Region Archives: Canada West

Special Feature

Summary Wrap-Up: 2025 COFI Convention

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
The Tree Frog News
April 7, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Tree Frog News is featuring the panels and speakers from last week’s BC Council of Forest Industries Convention. On Friday, we carried the Thursday morning keynote speakers and panel sessions, and in today’s Tree Frog News we have the balance of Thursday’s presentations and all of the Friday sessions. Below are links to all of the conference sessions in chronological order.

Day One – April 3, 2025

Day Two – April 4, 2025

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The interconnected crises of wildfires, community risk, and forest health

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
The Tree Frog News
April 7, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Former Oregon Governor John Kitzhaber opened the conference’s second day with a call for systemic change in how western jurisdictions respond to the interconnected crises of wildfires, community risk, and forest health. Speaking from decades of experience, Kitzhaber urged British Columbia to move beyond reactive firefighting and fragmented policy to create a landscape-level, cross-boundary strategy rooted in collaboration. “We need to reframe the problem,” he said. “We have a land management crisis masquerading as a wildfire crisis.” …Following Kitzhaber’s address, the panel tackled the challenge of bringing those high-level ideas into local practice. COFI Vice President Zara Rabinovitch moderated the conversation, which featured MLA Ward Stamer, wildfire researcher James Whitehead, and Klay Tindall of Lil’wat Forestry Ventures.

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Conservation, consultation, certification and careers in BC’s working forest

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 7, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The COFI panel on conservation, consultation, certification, and careers brought together diverse voices from across the forest sector to explore how BC’s working forest can evolve to meet social, economic, and ecological expectations. Moderated by Jason Fisher, Executive Director of the Forest Enhancement Society of BC, the discussion featured Lennard Joe, CEO of the BC First Nations Forestry Council; Michael Reid, BC Program Director with Nature United; Kathy Abusow, President and CEO of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative; and Aspen Dudzic, Director of Communications at the Alberta Forest Products Association and lead for the Forestry Together campaign. Opening the session, Fisher framed the discussion as a turning point for the sector. …Lennard Joe answered with a call to action. …Michael Reid echoed the theme of co-development. …Kathy Abusow brought a national and North American perspective. …Aspen Dudzic described their Forestry Together campaign.

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Growing the Canadian market for BC wood

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 7, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The COFI panel on growing Canadian markets for BC wood brought together a mix of voices from architecture, Indigenous forestry, and sustainable design to explore how to unlock domestic demand for BC’s wood products. Moderated by Shawn Keyes, Executive Director of WoodWorks BC, the discussion featured Chris Hill, President of BCollective; Robert Manuel, Strategic Advisor with the BC First Nations Forestry Council; and architect Shelley Craig, Principal at Urban Arts Architecture. Keyes said there is enormous untapped potential within Canada itself. …Chris Hill offered an Indigenous business perspective, speaking about the importance of anchoring markets in reconciliation and sustainability. …Robert Manuel emphasized the link between Indigenous forest tenure and economic opportunity. …Shelley Craig described the ways wood is transforming urban architecture and public infrastructure.

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John Rustad calls for a forestry policy reset

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 7, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC Conservative Party Leader John Rustad closed out Day 1 of the COFI conference with a direct, politically charged address that called for a full-scale rethinking of provincial forest policy. Speaking in his dual role as Opposition Leader and longtime MLA for Nechako Lakes, Rustad framed his remarks around a central theme: the need to reassert forestry as a cornerstone of the BC economy. …”We need to re-establish a viable, harvestable working forest. Period,” he said. …On wildfire, Rustad argued that current policy places too much emphasis on response and not enough on proactive management. …On Indigenous relations, Rustad struck a tone that blended support for increased economic participation. …He also voiced concerns that forest planning is becoming disconnected from local communities. …”This is a moment of choice,” he said. “We either rebuild our forest sector, or we let it continue to decline.”

