Region Archives: Canada West

Special Feature

A call to all forestry students and young professionals of BC: Are you interested in being a part of the future of forestry?

BC Forestry Youth Conference
February 13, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

We are gauging interest in a conference for students and young professionals across B.C. in the forestry industry. The goal of this conference is to create a more unified forestry sector throughout the province by bringing together students and young professionals to discuss current and future challenges in forestry, explore innovative solutions, and build relationships that can support us throughout our careers. This is a youth-led initiative and so having your opinions and participation is crucial to determine the topics and speakers for the conference. We have created a short survey (see link) to help determine the topics and timing of this conference.  This is a chance for young professionals and students like yourself to build a more connected, informed, and forward-thinking forestry community and empower them to help shape the future of forestry in B.C. 

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Forest Professionals BC Honours Seven Outstanding Forest Professionals

Forest Professionals British Columbia
February 11, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver — Forest Professionals British Columbia (FPBC) honoured seven individuals as part of its recognition program in Vancouver on February 5. Forest Professionals BC recognized three Distinguished Forest Professionals, one Forest Professional of the Year, one Jim Rodney Memorial Volunteer of the Year, and two authors for BC Forest Professional Magazine Best Article at the 78th Forest Professionals BC forestry conference recognition banquet. Jeff Fisher (North Vancouver), BSF, RPF, Christopher Vukovic (Qualicum Beach), HBScF, RPF(Ret), and John Walker (Williams Lake), RPF, were honoured as Distinguished Forest Professionals for 2025. This category recognizes significant accomplishments over a career, for providing outstanding service to the profession of forestry and for furthering the principles of Forest Professionals BC. It is the profession’s highest honour for a registrant. Peter Flett, MSFM, RPF, of Penticton is the 2025 Forest Professional of the Year. Margaret Symon, RPF, PCP, of Duncan is the 2025 Jim Rodney Memorial Volunteer of the Year. Lastly, Vanessa Fetterly, BSc, RPBio, and Carl Pollard, BSc, RPF, collaborated on the 2025 BC Forest Professional Magazine Best Article.

Additional coverage:

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Business & Politics

BC logging association’s joint statement on BC’s 2026 Budget

BC Truck Loggers Association
February 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Truck Loggers Association, Interior Logging Association and North West Loggers Association are pleased BC’s Budget 2026 acknowledges the importance of forestry and includes funding intended to address the province’s ongoing forestry crisis. However, we note the budget forecasted annual harvest levels of only 29 million cubic metres, which fall far short of Premier Eby’s mandate to Forests Minister Ravi Parmar to achieve an annual harvest level of 45 million cubic metres. This is unsustainable for forestry-dependent communities, damaging to the provincial economy at a time of an unprecedented deficit, and deeply discouraging for the forest workers and contractors who have endured too many years of uncertainty. Our associations and the forest industry are collectively committed and prepared to support Minister Parmar and government in achieving positive outcomes for our sector, communities and the broader economy. We remain ready to work collaboratively on practical solutions. However, meaningful progress requires a clear vision and accountable plan to restore markets for British Columbia’s forest sector to move harvest levels toward the 45 million cubic metre objective. 

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B.C. Budget: LNG a bright spot, but red ink dismays business groups

By Derrick Penner
The Vancouver Sun
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Brenda Bailey

For all the measures touted as keys to unlocking BC’s resource sector, such as speeding up permits for mining activity, Finance Minister Brenda Bailey’s budget includes additional tax hits. …The ministry of forests will see its budget go from $1.3 billion in 2025-26 to $910 million in fiscal 2026-27 to $860 million in 2027-28. …The budget includes some new measures for BC’s beleaguered forestry sector, such as $50 million in new and reallocated federal funds to support for Indigenous scholarships, the purchase of equipment to aid in wildfire fighting and refunding the province’s Fire Smart program. However, Bailey’s document doesn’t make specific mention of measures Forests Minister Ravi Parmar alluded to at the BC Truck Loggers Association. …BC had set a target to harvest 45 million cubic metres of timber, but the document shows the 2025-26 harvest at 29 million cubic metres, with the number expected to stay at that level through the three-year financial plan.

