Region Archives: Canada West

Special Feature

Unsettled Times Provide Opportunity for Forest Professionals to Step Up

By Christine Gelowitz, CEO
Forest Professionals British Columbia Magazine
January 6, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Christine Gelowitz

BC’s forest sector is undergoing a momentous change, buffeted by a combination of policy reform, economic uncertainty, new models of shared governance, shifting markets, climate impacts, workforce demographics, and evolving public expectations. This moment feels different than previous market downturns and it’s increasingly obvious there will be no return to “business as usual.” Clearly, a transformation in forestry is underway, some of it overdue, some daunting, and some full of possibility. In moments like this, certainty is elusive. Information floods in while the signals that matter are often buried beneath speculation, opinion, and outright misinformation. It is easy to get stuck in the ‘muddiness’ of it all and hope someone else will bring clarity and provide a clear and obvious path forward.

The policy choices, management decisions, planning assumptions, and stewardship priorities made today will shape BC forests and forest sector for decades. Who will lead in making those decisions? How will we prevent the strong desire to place all the focus on urgent short-term fixes from overshadowing the important and the need for improving our long-term potential? This is a moment fit for forest professionals. [Extracted from the BC Forest Professionals Winter 2026 Magazine]

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Business & Politics

BC forestry: Endless change, constant woes

By Don MacLachlan
Resource Works
January 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Since 2018, notes forestry watcher David Elstone, the British Columbia government has introduced more than 43 measures, policies, plans, systems, laws, reviews and reports about and affecting the BC forest sector. Meanwhile, there have been a series of closures and curtailments (permanent, temporary or indefinite) of sawmills and pulp mills, and thus workforce reductions. “And the fibre-supply crisis has continued to worsen, and . . . the industry is in far worse condition than ever before.” Elstone’s basic message: “Government has been busy designing change rather than figuring out solutions and moving forward. …Kim Haakstad, CEO of the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) echoes the analysis “There’s been a significant amount of change that hasn’t settled itself into the system, and there’s been no look at what regulatory efficiency can be achieved to make processes clearer, more transparent, and more accountable.”

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Vanderhoof, B.C., facing long-term financial impacts of Canfor mill closure

By Hanna Petersen
CBC News
January 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The District of Vanderhoof, says it is now feeling the full financial impacts of Canfor’s 2024 Plateau sawmill closure and is facing a substantial loss of tax revenue for 2026. Canfor closed its sawmills in both Vanderhoof and Fort St. John, B.C., in December of 2024 citing “increasing regulatory complexity, high operating costs and the inability to reliably access economically viable timber.” Kevin Moutray is the mayor of The District of Vanderhoof, says the closure will create a loss of $580,000 in tax revenue equivalent to 11 per cent of its tax base. …Recent closures include the West Fraser’s sawmill in 100 Mile House and Domtar’s permanent closing of its plump mill in Crofton on Vancouver Island. “It’s difficult and sometimes action only happens in a crisis even though you sort of, can see some of it coming,” said Kurt Niquidet, B.C. Lumber Trade Council president and B.C. Council of Forest Industries chief economist.

Additional coverage by Kevin Moutray Mayor, District of Vanderhoof in the Terrace Standard: Vanderhoof mayor responds to impacts of the Canfor Plateau Mill closure

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North Cowichan advocates for age limit for retirement program to aid Crofton mill workers

By Justin Baumgardner
My Cowichan Valley Now
January 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Municipality of North Cowichan said it is hoping to reopen the Bridging to Retirement Program and lower the eligible age to increase support for workers affected by the Crofton mill closure. Mayor Rob Douglas said he has asked the premier and the minister of forests to work with the federal government to reinstate the program, which was launched in 2021. He said the program is aimed at workers over 55 who do not “relish the idea” of retraining for new careers. “We recognize workers who are in their 50s and 60s are in a tough spot and are able to access pensions,” Douglas said. “For obvious reasons some aren’t too excited about going back and getting retrained to work in a whole different field.” …Douglas said the decision rests with the province and there is no definitive timeline for when workers or the municipality could see results.

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West Fraser amalgamating five Alberta subsidiaries including Sundre location

By Simon Ducatel
The Albertain
January 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

SUNDRE, Alberta – The general manager of what will soon become the former West Fraser – Sundre Forest Products said there will be no impact on staff or operations amid a corporate reorganizing. According to a December letter to vendors, West Fraser is “undertaking an internal corporate reorganization, whereby Blue Ridge Lumber, Spray Lake Sawmills, Crowsnest Forest Products, Sundre Forest Products, and Manning Forest Products will be amalgamated into one company and renamed West Fraser Alberta Wood Products Ltd.” The new entity is to remain a wholly-owned subsidiary of West Fraser Mills Ltd., and the amalgamation and rebranding will be effective as of end of day on Dec. 31. “There’s zero impact to operations,” said Jason Foote. “This restructure is administrative”.

