Region Archives: Canada West

Business & Politics

Russ Taylor joins the board of Forestry Innovation Investment

By Forestry Innovation Investment
LinkedIn
February 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Russ Taylor

Forestry Innovation Investment is pleased to welcome Russ Taylor to our Board. Russ brings decades of experience across forestry, manufacturing, and global wood markets consulting. A recognized authority on international supply, demand, and pricing trends, he has advised hundreds of clients worldwide and founded International Wood Markets Group Inc. He currently leads Russ Taylor Global, providing strategic wood business and market analysis. FII is B.C.’s market development agency for forest products.  BC Minister of Forests, Ravi Parmar, said in a LinkedIn post, “there are few people in Canada who understand global forest product markets as deeply as Russ Taylor. I’ve had the opportunity to spend time with Russ and learn from his work, and I continue to be impressed by his ability to unpack the complexity of the forest economy — from global demand and trade dynamics to the real impacts on workers, mills, and communities here at home.”

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Council of Forest Industries 2026 CEO Panel to Tackle the Forest Sector’s Future

BC Council of Forest Industries
February 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

COFI 2026 CEO Panel to Tackle the Forest Sector’s Future: The Council of Forest Industries has announced the lineup for its popular CEO Panel at the upcoming 2026 COFI Convention, taking place this April at the JW Marriott Parq Vancouver. The session will feature senior industry leaders Susan Yurkovich (Canfor), Steven Hofer (Western Forest Products), Sean McLaren (West Fraser), and John Mohammed (A&A Trading). Moderated by Bridgitte Anderson, President and CEO of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade, the panel will offer a candid discussion on competitiveness, growth pathways, and forestry’s enduring role as a cornerstone of British Columbia’s economy at a pivotal moment for the sector.

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Lakes District and Bulkley Valley First Nations acquire more timber rights

Terrace Standard
January 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

More of the B.C. Central Interior’s timber rights are back in First Nations hands. The Ministry of Forests sat down at the BC Natural Resources Forum in Prince George to transfer about one million cubic metres of the Morice Timber Supply Area (TSA) to a coalition including the Witset, Wet’suwet’en, and Lake Babine Nations. …During the signing ceremony, where nine of the region’s chiefs put their names on the dotted line, Lake Babine Nation leader Wilf Adam pointed out that the coalition had gone first to Canfor with a “fair market value” offer to buy it, but the company refused and closed communications. Adam added that the spinoff effect was a stalled and unstable local economy in the Burns Lake-Granisle-Houston-Smithers-Witset region.

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B.C. First Nation sues to reclaim lands at the head of Kingcome Inlet

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A First Nation on B.C.’s central coast has filed a lawsuit looking to recover lands it claims were “alienated” more than a century ago. …Filed in a BC Supreme Court Jan. 26, the suit from the Dzawada’enuxw First Nation targets about five square kilometres of land at the head of the Kingcome Inlet. The lands are currently owned in fee simple by the Interfor, the Nature Trust of BC, and the province of British Columbia. The case also names the Government of Canada. …A spokesperson for Interfor said the company has “longstanding and ongoing discussions” with the Dzawada’enuxw, and that it is not engaged in any active forestry operations on its fee-simple parcels in the valley. …The lawsuit… builds off a landmark 2025 decision that found the Cowichan Nation had its Richmond, BC, village sites and fishing rights taken from it under colonial rule. …None of the claims have been tested in court.

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Cascades announces the sale of its Richmond, British Columbia, packaging plant to Crown Paper Group

Cascades Inc.
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades announced that it has entered into an agreement with Crown Paper Group for the sale of its corrugated packaging plant located in Richmond, BC, for a total value of $65.5 million, including the real estate assets and subject to working capital adjustments and the assumption of certain liabilities. The transaction is expected to be completed in the coming days, subject to customary closing conditions and adjustments. …Given its geographic position, the Richmond plant offered limited integration and synergy potential within Cascades’ operational network, but aligns with Crown’s current footprint, expanding its operations in the region. …With a long-established presence in BC and nearly a century of operating an integrated containerboard mill in Port Townsend, Washington, Crown is a natural long-term fit for the Richmond plant.