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Council of Forest Industries Statement on BC Budget 2026

The BC Council of Forest Industries
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC – Kim Haakstad, President & CEO of the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI), issued the following statement today in response to the Government of British Columbia’s 2026 Provincial Budget: “As the province navigates significant fiscal and economic challenges, the forest sector continues to face intense pressure. We welcome Budget 2026’s recognition of the urgent crisis facing the forest sector and the government’s plan to make targeted investments that support the sector today while building a more resilient future. We are concerned about the budget’s plan for a harvest level of 29 million cubic metres over the next three years—a figure that sits well below the province’s own Allowable Annual Cut (AAC) of approximately 60 million cubic metres. …Working together we can reverse the trend of mill closures and rising costs of doing business so forestry can continue to contribute to the well-being of families and communities across the province. 

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B.C. budget includes tax increases, job cuts and $13B deficit

By Justin McElroy
CBC News
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Brenda Bailey

The BC government’s 2026 budget announced a series of tax increases, capital project delays, and a reduction of 15,000 public sector jobs over three years. Despite this, major deficits are still forecasted for the indefinite future. “This budget is different from our past budgets, because this moment is different,” said Finance Minister Brenda Bailey in her speech to the legislature on Tuesday. The speech blamed the province’s economic condition on challenges such as US tariffs and a cooling housing market. “It’s time to take a pause on some of the things we want to do to focus on the things we need to do.” A $13.3 billion deficit is forecast for the 2026-27 fiscal year, up from $9.6 billion for this year. …The government announced a diverse range of tax increases that it said would primarily impact higher-income earners, causing an average increase of $76 a year. 

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B.C. forecasts upswing for natural gas and tough times in forestry as deficit soars

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC government is forecasting that the natural gas industry will play a larger role as the top driver of provincial resource revenue, while warning about tough times in the former economic powerhouse of forestry. Natural gas royalties are expected to ring in at nearly $1.3-billion for the 12 months ending March 31, 2027, up 38%. …The government is anticipating $521-million in forestry revenue for the 2026-27 fiscal year, up 3%, but still down sharply when compared with several years ago. …In the 2020-21 fiscal year, forestry revenue surpassed $1.3-billion and natural gas royalties reached $196-million. …Tuesday’s budget introduces a temporary Stumpage Payment Deferral Program in an effort to ease the cash crunch for companies. The voluntary program covers the first 11 months of 2026. …The government anticipates that the trend of depressed annual volumes of tree harvesting will continue over the next several years, restricting the production of softwood lumber. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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B.C. budget supports growth but falls short for many workers, says United Steelworkers

United Steelworkers
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The United Steelworkers union found positives in a difficult BC budget. …Recognizing the uncertainty created by US trade policy… USW Western Canada Director Scott Lunny said… “Today’s budget advances the government’s work towards long-term economic stability, including BC’s goal of securing $200 billion in private-sector investment over the next decade in sectors including mining, forestry and manufacturing”. …USW noted positives, including: a continued commitment in funding to strengthen permitting capacity in resource industries; a $400- million Strategic Investments Special Account to leverage federal government dollars for investment and job creation in key sectors like value-added forestry, responsible mining, manufacturing and clean energy; and unprecedented investment in skilled trades funding as well as a training grant to encourage apprenticeships. …”While we welcome the $20 million to help workers and employers in tariff-impacted sectors like steel and forestry, there is still a missing commitment to stabilizing and sustaining the primary forestry sector,” said Lunny.

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Why This Mill Survives When Others Don’t

By Forestnet
You Tube
February 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

‘Making forestry sexy again’ That’s the bold mission Bhavjit Thandi is on as the new face of Richmond Plywood. Most CFOs stay in the boardroom, but 38-year old Bhavjit Thandi hit the mill floor on day one to understand the 70-year-old employee-owned co-op where workers take out mortgages just to get in. We dive into how this “shareholders on the floor” co-op model powers a zero-waste juggernaut that invests millions in automation and hiring more workers while other mills go dark. Expect hot takes on the dangerous “gray market” imports threatening Canadian construction and the brutal reality of battling the world’s most expensive fiber costs. Bhavjit pulls no punches on government red tape, the Trump factor, and why Richply refuses to shut down even when demand tanks.

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Truck loggers feeling the effects of a lagging B.C. forest industry, critic says

By Brendan Shykora
Nanaimo Bulletin
February 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ward Stamer

As BC’s forestry industry licks its wounds following a series of recent mill closures, BC’s forest critic says truck loggers are hurting, too. Kamloops-North Thompson MLA Ward Stamer attended the TLA’s convention last month, and came away with a dire picture of how these BC workers are feeling in terms of their job security. …Stamer lamented the closing of the Atli Chip mill near Port McNeill, announced last month. He said the closure was unexpected, but not altogether unsurprising given the domino effect set in motion by a previous Crofton pulp mill closure on Vancouver Island. He said “we never heard a peep” about the Atli Chip mill closure in the week before it happened, “but that’s what happens when you get something like a pulp mill that goes down, it can drag anywhere between four to six solid mills with it.” 