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Tariffs, mill closures and reconciliation: Eby reflects on a tumultuous year in B.C.

By Erin Haluschak
Chek News
December 31, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

What started as online threats from US President Trump ended with tangible consequences for BC, Premier David Eby says, as steep tariffs on timber pushed the province into economic triage in 2025. In a year end interview with CHEK’s Rob Shaw, Eby describes the past year as “wild,” with huge pressure placed on the forestry sector in particular, he notes. “We had the pine beetle, we had the wildfire, we have low prices. There’s significant reform that’s needed. And instead of focusing on that reform, we’re in kind of triage mode of responding to 46% tariffs. …In terms of forestry, Eby notes his government’s first priority in the sector is to provide stability, reassurance and support for families that have lost jobs, particularly with the closure of the Crofton mill. Workers will remain on site through early spring, Eby says, giving time to determine the next phase for what is considered a valuable industrial property.

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The continental trade pact is up for review in 2026 — here’s what Trump might want

The Canadian Presss in the Daily Commercial News
January 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

WASHINGTON — A mandatory review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico-Agreement on trade kicks into high gear this year as US President Trump continues his campaign to realign global trade and poach key industries from America’s closest neighbours. …Since the president’s return to the White House, however, confidence in CUSMA’s future has waned. Trade with Canada may not be front of mind for Trump, said Fen Osler Hampson, a professor of international affairs at Carleton University in Ottawa and co-chair of the Expert Group on Canada-U.S. Relations. It’s more like the “proverbial iceberg,” he said. “It’s what you don’t see that matters. And that’s the kind of hidden economic wiring of a very deep and highly interdependent relationship.” …Trump has complained repeatedly about long-standing irritants in the United States’ trade relationship with Canada — the supply management system for dairy products, the alleged subsidization of the softwood lumber sector, other non-tariff barriers.

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B.C. economic outlook 2026: From trade wars to tariffs—8 forces shaping the year ahead

By Michael McCullough
BC Business Magazine
January 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Michael McCullough

We knew we were in for a rough year in 2025, but not how rough. We hadn’t factored in the breadth and intensity of the incoming Trump administration’s trade actions. As we look forward to 2026, we can expect more of the same, including a likely fraught Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) renegotiation. On the plus side, most economic forecasts suggest the business cycle has bottomed and should improve, if slowly, henceforward. …For all the fear and loathing over “Liberation Day” last April and the targeting of the softwood lumber industry, Canada has come away relatively unscathed from U.S. trade action, with 85 to 90 percent of Canadian exports to the U.S. continuing to cross the border tariff-free. Whether that free pass stays in place depends on negotiations to extend or replace CUSMA, which comes up for renewal in July. Based on past experience with the Trump administration, the process will not go smoothly.

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Two wood pellet manufacturing facilities planned for Northern Alberta

The Woodworking Network
December 30, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

MACKENZIE COUNTY, Alberta — An agreement with Calgary-based PowerWood Canada Corp. will bring two new wood pellet manufacturing facilities to the Mackenzie County region in Northern Alberta, Canada. Josh Knelsen, Mackenzie County Reeve, announced Dec. 23 the agreement. “This is a leading-edge, first-of-its-kind project in Canada that turns wildfire-damaged wood into clean energy and helps reduce reliance on coal,” said Knelsen. The two facilities represent the potential for up to 300 direct jobs,” with many more across forestry, construction, transportation, and local businesses. …Construction on two sites is expected to begin by mid-2026. …The facilities will also see the introduction of Canada’s first steam explosion pellet production process – developed by leading industrial systems engineers Valmet and capable of producing black wood biofuel pellets with 94% less carbon release than coal. …PowerWood Canada plans to open a second Alberta plant and has developed expansion plans for further plants in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

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Manitobans likely to see higher premiums, limited insurance options after devastating wildfire season: expert

By Rosanna Hempel
CBC News
January 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Manitobans should expect higher cabin and home insurance premiums in 2026, one expert says, after a 2025 fire season that destroyed at least 130 properties in the province and forced more than 32,000 people to leave their communities. Owners may also encounter new caps on payouts or exclusions in their policies that won’t cover certain hazards or parts of a property, or may find insurers will not provide coverage at all, said Jason Thistlethwaite, an assistant professor at the University of Waterloo’s school of environment, enterprise and development. “Insurance is a business, and they’re going to be looking to recoup those losses,” said Thistlethwaite, who studies the economic impacts of climate risk and natural disasters.