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Nathanson, Schachter & Thompson LLP announce King’s Counsel recipient

By Nathanson, Schachter & Thompson LLP
LinkedIn
January 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Nathanson, Schachter & Thompson LLP is proud to announce that Karen Carteri, K.C. has been appointed King’s Counsel by the Lieutenant-Governor in Council, on the recommendation of the Attorney General of British Columbia. The official announcement from the Attorney General states: Karen Carteri (2002) is a partner at Nathanson Schachter and Thompson LLP, one of Canada’s leading litigation firms. A graduate of the University of Saskatchewan, bachelor of laws with distinction, Carteri specializes in complex commercial litigation and arbitration, including property development, mining, partnership disputes, title insurance, director liability, shareholder remedies, civil forfeiture, contract interpretation, financial institution disputes, fraud and cross-border matters. She is ranked among Canada’s top litigators and serves as an arbitrator with the Vancouver International Arbitration Centre. She received the Vancouver Bar Association’s Hyndman Mentorship Award and contributes to continuing legal education programs, pro bono work and community boards.

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New CEO for B.C. Forest Safety Council

By Darron Kloster and Michael John Lo
Victoria Times Colonist
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Cherie Whelan has been named the new chief executive officer of the B.C. Forest Safety ­Council. She takes over on April 1 from Rob Moonen, who announced his retirement in October. Whelan served as CEO of the Newfoundland & Labrador Construction Safety Association for two years and previously held the position of director of SAFE Companies at B.C. Forest Safety Council. The Nanaimo-based council delivers safety training and advisory services to British Columbia’s forest industry.

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City of Nanaimo director Manly spearheads raw log exports resolution

By Karl Yu
Cowichan Valley Citizen
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Regional District of Nanaimo board will plead with fellow municipalities to pressure the B.C. and Canadian governments to prohibit raw log exports. At the Jan. 27 RDN board meeting, Paul Manly, City of Nanaimo director, proposed a resolution for the upcoming Association of Vancouver Island and Coastal Communities conference, asking B.C. local governments to call on senior government to “ban the export of raw logs and lumber cants from B.C. to ensure that forests harvested [on] Crown land and private-managed forest lands are processed in B.C.…” The resolution passed and will be brought before AVICC. Should it pass there, it would be forwarded to the Union of B.C. Municipalities. Manly …pointed to recent mill closures on the Island, with a key factor being “lack of accessible and affordable fibre”. …Leanne Salter, Coombs area director, said she thought the resolution needed to be tweaked.

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Ideological attacks on David Eby for reconciliation don’t help: Ex-Liberal cabinet minister

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
January 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Geoff Plant

VICTORIA — Premier David Eby should be praised, not criticized, for trying to reconcile Indigenous relations in light of court decisions, says former BC Liberal attorney general Geoff Plant. “The drumbeat of complaints… reveals a profound misunderstanding of Canadian law that supposes political ideology is the cause of the current state of legal affairs,” says Plant. “In reality, when it comes to questions of Indigenous claims and rights, it is the judges who have the last word, not politicians.” …“Courts always say negotiation is the better path to reconciliation. Regrettably, their decisions often have the opposite effect.” Plant doesn’t try to predict what the courts will do when they have the last word on the Eby government’s appeal of the Cowichan Tribes decision on private property or the attempt to rein in judicial use of the Declaration Act. But… I wouldn’t bet on the province emerging as the victor in either proceeding.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

New society launched to advance workforce housing in Kootenay region

By Timothy Schafer
Castanet Kelowna
February 3, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

©Kalesnikoff

The Kootenay Workforce Housing Society has been created to collaborate with local governments and First Nations, private developers and landowners and other community-based housing providers “to increase the supply of attainable housing for moderate-income working individuals and families within the Regional District of Central Kootenay and beyond… The society was created by Community Futures Central Kootenay… To get started, the society and has approached the City of Castlegar about using city-owned land to locate its first workforce housing development project. Kalesnikoff will partner with the society as its construction manager, overseeing project design, manufacturing and delivery. Traditionally known for its roots in forestry and wood manufacturing, Kalesnikoff has evolved into a leader in mass timber innovation, said Andrea Wilkey. “Through its mass timber division, the company is now expanding into prefabricated and modular construction services, supporting the delivery of housing projects from design through installation,” she said.

