation before moving ahead with what it termed shared decision-making on Crown land meant that if it was successful in the election, the NDP would move ahead. …Indigenous rights initiatives tend to start in B.C. and extend across the country. …Enshrining the UN declaration started here, and Justin Trudeau’s government followed suit, with a yet-undefined law to implement it across the federal government as B.C. has begun to do. 

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Why the Douglas fir is disappearing from our forests

By James Steidle
Prince George Citizen
January 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Our new forest minister has been touring the North, trying to learn about forestry, and I hope, forests. I sure hope someone is telling him about the need to stop clearcutting Douglas fir forests… Douglas fir represent only two per cent of our forests in the Prince George Timber Supply Area. It’s a relatively fire-resistant conifer species with good biodiversity values we could use more of, not less… Douglas fir seedlings have a higher rate of failure compared to lodgepole pine. They are vulnerable to frost damage. During heatwaves the sun can cook them… This report identified another threat to Douglas fir regeneration: the elimination of our critical deciduous species. Douglas Fir, the report argues, are protected and enhanced by the deciduous “brush” that we currently eliminate from our regenerating stands, either with herbicides or with brush saws.

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Preserving the legacy of Cochrane’s Grandfather Tree

Cochrane Municipality Press Release
January 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

On January 30, the Parks and Open Spaces Department will begin safety work on the Grandfather Tree following its fall during the windstorm earlier this month. To ensure public safety, the Grandfather Tree trail will be temporarily closed to all bicycle and pedestrian traffic during this time. The Town of Cochrane kindly asks residents and visitors to respect posted signage and follow any guidance provided by staff working in the area… Propagation specialists have successfully collected seeds and meristem cuttings from the top of the tree. They are working closely with a grower to propagate the seed and are also exploring innovative tissue culture micropropagation techniques to create potential clones of the tree. These efforts aim to preserve the Grandfather Tree’s unique genetic legacy for future generations.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province.

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
January 31, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

This is the beginning of convention season and that means many opportunities to learn, connect, and hear from government officialsproject partners, and community organizations about problems, policies, and possibilities for the sector. The mood, thus far, is introspective, with reviews planned for BC Timber Sales and the forest sector in general. …At FESBC, we are reviewing applications for funding over the next two years. Demand for funding currently far exceeds supply. In this newsletter: A safety tip from the BC Forest Safety Council; Faces of Forestry features Erin McLeod; Information on FESBC’s 2025-27 second round of funding; Impact and benefits of the Pressy Lake Pilot Project; Nakusp & Area Community Forest’s wildfire risk reduction projects; and a podcast feature from the University of Northern British Columbia Forestry Club.

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BC extends Fairy Creek logging deferral amid tree spiking reports

By Marcy Nicholson
The Canadian Press in CTV News
January 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC government has approved a legal order to extend temporary protections to an old-growth forest on Vancouver Island even as the minister of forests acknowledged that the RCMP are investigating reports of tree spiking. Ravi Parmar called the news of such vandalism “incredibly alarming.” Spikes are typically metal and can injure or even kill a person who attempts to cut down or mill the tree. …The minister said spiking puts health and safety of forestry workers at risk, adding that the province immediately notified both the forestry licensee and the local First Nation. “It is outrageous that… they feel that causing serious injury to workers furthers their cause,” said Brian Butler, president of United Steelworkers Local 1-1937. The provincial government’s announcement… came at the request of the Pacheedaht First Nation, whose territories encompass the entire watershed. The protections allow for continued discussions about the long-term management of the watershed.

Related coverage:

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Big trees crucial to migrate B.C. forests under climate change, finds study

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
January 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…changes in climate are expected to drive wildlife seeking refuge up mountains and further north. But for trees… the changes in climate are often coming too fast to get out of the way, especially when combined with pressures from logging, said Suzanne Simard, a professor in the University of British Columbia’s Faculty of Forestry. …In a new study published in Global Change Biology, Simard and her UBC colleagues took three-year-old interior Douglas fir seedlings from locations in southern B.C. and planted them as far north as Fort St. James, the northern limit of the species’ range … to find out how the trees would handle the human-assisted migration, and if they would do better in a colder climate.  …As early as 2006, University of Alberta researcher Andreas Hamann published a study that concluded climate change could push the range of B.C.’s tree species north at a rate of 100 kilometres per decade.  