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BC Wood Announces Leadership Transition as CEO Brian Hawrysh Steps Down

The BC Wood Specialties Group
December 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Brian Hawrysh

Langley, BC – BC Wood today announced a planned leadership change as Chief Executive Officer Brian Hawrysh steps down after more than two decades at the helm. The association will begin the search for a new CEO in the coming weeks. As he transitions towards retirement, Brian will continue in an advisory role through 2026, mentoring staff and supporting key initiatives to ensure a smooth handover. His tenure has been marked by significant growth in membership, expanded international presence, and the launch of key programs including Wood First, First Nations engagement, and workforce development. “It has been the honour of my career to lead BC Wood for more than 20 years. Together with an incredible team, we introduced new programs, expanded our reach, and secured our place as one of the most dynamic industry associations in the world,” said Hawrysh. …BC Wood will continue to champion BC’s value-added wood products sector building on the strong foundation established under Hawrysh’s leadership.

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BC’s Minister of Forests remains hopeful for forestry revival despite recent mill closures

Vernon Now
December 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Amid ongoing mill closures across the province, British Columbia’s Minister of Forests expressed optimism about federal advocacy and the premier’s efforts in securing investments for the forestry industry. In a recent interview with KelownaNow, Ravi Parmar highlighted the ongoing challenges facing the province’s forestry sector, describing it as a “boom and bust industry for decades.” …Parmar attributed much of the strain on the forestry industry to US tariffs and duties, which he said are “placing a choke hold on our ability to provide strong quality wood products” to American markets, compounded by low lumber prices under $400 per board foot and collapsed demand due to economic policies under President Donald Trump. Parmar expressed optimism about federal advocacy, praising Prime Minister Carney and Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodson for stepping up where predecessors “completely dropped the ball on forestry and softwood lumber.”

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Contamination of agricultural shipments focus of Fibreco legal case

By Jane Seyd
North Shore News
December 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A North Shore port terminal is entitled to damages stemming from the cancellation of a multimillion-dollar contract, despite several incidents where wood pellets were found mixed in with loads of agricultural products, a BC Supreme Court judge has ruled. The decision, handed down in November by Justice Kevin Loo, follows legal arguments from Fibreco Export, which handles a number of products for export at its North Vancouver port terminal, and AGT Food and Ingredients, a large agricultural customer of the port. …In January 2025, AGT abruptly cancelled its contract with Fibreco, after several incidents where wood pellets were found mixed in with shipments of canola, wheat and lentils shipped from the terminal. …The wood pellet contamination was a “ticking time bomb” that could potentially cost AGT millions of dollars, the head of AGT told the court. …Loo eventually ruled that AGT had also violated the terms of its contract.

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BC invests $2.5 million in support of high-value, made-in-BC wood products

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
December 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Nine more forestry companies are being supported to modernize, innovate and diversify their product lines and fibre sources to make more high-value, made-in-BC products, and help protect and create jobs. “It’s no secret our forestry sector is facing many challenges, making these investments timely,” said Minister of Forests, Ravi Parmar. …Through the BC Manufacturing Jobs Fund, the Province is contributing $2.5 million to plan or complete capital projects. For example, Canadian Bavarian Millwork and Lumber in Chemainus will receive as much as $1.4 million to help build its new facility. …Additional investments include:

  • Delta – Leslie Forest Products – $420,000 to buy and commission new equipment that will optimize production and efficiency.
  • Deroche – F&T Technologies – $350,000 to commercialize a biopolymer technology that transforms wood-based materials into waterproof, fire-resistant and mould-proof solutions.
  • Central Saanich – Island Precision Machining – $124,000 toward new equipment for manufacturing architectural millwork and cabinetry.
  • Powell River – homeD Modular Building Technologies – $50,000 for a next-generation manufacturing hub. 
  • Terrace – Kitsumkalum Development Limited Partnership – $42,817 to conduct assessments associated with restarting Skeena Sawmills.
  • Powell River – Tla’amin Timber Products – $38,725 for a value-added processing facility. 
  • Vavenby – Simpcw Resources – $10,750 to undertake planning for a capital project.