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naturally:wood – New mass timber building unveiled

naturally:wood
February 4, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The latest naturally:wood newsletter brings a suite of timely updates for the wood-building and forestry community. Highlights include BuildEx Vancouver 2026, featuring more than 12 hours of sessions dedicated to wood design and construction — an excellent opportunity for professionals to deepen expertise and network. A major project spotlight celebrates the nine-storey hybrid mass timber Chief Leonard George Building in East Vancouver, blending affordability, sustainability, prefabrication, and Indigenous architectural values. The issue also showcases insights from Archimarathon’s B.C. tour of notable wood-architecture projects, offering design inspiration and industry learnings. Plus, readers are reminded of WoodRise’s ongoing efforts to —advance industrial wood construction in Canada, including resources and alliance collaborations aimed at growing market confidence in tall wood and sustainable building systems. 

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BCIT launches national platform: Modern Methods of Construction Education

Education News Canada
January 30, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) launches a national platform, Modern Methods of Construction Education (MMC Edu), bringing education and industry together to advance the future of construction education and training in Canada. The platform is an outcome of the Mass Timber Training Network: Advancing Trades for a Sustainable Future (MTAT) project. The project convened a national network to support the advancement of wood as a low-carbon building material by addressing major barriers to mass timber adoption across Canada. The MTAT network focuses on education and training as a key vehicle for reducing barriers and empowering the next generation of the workforce with the skills needed to succeed in modernized construction. In partnership with Natural Resources Canada (NR Can) and the Green Construction Through Wood Program (GC Wood), BCIT is building the foundation for a skilled workforce in mass timber and off-site construction supporting innovation, sustainability, and workforce readiness across the sector.

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Forestry

B.C. forests policy likened to paddling in circles

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
February 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vaughn Palmer

The co-chair of the provincial forestry advisory council… Garry Merkel presided over the release of what he characterized as “another freakin’ review” of BC forest policy. …The council report cast doubt on two other mainstays of NDP forest policy. It suggests “many” of the 54 recommendations in the recent review of BC Timber Sales should be paused or ceased altogether. Merkel also disparaged the forest landscape plans.  …His co-chair, Shannon Janzen, former vice-president of Western Forest Products… and their half dozen colleagues believe they’ve produced a set of recommendations — 10 in all — to get everyone paddling together and in the same direction. The changes would be sweeping and fundamental. …A report that offers “no comfort” for today’s crisis in the industry, but suggests waiting five years and maybe things will be better? I doubt the New Democrats will put it at the top of the cabinet agenda for action this day.

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BC Must Overhaul the Province’s Forestry Industry, Report Says

By Zoë Yunker
The Tyee
February 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A forest advisory council has recommended shifting BC’s forest regime towards more local decision-making. The plan has received applause from forestry groups, the BC Greens and the head of the BC First Nations Forestry Council. But some experts warn the plan lacks teeth and risks putting fragile forest ecosystems at risk. …“I think of this like the cod fishery,” said Garry Merkel, a forester and co-chair of the advisory council, at the report’s launch event Monday. Merkel likened B.C.’s crisis to the fishery collapse on Canada’s East Coast. …BC First Nations Forestry Council’s Lennard Joe said he supports efforts to bring forest decision-making closer to people it affects. …But UBC forest management professor Peter Wood noted that the report made little mention of the province’s Old Growth Strategic Review. …Rachel Holt, a conservation ecologist worries that the council’s recommendations stop short of changes that are required to protect key ecosystems.

In related coverage:

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Better government co-ordination on wildfire resilience will strengthen B.C.

By Doug Donaldson, Oliver M. Brandes, Jon O’Riordan
The Vancouver Sun
February 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Forests Minister Ravi Parmer hosted the high-profile first National Wildfire Symposium in Vancouver and wildfire risk featured prominently at the 23rd B.C. Natural Resources Forum in Prince George. Dialogue at the symposium made it clear that wildfire is a coast-to-coast-to-coast challenge. It has stretched the resources of all provinces and territories. …But what if there is a way for our provincial government to more effectively spend available dollars to maintain wildfire suppression, improve prevention capabilities and support beneficial fires as an essential ecological function, while at the same time becoming better at identifying cross-government areas for new investments to improve wildfire resilience? This is the focus of a new report being published by the POLIS wildfire resilience project at the University of Victoria’s centre for global studies. By pursuing more dedicated and strategically focused cross-government integration and better collaboration, the provincial government can leverage capacity and save money over time.