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Collapse of NDP-Green pact gives Eby one more excuse to call early election

By Rob Shaw
Business in Vancouver
February 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The only thing more surprising than the collapse of the co-operation agreement between the BC Greens and NDP would have been if the two sides had agreed on a new deal. …The Co-Operation and Responsible Government Accord (CARGA)… didn’t seem to be meeting anyone’s needs. For the NDP, the deal was supposed to act as a safety net for a slim one-seat majority. …It worked for last year’s budget. But outside of that, the Greens refused to back the NDP on three other confidence matters. And for that, the government agreed to advance the Green causes… [including] an early review of CleanBC and another review of the forestry system. For the Greens …it was a mixed bag, at best. The NDP did launch reviews of CleanBC and forestry, but then didn’t accept the resulting recommendations. The documents seem destined for that dusty shelf in the legislature library where unwanted reports go to die.

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The Silvacom Group Celebrates a Decade as One of Alberta’s Top Employers

By Mandy Bilous
Silvacom Ltd.
January 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

EDMONTON, AB –The Silvacom Group is proud to announce it has once again been named one of Alberta’s Top Employers, marking a significant milestone: ten consecutive years of recognition. This achievement reflects a decade-long commitment to building an exceptional workplace where people feel supported, engaged, and empowered to succeed. The Alberta’s Top Employers designation is part of the Canada’s Top 100 Employers project, organized by Mediacorp Canada Inc. Each year, the competition recognizes organizations across the province that demonstrate leadership in creating outstanding workplaces and progressive human resources practices. Being recognized for ten straight years highlights the consistency of Silvacom’s values and its sustained focus on people-first practices. Employers are evaluated based on eight key criteria, including physical workplace; work atmosphere & social; health, financial & family benefits; vacation & time off; employee communications; performance management; training & skills development; and community involvement.

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Pender Harbour and Area Residents Association Files Updated Legal Action to Strike Down DRIPA

Pender Harbour Residents Association
February 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Pender Harbour and Area Residents Association (PHARA) has filed a Notice of Civil Claim in BC Supreme Court, seeking to have the DRIPA struck down and declared of no force and effect. The constitutional challenge argues, among other things, that the DRIPA: is beyond the province’s constitutional authority; breaches the democratic rights of citizens by leaving them governed by an entity they had no say in electing; and illegally tries to tie the hands of future governments by dictating what types of laws they must pass… In 2024 PHARA filed a petition seeking to challenge the DRIPA and a related Order in Council that proposed to give the shíshálh Nation statutory decision-making powers under what is known as a DRIPA “section 7 agreement”. Government has since rescinded that specific Order in Council and signed an agreement with the shíshálh Nation to pursue other section 7 decision-making in the Sunshine Coast. 

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Local Government Panel announced for COFI event: Resilient Forestry, Resilient Communities

BC Council of Forest Industries
February 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Municipal leaders are on the front lines of BC’s economy, where the health of the forest sector directly impacts jobs, services, and long-term community stability. This timely panel brings together mayors from across the province for a practical, solutions-focused discussion on what a competitive and resilient forestry future means for families and local economies — and what’s needed to ensure forestry remains a cornerstone industry for generations to come. Featuring mayors Maria McFaddin (Castlegar), Brad West (Port Coquitlam), Leonard Krog (Nanaimo) and Gary Sulz (Revelstoke), the conversation will offer grounded municipal perspectives from communities both large and small. The session will be moderated by Karen Brandt, Senior Vice President, Public Affairs and Partnerships with Mosaic Forest Management. Expect candid insights, local realities, and a forward-looking discussion on strengthening forestry and the communities it supports.

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Finance & Economics

B.C. outperforms Canada on exports despite tariffs and weak hiring

By Bryan Yu, chief economist of Central 1
Business in Vancouver
February 11, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s export performance moved against the national pattern in November. Domestic exports to international markets rose 7.6 per cent year over year to $4.59 billion, whereas exports nationally declined by about four per cent on a customs basis. This contrast partly reflects differences in the types of goods each region exports. Nevertheless, provincial export trends remain soft, reflecting U.S. tariffs on key products like lumber, and end of de minimis treatment of low value exports. Year-to-date, B.C. exports slipped a mild 0.1 per cent from same-period 2024, which was slightly stronger than the national reading. …That said, a declining trend continued in the battered forestry sector (-13.7 per cent year over year), where tariffs have compounded weakness from timber supply constraints and other duties already imposed by the U.S.