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Province invests up to $7.5 million in WFP’s value-added division in Chemainus

By Robert Barron
The Chemainus Valley Courier
December 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

CHEMAINUS, BC — Western Forest Products’ value-added division in Chemainus is receiving up to $7.5 million from the province to add two new continuous dry kilns to its manufacturing operations. The investment, from the province’s BC Manufacturing Jobs Fund, will allow WFP’s facility on River Road to expand the production of high-value products and create new opportunities for second-growth hemlock to produce higher-value products, as well as increasing the stability of the forest company’s operations on Vancouver Island. Minister of Jobs and Economic Growth Ravi Kahlon and Forest Minister Ravi Parmar joined Steven Hofer, CEO of WFP, to make the funding announcement, which is expected to strengthen Vancouver Island’s manufacturing sector. In addition, the ministers announced that Island TimberFrame in Cumberland is receiving as much as $325,000 to expand its production of high-value structural mass timber and wood-finishing products through the purchase and installation of new advanced manufacturing equipment. …WFP’s value-added division in Chemainus currently employs 61 workers.

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Domtar delivers lump of coal for Christmas

By Editorial Board
The Cowichan Valley Citizen
December 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

For Crofton mill workers it was like getting a lump of coal in their stockings. Last week owners of the Domtar pulp mill announced they were shuttering the operation …Who and what is to blame is a complicated tangle, encompassing questions about the future of the forest industry in this province. …While we must confront these questions, the closure also highlights the dangers of community dependence on a particular operation, or even industry. While the workers will, of course, be the most affected, North Cowichan residents will also feel the pain from the mill closure, as it is the municipality’s single biggest taxpayer. ….We can all hope that there will still be a future for the Crofton mill site… but that’s in no way a given. The municipality will be facing some very difficult decisions about services and what it can afford. The larger community will also feel the loss of all of those well paying jobs.

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Harmac Pacific rejects potential restrictions for ’emissions intense heavy industries’

By Ian Holmes
Nanaimo Now News
December 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

NANAIMO — Exploratory discussions around potentially restricting industrial business activities in Nanaimo irked representatives of Nanaimo Forest Products (NFP), which operates Duke Point’s Harmac Pacific pulp mill. The narrowly approved Nov. 17 notice of motion from Nanaimo city councillor Paul Manly. …Harmac Pacific is actively attempting to rezone a pair of adjacent Phoenix Way lots involving a combined 244 acres bordering Cedar’s Cable Bay Trail. “If this bylaw were to become a reality, it would threaten the ability of our business to continue. …Mayor Leonard Krog is heavily opposed to the motion. “This motion basically says to anyone who wants to invest in this community ‘Don’t bother going to Nanaimo, don’t bother worrying about whether the land is zoned for heavy industry because Nanaimo wants to limit everything that might actually create some real jobs…’” …Harmac Pacific employs roughly 340 employees at its specialty pulp operation, which features a unique employee-owned ownership model.

Related coverage in the Nanaimo Bulletin, by Jessica Durling: B.C. forest minister slams Nanaimo council motion to look at limiting emissions-intense industry

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Workers at Chemainus sawmill anxious to get back to work

By Robert Barron
The Cowichan Valley Citizen
December 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Many laid-off workers at Western Forest Products’ Chemainus sawmill are increasingly frustrated with the company for the delays in the reopening of the mill, and with the state of the coastal forest industry overall. Brian Bull, Randy Robertson and Robert Joyce, who collectively have 95 years working in the forest industry, have been laid off since WFP temporarily curtailed operations at the mill on June 18. WFP recently announced that the shutdown at the mill, which employees approximately 150 workers, would extend into 2026 due to poor market conditions, high American lumber tariffs, and log-supply issues. Robertson said the company has not given the workers any indication of when the mill will reopen. …Bull said the mill’s workers’… employment insurance benefits are running out and they’re only making about half of the money they make at the mill even with the EI benefits. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

PHOTOS: A sneak peek at Kelowna’s soon-to-open airport expansion

Kelowna Now
January 5, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

@Kalesnikoff

 …A few weeks back, YLW CEO Sam Samaddar told KelownaNow the exciting expanded airport terminal building project is ahead of schedule and the new space is expected to open up in the first quarter of 2026. Travellers will be seeing it in person soon enough, but Kalesnikoff recently shared a few photos of the new terminal building for those who don’t want to wait. The mass timber used for the project, the biggest airport expansion in Kelowna’s history thus far, was manufactured and supplied from Kalesnikoff’s facility in Castlegar. According to the City of Kelowna, nearly 800 square metres of wood from the Slocan Valley was incorporated in the project, which received a $500,000 grant from BC’s Mass Timber Demonstration Program. …Check out photos of the new terminal building below and look forward to a smoother travel experience at YLW in the near future!