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BC timber sales outlined for qathet Regional District directors

By Paul Galinski
Powell River Peak
February 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Christi Howes

qathet Regional District directors were brought up to date on British Columbia Timber Sales (BCTS) activities in the area. At the January 28 board meeting, Christi Howes, senior communications and engagement specialist with BCTS, said the purpose of the presentation was to create an opportunity for qRD and constituents to engage with BCTS on local forest management and wildfire resiliency planning. The directors were told that BCTS is a provincial government program within the ministry of forests. Its central role is to manage and sell a portion of BC’s publicly owned timber through competitive auctions. Howes said BCTS manages roughly 20 per cent of BC’s public timber harvest, operating in 33 communities across the province. “In January 2025, the province launched a review of BCTS. …BCTS is now being expanded to take a more active forest management role, including supporting wildfire risk reduction, sustainable forest practices, First Nations partnerships and community-focused forestry,” said Howes.

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City considers action after explosion of Dutch elm disease in Saskatoon

By Brody Langager
Saskatoon StarPhoenix
February 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©Wikipedia

The number of Dutch elm disease cases in Saskatoon almost quadrupled between 2024 and 2025, increasing 10 times since 2023, according to a city report. An additional $1.7 million is being sought for urban forestry and pest management capital funding. It was part of a report submitted to the city’s environment, utilities and corporate services committee meeting that was planned for Tuesday, but will now be discussed in March. It states there were 41 cases of Dutch elm disease (DED) in 2025, 11 cases in 2024, and four in 2023. The city said the disease is now widespread in Saskatoon, and it is looking at moving from a prevention approach to active management. …A response plan from the city was put in place last year, resulting in the rapid removal of infected trees. The city said 14,400 kilograms of wood stored on residential properties was removed by the parks department, and residents and commercial customers disposed more than 2,200 tonnes of elm wood.

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Province to take over any prosecution of Walbran protesters

By Roxanne Egan-Elliott
The Times Colonist
February 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The attorney general of BC has decided to take over any potential prosecutions of those arrested for violating an injunction prohibiting people from blocking roads in an area of the Walbran Valley. Forestry company Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership, which has rights to log in the area where protesters have set up blockades, asked the attorney general to take over the proceedings, and to determine if there is enough evidence to charge those arrested with criminal contempt. Those arrested have faced civil contempt of court charges for alleged breaches of the injunction. …Lawyer Noah Ross, who represents Bill Jones, a Pacheedaht First Nation elder who opposes the logging, said, “By being willing to step in and fund the prosecution, they make it effectively cheaper for the logging company”. …The decision means it’s now up to the BC Prosecution Service to determine what charges, if any, it will approve against those arrested.

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AUDIO: What B.C.’s forestry overhaul could mean for workers: Jeff Bromley

CBC Radio
February 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jeff Bromley

Jeff Bromley, of the United Steelworkers Wood Council, explains how new recommendations could affect forestry jobs and day-to-day operations. [Click the Read More below to listen to the CBC Radio interview]

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Kick-Off Plenary Sets the Tone for FPBC 2026

Forest Professionals British Columbia
February 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The 2026 FPBC Forestry Conference & AGM opens with a timely and thoughtful plenary session, An Update from the Provincial Forestry Advisory Council: A New Model of Land Care for Stable Ecosystems, Communities, and Economies. This opening conversation brings together Shannon Janzen, RPF of Hypha Consulting and Garry Merkel (nadi’ denezā), PhD, RPF, from UBC’s Faculty of Forestry, moderated by Christine Gelowitz, RPF, CEO of Forest Professionals British Columbia. Framed as a fireside discussion, the session previews key themes from the Provincial Forestry Advisory Council’s forthcoming final report, including land governance reform, regional stewardship models, biodiversity and wildfire resilience, and long-term supply stability for communities and mills. The plenary sets the stage for the conference by exploring how ecosystem health and a resilient forest sector are deeply interconnected — and how new partnerships, structures, and tools can translate vision into on-the-ground action.