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Fraser Institute News Release: Ottawa’s “Net Zero” emission-reduction plan will cost Canadian workers $8,000 annually by 2050

By The Fraser Institute
Cision Newswire
January 30, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC – The federal government’s plan to achieve “net zero” greenhouse gas emissions will result in 254,000 fewer jobs and cost workers $8,000 in lower wages by 2050, all while failing to meet the government’s own emission-reduction target, finds a new study published today by the Fraser Institute, an independent, non-partisan Canadian public policy think-tank. “Ottawa’s emission-reduction plan will significantly hurt Canada’s economy and cost workers money and jobs, but it won’t achieve the target they’ve set because it is infeasible,” said Ross McKitrick, senior fellow at the Fraser Institute and author of Canada’s Path to Net Zero by 2050: Darkness at the End of the Tunnel. The government’s Net Zero by 2050 emission-reduction plan includes: the federal carbon tax, clean fuel standards, and various other GHG-related regulations, such as energy efficiency requirements for buildings, fertilizer restrictions on farms, and electric vehicle mandates. By 2050, these policies will have imposed significant costs on the Canadian economy and on workers. 

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Transition to more biomass heating in Northwest Territories requires better supply chain, advocates say

By Jocelyn Shepel
CBC News
January 30, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

Mark Heyck

A gathering of advocates, researchers and government officials in the N.W.T. this week is looking at biomass as a viable alternative to diesel in the territory. The Arctic Energy Alliance’s “Biomass Week” started Monday in Yellowknife and continues all week. Biomass is organic matter — for example, wood — that is used to generate energy. Statistics Canada data shows that diesel accounted for roughly half of the territory’s total energy demand in 2023. A significant portion of that diesel is used for space heating and power generation, according to the Canada Energy Regulator. The non-profit Arctic Energy Alliance wants to help steer the territory away from fossil fuels and toward cleaner energy sources. …If the territory is to move away from fossil fuels, Heyck believes biomass is a viable option. He says having more certified wood-stove installers and people who can service and install pellet stoves in the territory is helping.

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Arbios Biotech biomass to bio-oil facility is set to go

By Cheryl Jahn
CKPG Today
January 29, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE – It was 2021 when Canfor announced a final investment decision on a project to produce biofuel. The plant will use hydrothermal liquefaction technology to convert forestry residues and wastes into high value into renewable biocrude, which can be further refined to produce low-carbon transportation fuels. “What we do is essentially, what nature does over millions of years we do in 25 to 30 minutes,” explains Rune Gjessing, CEO of Arbios Biotech. “We’re taking organic matter, manipulating it, and then producing oil.” In August 2022, a formal naming of the Arbios facility adjacent to the Canfor Intercon Pulp mill to Chuntoh Ghuna, meaning “the forest lives.” …The world’s largest hydrothermal liquefaction facility in the world, converting 25,000 dry tonnes of wood residuals into 50,000 barrels of biofuel annually. …The plant uses residuals from the forest sector. …The biofuel produced will be used for aircraft and marine purposes.

 

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Forest History & Archives

Museum Musings: Valleau Logging—a family business

By Allyn Pringle
Pique News Magazine
February 5, 2025
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada, Canada West

When Everett Valleau moved his company, Valleau Logging Ltd., to the Alta Lake area in 1955, he came to log timber around Alta and Green Lakes. Valleau Logging was a family business, and over the years each of Everett’s seven sons, at least 10 of his grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren all worked for the company. The Valleaus operated from Parkhurst on Green Lake and later moved their logging camp to Mons. As skiing opened up and development increased, the Valleaus formed a subsidiary company, Alta Lake Contractors Ltd., to provide excavation work, road-building, and more. In 1965, they were hired by Garibaldi Lifts Ltd. to build the road from the valley to the midstation of Whistler Mountain while the logging side of the company removed the usable timber from some of the runs that were cut. …As Whistler placed more emphasis on resort development, Laurence moved Valleau Logging to Pemberton. 

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