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First Nation in B.C. develops prefabricated housing system from locally-sourced wood

By Hanna Petersen
CBC News
January 2, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

FORT ST. JAMES, BC — A home described as the first of its kind now stands in the Nak’azdli Whuten community near Fort St. James, BC. The home is a prototype for an Indigenous-led housing system that uses low-grade locally-sourced wood to produce prefabricated housing kits for northern communities. The concept is to take trees from the local territory, mill them locally, and then have local workers use that lumber to build panels, which are then used to construct a house in a matter of days. …The pilot project was born out of a collaboration between Nak’azdli Whuten Development Corp. and Deadwood Innovations, a forestry startup based in Fort St. James. They partnered with researchers at the University of Northern British Columbia’s Wood Innovation Research Lab to develop the prefabricated mass timber panel system.

Additional coverage in the Vancouver Sun by Derrick Penner: Indigenous development company looks to carve niche in mass-timber housing construction in rural B.C.

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Wood Connections December Newsletter

BC Wood Specialties Group
December 22, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The December 19 edition of Wood Connections highlights a range of upcoming opportunities and initiatives for BC’s value-added wood products sector. This issue includes news that BC Wood’s popular Export Readiness Training Program is returning this winter, offering companies practical tools and guidance to strengthen their approach to international markets. Readers are also encouraged to mark their calendars for the 23rd Annual Global Buyers Mission, scheduled for September 10–12, 2026 in Whistler. As one of the industry’s premier networking events, the GBM continues to connect Canadian manufacturers with qualified buyers from around the world. In addition, the newsletter outlines a busy slate of upcoming trade missions and trade show participation opportunities in key domestic and international markets, including Japan, Mexico, Korea, and across Canada. Rounding out the issue are timely industry updates, including federal initiatives affecting the lumber sector and insights into trends shaping wood construction and finishes.

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A tour of University of Northern BC’s Wood Innovation Research Lab

By Zach Dallas
CKPG Today
December 16, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE, BC — The Wood Innovation Research Lab (WIRL) gives University of Northern British Columbia students a unique opportunity to build, test, and collaborate on various wooden components and structures. The data and research collected then go on to inform future building code updates and to validate current building practices. Today, we’re taking you inside the lab to learn more about the facility (which also has a story all to itself) and test a few samples to see which building practice will stand the test of time. Plus, we’ll introduce you to Houman and his research in the lab. [This story has video content]

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Forestry

RCMP investigating logging equipment fire on Vancouver Island

By Kylie Stanton and Amy Judd
Global News
January 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mark Bryson received a call early on Friday morning stating that a massive equipment fire was burning along the Caycuse Main logging road, approximately an hour and 15 minutes outside of Lake Cowichan. Three machines were destroyed, with Bryson saying that there are millions of dollars in damages. …Lake Cowichan RCMP and the Lake Cowichan Fire Department were called to the scene and RCMP confirmed they are investigating the incident. However, Bryson said he doesn’t think investigators have to look too far. He said the logging equipment was stationed 30 minutes down the road from where heavy protests are taking place at Tree Farm License 44, where Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership (C̕awak ʔqin Forestry) operates a timberlands business. …Global News went to the protester camp, but no one there was authorized to comment on the matter and we did not receive a response to email requests.

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Check Out the Winter 2026 BC Forest Professional Magazine!

Forest Professionals British Columbia
January 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The latest Winter 2026 issue of BC Forest Professional is now online! Highlights include an in-depth look at outbreaks and changing forest conditions with Western Spruce Budworm, feature articles on wildlife-habitat balance and operational retention of subalpine fir, and a timely piece on U.S. softwood duties impacting BC lumber markets. You’ll also find engaging profiles (including a spotlight on forest professional twins), thoughtful opinion on mentorship, and insights from the Board Chair and FPBC CEO. Don’t miss these perspectives from across BC’s forest sector.