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Provincial Forestry Advisory Council Final Report Calls for Fundamental Shift in Forest and Land Management

By Brandon Wirsz
The Provincial Forestry Advisory Council
February 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Victoria, B.C. – A new independent report from the Provincial Forestry Advisory Council (PFAC) finds that British Columbia’s current forest management system is failing to meet a range needs, including communities, First Nations, businesses and the environment. The report concludes that small, incremental reforms are not enough to address the scale of challenges facing the sector. Titled From Conflict to Care: BC’s Forest Future, the report identifies outdated systems, limited access to trusted public data, and deep structural misalignment as major drivers of ongoing conflict and instability. Decades of layered rules and centralized, top-down decision-making have created a system that lacks the predictability and flexibility needed to respond to today’s ecological, economic, legal and social realities. “This isn’t about tinkering around the edges or adding more rules,” said Shannon Janzen, co-chair, PFAC. “It’s about rethinking the system as a whole. From Conflict to Care lays out a practical path forward, one that moves beyond elusive short-term fixes toward a system capable of addressing challenges and realizing the opportunities that we actually face.”

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B.C. forestry review seeks overhaul, moving focus away from harvest volumes

By Ashley Joannou
Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
February 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

VANCOUVER — A government-commissioned review of forestry in British Columbia is calling for the system to be razed and rebuilt with a focus on trust and transparency about the state of the province’s forests, shifting away “from managing harvest volumes to managing lands.” …The authors of the report, including industry representatives and academics, pitch a model that would change who makes decisions about lumber allotment, taking that power away from the provincial government and shifting it to regional bodies that manage defined areas. …Shannon Janzen a co-chair of the advisory council, and former chief forester, said the use of area-based land management is not a new idea and is already in use in places like Ontario and Alberta. …Forest Minister Ravi Parmar would not commit to implementing the report’s recommendations, telling reporters that he has to consult with other ministries. …A statement from the BC Council of Forest Industries said it would be reviewing the recommendations with its members. …Brian Menzies, the executive director of the Independent Wood Processors Association of B.C., said there’s little detail in the report about how its members would access more fibre.

Additional coverage:

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The BC Community Forest Association Launches ‘Rooted Together’

The BC Community Forest Association
February 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

VICTORIA, B.C. – The Traditional Territory of the Lekwungen Peoples: The BC Community Forest Association (BCCFA) has released a new film entitled Rooted Together, created to highlight the value and impact of community forests throughout British Columbia. It explores how community forests support environmental stewardship, local economies, and strong, resilient communities throughout the province. The film centres on a simple but powerful idea that forests are best managed by the people who live closest to them. Featuring voices from Indigenous and community forest leaders plus renowned forestry experts and specialists, the film explores how community forests go beyond timber to prioritize social, cultural, environmental, and economic values. “The film was designed as an educational tool to increase awareness and understanding of the important role community forests play in reconciliation, wildfire resilience, sustainable forest management, and local economic development,” said Jennifer Gunter, Executive Director, BCCFA. 

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Williams Lake Indigenous forestry project seeks support for continued funding

By Rebecca Dyok
The Williams Lake Tribune
February 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A First Nations-owned company west of Williams Lake says continued funding is essential for projects that use fire-killed wood instead of burning it in slash piles or leaving it to decay. Percy Guichon and Daniel Persson with Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. (CCR) attended a Jan. 27 regular city council meeting in Williams Lake to provide an update on the Palmer Project, a multi-year Indigenous-led stewardship initiative which aims to reduce wildfire risk and improve public safety and forest health through spacing treatments that remove hazardous fuels. To date, the project located along Palmer Lake Road, about one and a half hour west of Williams Lake, has treated more than 1,500 hectares with recovered fibre utilized by Atlantic Power for biomass and Cariboo Pulp & Paper for pulp. Fibre was also previously utilized by Drax, which closed in Williams Lake by the end of 2025, into fibre pellets for bioenergy.

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New take on how to turn around the B.C. forestry industry

By CTV News
YouTube
February 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A new report is offering its take on how to turn around BC’s forestry industry. As of now six mills have announced permanent closures, with six more being hit with either indefinite or temporary closures. Even if the recommendations are adopted, it could take years to change the trajectory of the industry. The report has identified four major themes to begin to fix a forest industry that is in a fast decline in BC, seeing job losses, mull curtailments, and closures.