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Western Forest Products reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $17.5 million

Western Forest Products Inc.
February 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER – Western Forest Products reported adjusted EBITDA of negative $6.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. In comparison, the Company reported Adjusted EBITDA of $14.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and Adjusted EBITDA of negative $65.9 million in the third quarter of 2025, which included a non-cash export tax expense of $59.5 million related to the determination of final duty rates from the sixth Administrative Review. Net loss was $17.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2025, as compared to a net loss of $1.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2024, and net loss of $61.3 million in the third quarter of 2025. …For the full year 2025, the net loss was $82.4 million compared to to a net loss of $34.5 million in 2024. …“Despite more challenging markets and higher softwood lumber duties and tariffs in 2025, we enter 2026 with a significantly improved balance sheet to navigate the expected near-term market uncertainty,” said Steven Hofer, President and CEO of Western Forest Products.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

BC Wood Seminar: Learn about Grants and Government Funding Programs that Support BC’s Value-Added Wood Manufacturers

BC Wood Specialties Group
February 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Zoom Webinar | Wednesday, February 25, 2026 | 10:00am – 11:30am PST | Zoom. BC’s wood manufacturers are facing real challenges from labour shortages and export pressures to rising costs and growing sustainability expectations. The good news? There’s funding available to support your hiring, workforce development, technology upgrades, product innovation, and market expansion. Join this session designed specifically for processors, builders, and related businesses in the value-added wood sector. You’ll learn how to use grants strategically, not reactively, to achieve your business goals. What you will learn:

  • Which government and grant programs apply to your business: hiring, training, market expansion, R&D
  • How to align grants with your growth and sustainability plans
  • Tips on developing a funding strategy
  • Information on CanExport Program and the Trade Commissioners Office

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New National Platform Connects Education and Industry to Advance Construction Training: MMC Edu

By Modern Methods of Construction Education
British Columbia Institute of Technology
February 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Modern Methods of Construction Education (MMC Edu) is a national platform that connects education and industry to advance construction training in Canada. It is a key outcome of the Mass Timber Training Network: Advancing Trades for a Sustainable Future (MTAT) project, which brings together a national network to advance wood as a low-carbon building material by addressing major barriers to mass timber adoption across the country. Led by the British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) in partnership with Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) through the Green Construction Through Wood Program (GC Wood), the MTAT project focuses on education and training as a key vehicle for reducing barriers and preparing the next generation of the workforce. MMC Edu serves as a shared platform where network members, industry partners, and educators can exchange knowledge and access resources that support innovation, sustainability, and workforce readiness across Canada.

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International Pulp Week – Only 48 hours left to lock in Early Bird rates

International Pulp Week
February 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

International Pulp Week (IPW) is the premier annual gathering for the global market pulp sector, organized by the Pulp and Paper Products Council (PPPC). Set for May 10–12, 2026 at the Sutton Place Hotel in Vancouver, BC, the three-day conference brings together producers, customers, logistics providers, analysts and other key stakeholders from around the world to share market intelligence, expert insights and strategic dialogue on trends shaping the future of pulp markets. Through keynote presentations, expert panels and extensive networking opportunities, IPW offers decision-makers high-value analysis, opportunities for business development, and collaboration across the pulp supply chain. The event has become a must-attend forum for those involved in international pulp production, trade and investment, with participants from more than 40 countries expected to attend.

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Forestry

Forest loss can make watersheds “leakier,” global study suggests

By UBCO Faculty of Science
The University of British Columbia
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Forest loss does more than reduce tree cover. A new global study involving UBC Okanagan researchers shows it can fundamentally change how watersheds hold and release water. The research analyzed data from 657 watersheds across six continents. It found that both forest loss and changes in forest landscape pattern cause watersheds to release a higher proportion of “young water”—rain and snowmelt that moves through a watershed within roughly two to three months of falling. “Young water is a signal that water is moving quickly through a system,” says Ming Qiu, lead author and doctoral student in UBC Okanagan’s Earth and Environmental Sciences program. “When the young-water fraction is high, it means less water is being stored in soils and groundwater for use during drier periods.” The study was co-authored by Qiu and Dr. Adam Wei, professor in UBCO’s Irving K. Barber Faculty of Science. 