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A year of fighting wildfires in British Columbia

By Ministry of Forests
The Province of BC
December 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In 2025, the BC Wildfire Service (BCWS) worked tirelessly with people and communities to fight wildfires and build community resilience throughout the province. “We’re coming off our second-worst wildfire season in Canadian history,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “From technology to equipment and training, all to protect people and communities, the BC Wildfire Service has shown us that they are a global leader in wildfire work. Thanks to the dedicated members working tirelessly to fight the threat of wildfire. In 2026, we will raise the bar even higher. …Since April 1, 2025, more than 1,350 wildfires burned an estimated 886,360 hectares of land in B.C. The 2025 season compared to the past five years:

  • 2024: 1,697 wildfires, 1,081,159 hectares burned
  • 2023: 2,293 wildfires, 2,840,104 hectares burned
  • 2022: 1,801 wildfires, 135,235 hectares burned
  • 2021: 1,647 wildfires, 869,300 hectares burned
  • 2020: 670 wildfires, 14, 536 hectares burned

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B.C. mills processed more than one million cubic metres of wildfire chips in 2024-25

By Wolfgang Depner
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
December 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA — The BC government says cutting red tape has allowed provincial pulp mills to more than double their use of timber salvaged from forest fires. The Ministry of Forests says in a statement that mills processed more than one million cubic metres of wildfire chips in 2024-25, up from 500,000 cubic metres in 2023, and representing about seven per cent of all processed wood. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar says that BC can’t let anything go to waste, including logs that have been burned in wildfires.” The statement says pulp mills rarely accepted burned timber before 2022, but both government and industry recognized the opportunity of turning wildfire-affected fibre into wood chips. It says that faster permitting and stronger partnerships between government and industry made it even easier to use that type of timber and the work will continue in 2026.

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Drift logs destroying intertidal ecosystems in B.C., study finds

By Caroline Barghout
CBC News
January 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A new study by biologists at the University of Victoria has revealed why the simple back-and-forth motion of drift logs on B.C. beaches has destroyed critical ecosystems that keep the ocean healthy. … When the tides go out the logs go with them, and when they come in the logs crash onto rocks and beaches. “That intertidal zone … between the high tide and the low tide [supports] a tremendous diversity of life,” said Thomas Reimchen, adjunct professor at the University of Victoria. …The study published in the Marine Ecology journal, found that 20 to 80 per cent fewer barnacles on rocks that were exposed to logs, compared to protected crevices. The fewer the barnacles, the less food there is for species who rely on them. …They found a 520 per cent increase in drift logs since the late 19th century — including on remote shores — with more than half of them from the logging industry.

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Former forest ministry secretary speaks about industry’s future

By Mike Morris, former MLA, Prince George-Mackenzie, 2013 – 2024
The Campbell River Mirror
January 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mike Morris

Regarding a recent Canadian Press story  about a 1,000-year-old cedar tree that was harvested on Vancouver Island. It wasn’t the headline that caught my attention — although I am concerned over the harvesting of primary forests — but it was the forest minister’s comments that jumped out at me. In response to a question about the lack of economically available fibre in BC, he said, “It has nothing to do with government policy, it has nothing to do with reconciliation.” “It has everything to do with the fact that the trees aren’t there. They will come back, they will grow back. But they are not here right now.” Finally, an admission from government that the trees aren’t there. Why then did he and his entourage take a very expensive trip around the world trying to expand a market knowing we had no timber available? Everyone, including industry itself, has been aware of this for years. 

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Trevor Halford Is Wrong about Land Title and DRIPA. Here’s Why

By Adam Olsen
The Tyee
January 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC Conservative leader fostered fear and falsehoods in his Vancouver Sun op-ed. [David Eby has no path forward on the most consequential file shaping BC’s future]. …Reconciliation with First Nations, questions about land title, and creating economic certainty are complex and urgent questions in our province. That is why I feel the need to respond to an opinion piece by Conservative Party of BC interim leader Trevor Halford, published in the Vancouver Sun on Dec. 27. I do so as a member of Tsartlip First Nation and former member of the legislative assembly for Saanich North and the Islands with a record of seeking solutions based on inclusion, equity and justice. … Halford’s argument in his Sun piece reveals either a fundamental misunderstanding or a wilful misrepresentation of B.C.’s legal reality. DRIPA does not create Indigenous title; the Canadian justice system was recognizing it decades before.

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Destruction of B.C.’s old-growth forests puts our future in peril

Letter by Mackenzie Robin Gibson
The Vancouver Island Free Daily
January 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

My grandfather, Gordon Gibson Jr., taught me to speak up when I see injustice in the world, and I am seeing it now. I am absolutely furious regarding Premier Eby’s plans to destroy old-growth and primary forests. They are the lungs of our atmosphere, and cutting them down is not only an attack on our future, it’s anti-Canadian. The only possible benefit to the logging would be to make a few people richer, most of whom are not Canadian, and those people do not care about the longevity of our species. We are facing a major extinction event, at the end of which the planet will not be able to support human life. I ask the province to listen to the science, and to care about the people who you are tasked with caring for. Care about our futures, and our dreams. …Stop the deforestation of old growth, and save the lungs of our planet.