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High-tech imaging could improve cultivation of trees essential to Alberta’s forestry industry

University of Alberta
February 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

University of Alberta researchers have, for the first time, captured a much better view of what may be contributing to failures in lodgepole pine seed orchards — a tree essential to Alberta’s forest industry. The researchers used synchrotron microcomputed tomography, an advanced 3D imaging method usually used in medicine, in a pilot study to visually explore why some pollinated female pine cones, known as conelets, are healthy while others dielong before they fully develop. Carried out at the Saskatoon-based Canadian Light Source, the technique provided a clearer view of the internal reproductive structures of healthy and unhealthy conelets — a big improvement over previous low-resolution images, says study co-author Barb Thomas, a professor in the Faculty of Agricultural, Life & Environmental Sciences. “This represents the next step in using this technology to help determine why conelet failure occurs and how we can potentially change our management in the orchards,” she notes.

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Native plant seeds from critically endangered Garry Oak ecosystems to be preserved

By Hope Lompe
Vancouver Sun
January 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands are home to some of the critically endangered Garry oak ecosystems. Only five per cent remains today after much has been lost to land development. These ecosystems continue to face threats including climate change, wildfires, invasive species and urban development. Now, a novel B.C. rare and culturally significant seed bank will try to preserve seeds from native plant species, with the goal of repopulating critical ecosystems in the event of disaster. The plan to collect and preserve the seeds involves the Nupqu Native Plant Nursery, the Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship, University of British Columbia botanical gardens, and the Coastal Douglas fir Conservation Partnership, administered by the B.C. Conservation Foundation.” …The team has already begun the specialized process of seed collecting in Garry oak ecosystems, and collected 12,000 seeds from seven species to date.

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BC First Nations Forestry Council January Newsletter

BC First Nations Forestry Council
January 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The BC First Nations Forestry Council has released its January 2026 newsletter, highlighting continued momentum toward stronger collaboration, relationship-building, and First Nations leadership in B.C.’s forest sector. The update reflects on recent engagement with Nations, government, and industry, and emphasizes the importance of moving from dialogue to on-the-ground action through forest landscape planning, shared decision-making, and DRIPA-informed processes. A major focus of the newsletter is a preview of the 2026 BC First Nations Forestry Conference, which will bring together First Nations, industry partners, and government for three days of discussion, learning, and networking. The conference program will feature a First Nations caucus, workshops, panel discussions, youth engagement, and expanded networking opportunities. Readers will also find early details on registration, sponsorship, and event planning. The full newsletter offers useful insight into current priorities and upcoming opportunities shaping Indigenous leadership in forestry across the province.

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West Kootenay community, B.C. Timber Sales grapple with risks of logging in watershed

By Bill Metcalfe
The Rossland News
February 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Residents of a Bonnington, 18 km west of Nelson, hope they can rely on B.C. Timber Sales’ assurances that logging in their watershed will reduce wildfire risk and won’t threaten their water supply. For nearly a year, BCTS has engaged in an elaborate communication process with the residents of Bonnington about its plans for the Falls Creek watershed. The agency has a timber license on Crown land in the watershed, which provides drinking water to the rural community of about 600 people. …BCTS plans and designs logging operations, builds logging roads, then sells the timber to the highest bidder. The B.C. government added wildfire mitigation to the BCTS mandate last year. In the spring of 2025, the province hired Cathy Scott-May, a communications consultant, to steer a communication process along with BCTS professional forester Mark Tallman of Nelson. …Tallman said this consultation process is different from anything BCTS has done in the past…

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Woodlots Weekly

Woodlots BC
January 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The latest Woodlots Weekly from Woodlots BC kicks off with a call for feedback on access gates—licensees are asked to share their experiences managing gated roads on their woodlots to help gauge how widespread this practice is and inform future discussion. Executive Director Gord Chipman then emphasizes the importance of sharing Woodlots BC social media content to broaden understanding of the great forestry work happening on small woodlots and help spread that message beyond the immediate community. The newsletter features a member spotlight on veteran woodlot licensee Gary Burns from the Slocan Valley and points readers to a short video highlighting his long-term stewardship. Updates include changes to the waste and residue policy by the Ministry of Forests, including new effective dates for the interior and coastal regions, and announcements about the 2026 SISCO workshop and a range of upcoming forestry events.