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’Wuìk̓inux̌v Nation sues B.C. over timber licence extension amid final treaty talks

By Stefan Labbe
Business in Vancouver
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A BC First Nation in the final stages of treaty negotiation is suing the province for allegedly breaching the “honour of the Crown” after an official extended an expiring timber licence in its traditional territory. Filed in a BC Supreme Court last week, the application for judicial review from ’Wuìk̓inux̌v Nation seeks to overturn an August 2025 decision… that gave Interfor a three-year extension to log an estimated 50,000 cubic metres of timber. The court application argues that allowing a third party to continue harvesting on the nation’s lands—without their consent and against their environmental concerns—is a step backward that the law no longer allows. The claim, which also names Interfor, arrives at a volatile moment for BC politics: by leaning on a landmark legal precedent set in December 2025, it lands squarely in the middle of a heated debate over how the province manages its natural resources in an era of reconciliation.

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Fibreglass pollution in Cowichan estuary raises concern

By Robert Barron
Lake Cowichan Gazette
February 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

North Cowichan wants something done about the growing amount of fibreglass pollution in the Cowichan estuary. Council passed a motion at its meeting on Feb. 4 that the municipality write a letter to senior levels of government and the appropriate regulatory authorities asking that they raise awareness of the issue and take action to deal with the problem. Coun. Christopher Justice, who made the motion, said that the issue of derelict and deteriorating fibreglass boats is something that is becoming more acute in local harbours and waterways. …North Cowichan Mayor Rob Douglas said the municipality must signal its support for the continued operation of the Western Forest Products sawmill, which operates in that area. He said he spoke to officials at the mill before the council meeting. “They advised me that they are not aware of any fibreglass contamination coming from the mill site,” Douglas said.

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Alberta spending $400M on new water bombers for aging firefighting fleet

By Dayne Patterson
CBC News
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Alberta is spending $400 million to add five new water bombers to its aging firefighting fleet over the next several years. The deal with Calgary-based De Havilland Aircraft is expected to see the first amphibious plane delivered in 2031. The Canadair DHC-515 plane can skim bodies of water and fill its 6,100-litre tank in about 12 seconds. …Premier Danielle Smith said the money is separate from the $160 million the province spends on its wildfire response each year. …The province says 18 air tankers were available to respond to wildfires last year, four of which were Alberta-owned and -contracted. Those four were built between 1986 and 1988. Loewen said the aging planes still have life left in them, but doesn’t want to wait until their retirement to begin bolstering the fleet. The purchase is expected to create about 1,000 jobs while adding to the current fleet.

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Forestry report draws criticism

By Cheryl Jahn
CKPG Today
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE – [Local forester and forestry advocate Michelle Connolly says what’s being suggested in a recent report, titled “From Conflict to Care: BC’s Forest Future,” is off the mark.] “One of the core beliefs is that people are better at managing nature, than nature is, even though forests have been self-organizing and self-managing for millennia,” says Connolly. “The lack of self-awareness right up front in that report is troubling, because it means that they’re not aware of their own biases and belief systems that are guiding the things they’re putting in this report.” Kiel Giddens, Conservative MLA for Prince George-Mackenzie, says the report overlooks a lot of industry concerns.  …Giddens says, while the report misses the mark overall, he agrees with Objective Number 2 around regional decision making. …But Connolly says where the report truly hits the mark is over what is seen as a lack of transparency in the decision-making processes.

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The BC NDP promised to phase out glyphosate. Forestry companies are still spraying

By Ainslie Cruickshank
The Narwhal
February 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia’s three major political parties found rare common ground in the last provincial election on the forestry sector’s use of glyphosate….During the 2024 campaign, the BC Greens promised to ban the use of all chemical herbicides in forestry. The BC Conservatives committed to stop all aerial spraying of glyphosate. And the BC NDP, which was re-elected with a slim majority that October, promised to phase out the sector’s use of glyphosate altogether. Despite those commitments, chemical herbicides were sprayed across hundreds of hectares of forests in 2025, mostly in the area northeast of Prince George, B.C. …The area forestry companies reported spraying with herbicides each year in B.C. has declined since 1989, when it peaked at about 40,000 hectares, according to a 2019 report by FPInnovations, which describes itself as a private non-profit focused on research and development in the forestry sector.