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‘We all share the same goals’: Tŝilhqot’in and syilx foresters learn from each other

By Dionne Phillips
Penticton Herald
December 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Percy Guichon

Separated by hundreds of kilometres and very different landscapes, Tŝilhqot’in and syilx territories in fact share similar forestry challenges. That’s what Indigenous-owned companies are discovering after a series of site visits between operators run by bands in both nations. … “They’re both, in terms of ecosystems, quite distinct from one another,” said Percy Guichon, from the Tŝilhqot’in community of Tŝideldel First Nation. …Guichon is CEO of Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation (CCR), a nearly decade-old forestry company owned by three bands within the Tŝilhqot’in Nation. In October, it and the syilx-owned Nk’Mip Forestry invited each other to visit their counterparts’ work sites, hoping to share lessons from their respective operations. …There’s also a Forest Landscape Planning table, Guichon explained, which has members from the Tŝilhqot’in, Secwépemc, Southern Dakelh and other nations. …During the visit to Tŝilhqot’in territories, Guichon and the CCR team showed their Nk’Mip Forestry guests their large-scale projects, including road restoration, wildfire operations, and ecosystem management.

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BC Timber Sales ‘flexible’ to Sunshine Coast views on cutblock harvesting

By Connie Jordison
The Coast Reporter
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Over an hour of discussion followed BC Timber Sales’ (BCTS) presentation at the Sunshine Coast Regional District’s (SCRD) Dec. 11 committee of the whole meeting. …BCTS representatives, a delegation at the committee meeting, faced a direct ask from Gibsons area alternate director Annemarie De Andrade to pause harvesting activities on TA0519, in the Gibsons aquifer recharge area pending further study of the impacts of such logging. “We can continue to listen and continue with a light footprint, but we cannot pause,” was the response from BCTS’s Chinook Business Area timber sales manager Stacey Gould. She explained BCTS has a role as a revenue generator for the province. …That “lighter” BCTS footprint… is havesting about half of the volume it is permitted to on the lower Sunshine Coast. To make up for that, higher levels of harvesting need to be undertaking in other locations.

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Vancouver overstepped authority when it logged Stanley Park trees without board approval, rules judge

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A B.C. court has issued a rebuke to the City of Vancouver, declaring it overstepped its authority when it authorized the cutting down of thousands of trees in Stanley Park without approval from the park board. Handed down Dec. 17, the decision from B.C. Supreme Court Justice Jasvinder Basran analyzed a multi-stage approval to cut down thousands of trees in Vancouver’s largest park. In 2023, the city entered into an $1.9-million supply agreement with B.A. Blackwell and Associates to remove an initial 7,000 trees over six months [due to] a hemlock looper moth infestation… According to Basran’s judicial review, the initial decision to cut down trees in Stanley Park … was made without the proper authority. …The judge found the city circumvented the park board’s authority in the first phase of the tree removal, but that it went through the proper channels to approve the second and third stages of the work.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
December 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jason Fisher

Ravi Parmar

Ken Day

We know that 2025 has had its share of challenging news in the forestry sector. FESBC continues to invest in the long-term health and resilience of the forests by investing in forest enhancement projects led by local organizations throughout the province. This spring, Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar highlighted 64 projects specific to wood fibre recovery and wildfire mitigation initiatives funded by FESBC, many of which are successfully wrapping up. In this newsletter:

  • A message from the Minister of Forests, Ravi Parmar.
  • A holiday greeting from FESBC’s Board Chair, Ken Day.
  • A Holiday Safety Tip from our friends at the BC Forest Safety Council. 
  • An insight into FESBC Operations Managers’ favourite winter activites.
  • Faces of Forestry: Famiheh Yazdan Panah, Wood Pellet Assn.

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‘We’re looking at everything’: Alberta considers lifting 20-year hunting ban on grizzlies

By Teri Fikowski
CTV News
December 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Alberta government isn’t ruling out lifting a near 20-year ban on hunting grizzly bears, a divisive issue between conservationists, politicians, and hunters. Forestry and Parks Minister Todd Loewen says all options are on the table following several recent bear attacks and close encounters in the province. Grizzlies are being spotted in parts of the province they haven’t inhabited in more than a century. “There’s no plans at this time yet. We don’t want to take anything off the table. I think it would be irresponsible not to have all options on the table so we’re looking at everything,” Loewen said. There has been a ban on hunting grizzly bears in Alberta since 2006. …Loewen says there are several factors that would have to be considered …including the number of bears in the province and recent grizzly-human interactions, and their expansion into the foothills.