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BC Community Forest Association Newsletter

The BC Community Forest Association
January 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

In our January update, we begin by thanking community forest leaders across BC for their continued commitment and resilience. We also share several internal updates, including new team capacity focused on wildfire resilience, communications, and planning for our Indicators Report and upcoming conference. Read important policy and reporting updates, including changes to the provincial Logging Residue and Waste Measurement Procedures Manual, along with a reminder to participate in the annual Logging Cost Survey, which plays a key role in stumpage calculations. We highlight progress on wildfire risk reduction, including funding opportunities supported through our partnership with the BC Wildfire Service. Member news includes updates on tenure expansion for the Nakusp and Area Community Forest. Safety and well-being remain a priority, and we share information on free mental health supports available to forestry workers, along with the latest WorkSafeBC resources. Finally, don’t miss new tools and resources, sector news, and upcoming events, including our 2026 Conference and AGM in Vernon.

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Regional District of Nanaimo thanks Mosaic for reducing Hamilton Marsh price to $28M

Parksville Qualicum News
January 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Regional District of Nanaimo and Mosaic Forest Management continue to work together toward securing Hamilton Marsh lands as a regional park and conservation area. Mosaic has agreed to revise the purchase terms to $28 million from $30 million, subject to RDN board approval, in their efforts to help the RDN preserve the site. With the lower purchase price and generous support from the community and other agencies, which will to announced if all the conditions of the purchase agreement are satisfied, the RDN and Mosaic are optimistic a deal can be concluded to secure the “critical forest and wetland area.” “We thank Mosaic Forest Management for continuing to work with the RDN to acquire this ecologically significant land and for their reduction in the purchase price,” said Stuart McLean, RDN chair. …Hamilton Marsh, owned by Island Timberlands and managed by Mosaic Forest Management, is situated south of Qualicum Beach.

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B.C.’s forestry industry raises alarm about trees lost to forest fires

By Mary Griffin
Chek News
January 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Another dire warning is coming from B.C.’s forest industry, but this time from the tree-planting side, with those working in reforestation saying funding is running out as record wildfires took out huge sections of the province’s forests. A Western Forest Products greenhouse in Saanichton produces hundreds of thousands of tree seedlings. Many will be planted on Vancouver Island, according to Christina Lavoie, nursery supervisor, Western Forest Products, Saanich Forestry Centre. B.C. logging companies are legally required to restore the trees they harvest, but as the industry shrinks, fewer trees are being planted. Add to that the loss of trees due to years of record forest fires. …At the Western Forestry Contractors’ Association annual conference, there is concern about just how many trees are being lost to forest fires, and pests on public lands. …Forests Minister Ravi Parmar says he’s working with industry on solutions.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
January 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The latest newsletter from the Forest Enhancement Society of BC reflects on ongoing forestry challenges and emphasizes the value of collaboration, proactive planning, and shared solutions to strengthen forest health and resilience across British Columbia. It highlights a safety tip from the BC Forest Safety Council focused on mental health support for forestry workers, offering a free, confidential service to help industry professionals navigate stress. The newsletter also announces a new Extension Specialist position through a partnership with the Silviculture Innovation Program (SIP) aimed at translating technical and field knowledge into practical forestry resources. There’s a Faces of Forestry feature on Jennifer Grenz, plus links to a range of recent FESBC-funded project stories — from wildfire rehabilitation to biomass utilization — showcasing work being done by partners and communities province-wide.

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Squamish duo joins fight against old-growth logging on Vancouver Island

By Liz McDonald
The Squamish Chief
January 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Sarah Higgins

Two people living in Squamish recently returned from the Walbran blockade on Vancouver Island, hopeful for meaningful change to prevent old growth logging in B.C. Sarah Higgins was inspired to take action while finishing her undergraduate degree in international studies at Simon Fraser University. “It felt so wrong to just sit there and write an essay about it, and then close my laptop and walk away, and then I saw on the news that this blockade was ongoing on Vancouver Island. And that was kind of all the motivation I needed,” she said. …Joel Gillman arrived at the blockade in December after RCMP enforcement dismantled the cougar camp, a camp where blockaders created a giant wooden sculpture of a cougar. …As an outdoor recreationalist, he believes these forests should be protected for benefit beyond economics. The two were there on invitation from Pacheedaht Elder Bill Jones, whose traditional territory is being logged.