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Museum Musings: Whistler’s remaining old-growth forests

By Kristina Swerhun
Pique News Magazine
February 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Whistler is fortunate to be surrounded by temperate rainforest, which is essential to the resort’s appeal as a tourist destination. Forests have also proven to be highly beneficial for human mental and physical health. …Old-growth forests, defined as undisturbed for at least 250 years, are vital to addressing the interconnected biodiversity and climate crises. …On the climate side, old-growth forests store vast amounts of carbon in living trees, dead wood, and undisturbed soil. …Since the early 1900s, Whistler’s forests have been logged extensively, and low-elevation old-growth forests that once covered the valley are now found only in limited areas. Commercial logging and thinning have continued by the Cheakamus Community Forest (CCF) since 2009, though old-growth logging was deferred in 2021. …Given that old-growth forests thrive on stability, attempting to manage them doesn’t make ecological sense, especially since they are already among the most climate-resilient ecosystems on Earth.

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Timber technology to get a $5.9M upgrade

University of Alberta – Folio
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Robert Froese

Essential scientific tools used to balance timber harvesting with environmental sustainability are getting a significant update, powered by a $5.9-million investment in University of Alberta research. Forest growth and yield models … are being redeveloped in an eight-year project led by professor Robert Froese, supported with funding from the Forest Resource Improvement Association of Alberta, Alberta Forestry and Parks and the Saskatchewan Ministry of Environment. The work will create a new generation of models … and will provide capabilities specific to Western Canada’s boreal and Rocky Mountain forests that foresters and land managers are asking for, says Froese, Endowed Chair in Forest Growth & Yield in the Faculty of Agricultural, Life & Environmental Sciences. The project will modernize tools used in forest management, for tasks such as timber supply analysis, and for forecasts of how forests will respond to thinning, reforestation activities, tree genetic improvement, innovative silviculture, conservation and climate change.

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Peers honor John Walker as a Distinguished Forest Professional

By Pat Matthews
My Cariboo Now
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A Williams Lake man was of three people to be recognized by Forest Professional British Columbia (FPBC). At the 78th annual forestry conference on February 5, John Walker was honored as a Distinguished Forest Professional. …“John is a respected collaborator and mentor across BC, particularly in the Cariboo region, where he builds strong connections between forestry practices, First Nations stewardship and research,” Forest Professionals BC Board Chair Dave Clarke said. “I’ve been in Williams Lake since 1996 starting in consulting making decisions on a block by block level. Now working with Williams Lake First Nation it’s more landscape level working towards different policies and then also being operational. A lot of the Fire Mitigation work around town we’ve been a part of and helped push for,” Walker said. He has also collaborated with the BC Wildfire Service to develop thinning methods for prescribed burns, reducing wildfire risk, restoring culturally important plants, and enhancing operational efficiency.

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FireSmart funding changes raises concerns

By Dean Stoltz
Chek News
February 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Fire departments across BC are concerned about changes to the FireSmart program and how funding is provided to communities as they plan for wildfires. The Ministry of Forests says it’s moving to a more “holistic approach” based on where risk is the highest but the fire chief who was at the centre of the Wesley Ridge wildfire on Vancouver Island last summer says the program is too important to change. Nick Acciavatti says funding from the provincial FireSmart program was instrumental in saving numerous homes in the Wesley Ridge fire. …The program provides funding to local fire departments that then go into local neighbourhoods to educate and undertake fire prevention work like brush clearing and cleaning properties of combustible materials. But that money may no longer be available to any fire department that applies for it is something Acciavatti is concerned about, considering the changing wildfire conditions here on Vancouver Island.

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Next Woodlot Talk | Fisher Workshops | Silviculture Learning Opportunities | Planting Program

Woodlots BC
February 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The latest Woodlots Weekly delivers a comprehensive update for woodlot licence holders and forest professionals across British Columbia. This issue highlights an upcoming Woodlot Talk on February 19 featuring Gord Chipman, Woodlots BC Executive Director, offering insights from recent forestry conferences and a 2026 outlook. Free in-person Fisher habitat workshops are being offered in Smithers, Prince George, Dawson Creek and Williams Lake to support effective forest planning. There’s also a final reminder to register for regional silviculture workshops in Nanaimo, Prince George and Kelowna, with virtual options available. Support for wildfire risk reduction is showcased through details on the Wildfire Reduction Equipment Support Trust (WREST), designed to assist contractors in acquiring essential equipment. Forest Canada tree planting programs are also listed, offering financial support for restoration efforts following disturbances. Finally, the issue includes a robust Events Calendar with AGMs, conferences and workshops across the province.