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RCMP make more arrests at forestry blockade

The Chemainus Valley Courier
December 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The RCMP made more arrests over the weekend for allegedly breaching the court-ordered injunction at a blockade near a forestry operation in the Carmanah Valley, near Lake Cowichan. A police statement said that on the evening of Dec. 12, while patrolling the injunction area around the Walbran Forest Service Road, police located a cantilever structure across a bridge and a tripod structure in the middle of the roadway a short distance away. The two structures blocked both directions in and out of the cut block where the Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership and Tsawak-qin Forestry Inc. forest companies were conducting work.

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First Nation sues B.C. government over alleged secret land policy

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
December 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A First Nation is suing the B.C. government alleging it advanced a secret land claim policy to give away rights to its traditional territory, surrender control over lucrative carbon credits, and prevent it from safeguarding threatened caribou. The allegations, made in a Dec. 12 lawsuit filed by Chief Johnny Pierre on behalf of the Tsay Keh Dene First Nation, target the B.C. government’s handling of overlapping land claims—specifically, a policy that allows First Nations to switch between multiple identities to give them the best chance of claiming traditional territory. Tsay Keh Dene says it learned of the alleged government policy in October 2025 after the province confirmed the nation would see a sharp drop in the amount of money it received from a previously negotiated agreement to share revenue from forestry activities. In 2023, the province had quietly started negotiating with the neighbouring Kwadacha Nation to develop a similar agreement, the lawsuit claims.

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BC Community Forest Association December Newsletter

The BC Community Forest Association
December 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

As 2025 comes to a close, the BCCFA extend warm season’s greetings to our members, partners, and supporters. This past year has underscored both the challenges facing the forest sector and the resilience of community forests. Their locally grounded, long-term approach continues to inspire optimism and demonstrate the strength of the community forest model. …We are pleased to welcome the Burns Lake Community Forest (BLCF) back to the BCCFA membership. Licensed under Agreement K1A, BLCF was the first community forest to receive a pilot agreement and the first to transition to a long-term tenure. …BLCF is known for innovation on the land and strong community presence. …BCCFA Conference & AGM in Vernon June 3-5, 2026 will be hosted by Monashee Community Forest—a partnership between the Splatsin First Nation and the Village of Lumby BC. 

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Health & Safety

Russ Taylor’s unexpected journey – 39 Days in hospital

Russ Taylor
Russ Taylor Global
January 5, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Russ Taylor

For decades, Russ Taylor has been one of the forest sector’s most respected and trusted market voices — and a long-time friend and contributor to the Tree Frog community. Through his consulting work and industry analysis, Russ has helped the sector navigate global wood markets, cycles, and structural change with clarity and independence. But in late 2025, his own journey took an unexpected and life-threatening turn. We wish Russ a smooth and speedy recovery.

What first seemed like a minor bicycle accident just days before an overseas trip and a presentation at a Swedish Wood Association conference turned out to be anything but. By the time I returned to Vancouver, I was admitted to hospital with fractured ribs, internal bleeding, a lacerated spleen, and complications that required surgery, intensive care, ventilation, and dialysis. I spent 39 days in hospital and went through several critical episodes before finally stabilizing and returning home just before year-end. …My message is simple but important: listen to your body, don’t ignore mystery symptoms, and never take Canada’s high-quality, universal healthcare for granted.

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The Cache Will Pay for Authentic Forestry Work Photographs

The Cache via the Rumour Mill RoundUpDate
December 22, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

The Cache is building a visual archive that reflects the real working life of British Columbia’s forestry sector—on the block, in camp, and everywhere in between. We’re looking for experienced photographers and field workers who have authentic images of forestry and silviculture work in BC to submit for potential use on the Cache website and related materials.

  • Silviculture, restoration, wildfire, and forest operations
  • Camp life (meals, downtime, weather, logistics)
  • Crews at work (PPE on, real conditions)
  • Equipment, tools, terrain, and landscapes
  • Seasonal realities (mud, snow, smoke, rain)

This is not stock photography. We are specifically looking for grounded, field-authentic images that reflect day-to-day life in our industry. 

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