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When Science Becomes a Target: Bruce Blackwell and the Stanley Park recovery project

By Forestnet
YouTube
January 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

This episode explains how wildfire risk in British Columbia is shaped by both climate trends and a century of fire suppression, and what that means for urban forests, hazard abatement and provincial policy. In conversation with Bruce Blackwell, M.Sc., R.P.F., R.P.Bio., Principal of Blackwell Consulting Ltd., we cover frontline experience from the Stanley Park hemlock looper response to municipal wildfire mitigation and watershed risk work. Bruce draws on more than 36 years of applied forestry and fire‑and‑fuels practice to explain why he frames today’s wildfire challenge as roughly “50% climate” and “50% legacy fuel buildup,” how risk should be prioritized (probability × consequence), and why urban and high‑use sites demand different operational standards—examples include ISA TRAC risk assessments, helicopter removals in Stanley Park, and integrated backburning tactics.

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Indigenous Economic Pathways and PEFC Canada Sign MOU to Advance Indigenous-Led Forest Certification in Canada

The Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC)
January 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Vancouver, BC  — Indigenous Economic Pathways (IEP) and PEFC Canada are pleased to announce the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to collaborate on advancing Indigenous-led group forest management certification in Canada. This partnership supports First Nations leadership in forestry by co-developing certification pathways that reflect Indigenous stewardship, governance, and values, while strengthening access to markets, capacity, and long-term economic opportunity. The collaboration represents a practical step forward in advancing Indigenous economic reconciliation within Canada’s forest sector. Through this MOU, IEP and PEFC Canada will work together to support Indigenous Nations and organizations interested in forest certification models that are locally appropriate, scalable, and aligned with Indigenous priorities, while remaining nationally and internationally recognized.

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Lack of funds drive changes to BC’s FireSmart program

Union of BC Municipalities
January 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The FireSmart Community Funding and Supports (FCFS) program will be closing its current intake for applications on January 30 due to a lack of funding. The program will reopen on February 2 with a competitive adjudicated grant process. This intake will receive applications until April 30. The FCFS program provides provincial funding to First Nations and local governments in BC to increase community resiliency by undertaking community-based FireSmart planning and activities that reduce the community’s risk from wildfire. …Councillor Cori Ramsay, UBCM president said “As the province prepares its 2026 Budget, I have asked the Premier to prioritize renewing this funding. …Details on the specific changes to program delivery are now available. …In addition, several other changes are being introduced, including: fuel management and impacts from wildfire will no longer be funded; eligible FireSmart activities were modified; and all funding requests will now also be limited to one-year projects.

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Support for the North Island College Forestry Program in Campbell River

BC Truck Loggers Association
January 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The BC Truck Loggers Association sent a letter to the North Island College regarding the potential discontinuation of two forestry programs. This would mean a significant loss of forestry education for the forest industry, and we’re asking for your support by copying and pasting our letter into an email and sending it to the college Board of Governors at bog@nic.bc.ca …The North Island College forestry programs are an essential contributor to education and economic opportunity for students in Campbell River and the north Island and provides an important stream of new graduates for forestry businesses. The program has strong backing from local industry, government and First Nations, and it would be regrettable to see the program discontinued at a time when sustained investment in forestry education is vital to British Columbia’s future.

Related coverage in the Comox Valley Record: Writer wishes community was consulted on NIC course suspensions

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

How northern communities can make bioenergy work

By Emily Blake
Cabin Radio
January 30, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada West

What do northern communities need to make bioenergy projects successful? That was a key question addressed during the Arctic Bioenergy Summit and Tour in Yellowknife earlier this week. Hosted by the Arctic Energy Alliance and Wood Pellet Association of Canada, the event began with a day-long tour of buildings in Yellowknife that use biomass heating systems followed by a two-day conference at the Chateau Nova Hotel. “We’re the lead jurisdiction in Canada in terms of adoption of biomass for space heating and wood pellets,” Mark Heyck, executive director of the Arctic Energy Alliance, told Cabin Radio. “We want to continue that conversation, see where the future of that fuel source is going here in the Northwest Territories, but also learn from other jurisdictions in Canada and around the circumpolar world about what they’re working on.” …Following the conference, the Arctic Energy Alliance hosted a biomass boiler operator training course. 

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