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Motion to ban raw log exports pulled at Regional District of Nanaimo board meeting

By Maryse Zeidler
CBC News
February 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Doug Pauze

The Regional District of Nanaimo (RDN) board has reneged on a decision to advocate for a ban on raw log exports following feedback from wood manufacturing companies that said such a ban would put them out of business. RDN board members reviewed correspondence from the Coastal Forest Policy Coalition, Harmac and Coastland Wood Industries imploring them to rescind their recent decision to put forward a resolution to ban raw log exports at the upcoming Association of Vancouver Island and Coastal Communities meeting. The resolution called on governments to ban exports to encourage manufacturing in B.C. and support employment in B.C.’s forest industry. …”If B.C. bans log exports, manufacturing on the coast will shrink,” said Coastland Wood Industries president Doug Pauze. “Instead of protecting jobs, a ban would trigger widespread curtailments, put contractors out of business and strip millions in provincial revenue out of the economy.” Pauze said the idea that banning raw log exports would “magically redirect” wood fibre to domestic mills is “simply not true.”

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Yukon offers financial support to commercial wood harvesters

By Chris MacIntyre
CBC News
February 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

@Wikipedia

Yukon’s commercial wood harvesters could get a bit of financial relief, after a rough start to the winter season for some of them. The territorial government has created a multi-year “forestry sector fund” intended to help strengthen and support the Yukon forestry industry by reimbursing operators for some business costs. Michelle Sicotte, director of the territory’s forest management branch, said the program has three funding streams commercial harvesters can apply to. The capacity support stream helps businesses with planning, training, equipment, and operational costs. Another stream encourages harvesting and sorting of logs for home builders. There’s also a funding stream for “liquidity support,” intended to provide short-term emergency financial assistance to “harvesters who might be facing unexpected issues that affect wood supply,” Sicotte said.

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Environmental groups sue Ottawa over decade-long failure to map B.C. caribou habitat

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Three environmental groups have sued the federal government for allegedly failing to map out critical habitat for B.C.’s threatened caribou. The request for judicial review was filed in the Vancouver Federal Court Monday, Feb. 9 by Wildsight, Stand.earth and Wilderness Committee. …Southern mountain caribou were listed under SARA in 2003. The legislation requires Ottawa to identify what critical habitat a species needs, so it can implement a plan for it to survive and recover. …After a previous round of litigation in 2014, Ottawa said it would finish by the end of the year. More than a decade later, that still hasn’t happened. …By delaying 11 years, the three groups claim Ottawa’s unlawful and unreasonable failure to produce the maps has caused further harm to the threatened caribou herds. …Fully protecting southern mountain caribou could involve curbing logging activity in large swaths of B.C.—something that has worried the province’s forest industry.

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The Wildfire Act needs your input

BC First Nations Forestry Council
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

On behalf of the BC Wildfire Service, we are pleased to share this opportunity with First Nations communities. The BC Wildfire Service is in the early stages of policy development to address issues with the Wildfire Act and Regulation that are affecting wildfire operations and public safety in the province. Following the Interim Approach to Implementing the Requirements of Section 3 of the Declaration Act, the BC Wildfire Service is inviting First Nations to join us in dialogue that will shape the outcome of this policy development. We will be hosting three virtual sessions with the intention of hearing your feedback, perspectives, and suggestions for addressing issues with the Wildfire Act. The webinars will be February 10, 12 and 18. For more information, or to request other opportunities to participate such as Government-to-Government discussions, please email BCWS.Engagement@gov.bc.ca.

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Dr. Jennifer Grenz Wins Lane Anderson Book Award

By the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A huge congratulations to Dr Jennifer Grenz, Assistant Professor in the Department of Forest Resources Management, for receiving the prestigious Lane Anderson Award for her book, Medicine Wheel for the Planet: A Journey Toward Personal and Ecological Healing. The Lane Anderson Award is an annual award honouring the best non-fiction, science-based Canadian works, recognizing books that deepen public understanding of science and its relevance to contemporary life. Published in 2024, Dr. Grenz’s book received the award in the adult category at a ceremony in Toronto in January. Medicine Wheel for the Planet traces Jennifer’s professional and personal journey as a restoration ecologist, discovering why well-intentioned, science-driven environmental efforts often fall short. Drawing on Indigenous teachings and anecdotal experiences, the part memoir, part manifesto shows a path towards ecological healing as told through the teachings of the Native American sacred symbol: the Medicine Wheel.

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BC Forest History Association welcomes first speaker for 2026 program

Forest History Association of BC
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Forest History Association of British Columbia is pleased to launch its 2026 Speaker Series with Jennifer Houghton, Campaign Director for the New Forest Act project with the Boundary Forest Watershed Stewardship Society, on Tuesday, February 17, 2026 via Zoom. Jennifer’s talk, “Same System, Same Results: A Century of BC Forestry Without Structural Change,” takes a long-view look at the history of forest management in British Columbia. Over decades of reviews and tweaks to policy, tenure, and allowable cut levels, outcomes on the ground have remained largely unchanged. Jennifer will explore how volume-driven, tenure-based systems became entrenched and why those repeated cycles of reform have fallen short. Drawing on her work co-authoring the legislative framework for the New Forest Act, she will also introduce this grassroots proposal as a way to rethink and strengthen forestry law so that it serves both ecosystems and communities more effectively. All are welcome to register for the free Zoom event.

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“Task forces are where things go to die,” Public Workers of Canada Local 8 president

Byu Justin Baumgardner
My Cowichan Valley Now
February 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

NORTH COWICHAN, BC — A representative for mill workers in North Cowichan addressed council to oppose the idea of a special task force to identify why mills are closing in the region. Adrian Soldera, president of Public and Private Workers of Canada Local 8… said everyone already knows why the mills are closing and that a new task force would be a waste of time. …He said the Crofton mill is ending several jobs at its plant and that the Chemainus sawmill now faces extended curtailment efforts due to a fibre crisis. Soldera added that putting another group together to investigate why the mills are closing would be redundant. …“its like asking for a committee to study why a house is on fire while the roof is already collapsing,” Soldera said. “Every day this task force spends sitting in a boardroom another family in a mill town wonders if they can pay their mortgage.”

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Want to mitigate overland flood risk? Check upstream as well as downstream

By David Gambrill
The Canadian Underwriter
February 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C. documentary filmmaker Daniel Pierce has focused his lens on how deforestation, combined with climate change, elevates the risk of flood damage in the province’s river basins. Pierce presented his 2025 documentary, Trouble in the Headwaters at the recent CatIQ Connect claims conference in Toronto. …the film analyzes root causes behind the 2018 floods in Grand Forks, B.C., where more than 100 families were displaced and an estimated $38 million in damage was caused to buildings. Much was not eligible for insurance coverage, since policy deductibles for overland flood ranged between $2,000 and $100,000… Pierce’s film features Dr. Younes Alila, a professor of forest hydrology at the University of British Columbia. Alila published a controversial academic research paper in 2009 claiming: “While large floods may not appear to increase much in magnitude [due to loss of tree cover], they may occur more frequently as a result of forest harvesting or deforestation.”

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FireSmart funding running dry has B.C. fire chiefs worried

By Jordy Cunningham
The Ladysmith Chemainus Chronicle
February 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Surprised and devastated. That was West Kelowna Fire Chief Jason Brolund’s initial reaction to hearing about changes to the FireSmart program due to a lack of funding. The FireSmart Community Funding and Supports (FCFS) program closed its intake application on Jan. 30, according to the Union of BC Municipalities (UBCM). “To hear that the funding is abruptly not being replenished is really concerning for us,” said Brolund. “We know our community is no stranger to wildfire. We know the devastating effects that it can have.” The FireSmart Program is a provincially-funded initiative to increase the awareness of community-based planning and acitivies to reduce the risk of wildfire. …In lieu of this, UBCM president Cori Ramsey is asking for B.C. Premier David Eby to make renewing the FireSmart funding a priority while encouraging local governments and First Nations to write about the benefits they’ve gained from the program.

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Intimidation?

By Jim Rushton
Resource Works
February 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Intimidation is the mildest description of the reputation British Columbia has acquired after decades of radical environmental activism. On closer examination, the more appropriate word choice is violence. …I am certain that the actions of radical environmentalists in British Columbia over several decades…meet the World Health Organization’s definition of violence. One has to question the intent of the perpetrators of these crimes. They often claim they are attacking “big corporate interests.” But that is a lie. Corporate leaders are not on site… The violence and sabotage can only harm workers. …What about mainstream environmentalists? …It can’t be denied that those committing these crimes operate under the umbrella of the broader environmental movement. …The moral responsibility in this moment is for governments, First Nations, the environmental movement, communities, unions, corporations, and public institutions to come together to reverse the normalization of violence by radical groups and work to get things done in the best way possible.

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