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Greg Stewart kicks off 2025 COFI Convention with delegate welcome

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
The Tree Frog Forestry News
April 3, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The 2025 COFI Convention kicked off at the Prince George Civic Centre with an official welcome that set the stage for the two-day event. Greg Stewart, President of Sinclar Group Forest Products and Chair of the COFI Board of Directors, welcomed attendees to the conference, emphasized the significance of the gathering and acknowledged the unceded ancestral lands of the Klaytli Tenei Nation. Chief Dolleen Logan of the Lheidli T’enneh First Nation provided an Indigenous welcome, sharing her pride in the relationship between her people and the forestry industry. …Mayor Simon Yu of Prince George followed with a heartfelt address, acknowledging the region’s dependence on the forestry industry and emphasizing the need for innovative solutions to ensure its competitiveness. …Kiel Giddens, MLA for Prince George-Mackenzie stressed the need for bold action to navigate the current economic uncertainty and reaffirmed his commitment to supporting the forest sector. …Kim Haakstad, the new President and CEO of COFI, closed the welcoming segment by expressing her enthusiasm for the convention and the work ahead. She acknowledged the leadership of former CEO Linda Cody and introduced her vision for the future of COFI and the forest sector.

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Regional Chief Terry Teegee calls for meaningful partnerships and sustainable forestry

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 3, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The opening keynote of the 2025 COFI Convention was delivered by Regional Chief Terry Teegee of the BC Assembly of First Nations. …Teegee underscored the significant role First Nations play in the forestry industry, both as stewards of the land and as active participants in the economic fabric of the sector. …Turning to economic challenges facing the sector, Chief Teegee addressed the threat of tariffs on Canadian lumber products. “These tariffs are more than just a policy issue; they’re creating real-world impacts,” he said, noting the strain on forestry businesses, especially those owned or operated by First Nations. “The uncertainty hits us hard. The social impacts are significant,” he added. He also spoke about the need to build resilience in the sector, stating, “Forestry is a renewable industry…we’re going into second pass and it will always be there.” …Chief Teegee’s address set the tone for the convention, emphasizing the need for partnerships, sustainable practices, and the central role of Indigenous leadership in shaping the future of BC’s forest industry.

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Economic outlook and where do we stand on competitiveness and sustainability

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 3, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kurt Niquidet, Vice President and Chief Economist at COFI, opened the panel by discussing timber supply in BC. He explained that the annual allowable cut (AAC) has been trending down, now sitting at approximately 60 million cubic meters. This decline, attributed to factors like the mountain pine beetle outbreak and wildfires, is contributing to a growing gap between the AAC and actual harvests. …He also pointed out the challenges in meeting timber targets, especially with BC Timber Sales (BCTS) falling short of its targets, further stressing the supply crunch. …Glenn O’Kelly of O’Kelly Acumen, who shared findings from a benchmarking report comparing BC’s forestry sector performance with other global jurisdictions. “In the last 10 years, BC’s forestry sector has seen a 3.6% decline in GDP, the lowest of the peer group,” O’Kelly noted. …Despite the challenges, O’Kelly noted that BC had experienced a positive development in terms of productivity.

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Navigating global markets: challenges and opportunities

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 3, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The third panel of the 2025 COFI Convention focused on navigating global markets and maintaining competitiveness in the face of challenges. Russ Taylor, President of Russ Taylor Global, opened the session by addressing the disruptions in global markets, particularly with the US trade relationship under President Donald Trump. …Mark Cameron, Fellow & Lead of Canada-US Relations Strategy at the Public Policy Forum, addressed the current state of US-Canada trade relations and the threat of tariffs on Canadian lumber. …Kate Lindsay, Senior Vice President and Chief Sustainability Officer at the Forest Products Association of Canada, followed by discussing the European Union’s new regulation—the EUDR—that will be implemented in December 2025. …Sean Lawler, Managing Director of Canada Wood Japan, provided insights into the state of the Japanese market, focusing on the challenges and opportunities for BC’s forest products in the region.

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Spotlight on innovation, technology and wood construction

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 3, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The 2025 COFI Convention spotlighted the theme of innovation in forestry with a session focused on new technologies and opportunities for wood-based construction. Kylie Williams, BC Regional Director for Foresight Canada, introduced the session, emphasizing the critical role of innovation in the face of industry challenges such as fibre supply issues and market uncertainty. …Tim Caldecott, Senior Director of Sustainable Construction and Carbon & Market Economics at FPInnovations, followed with a discussion on the opportunities for wood-based buildings. He acknowledged the growing interest in wood as a building material but pointed out that the market share of wood-based non-residential buildings remains small. …Todd Sayers, Chief Operating Officer at the BC Centre for Innovation in Clean Energy, closed the session by focusing on diversification and the development of new technologies. He discussed the Centre’s work in biofuels and wildfire mitigation technologies.

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Wildfire Resilience & Awareness Week

URSA Wildfire Crews: Built on Professionalism, Preparedness, and Safety

By Strategic Natural Resource Consultants Inc.
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2025
Category: Wildfire Resilience & Awareness Week
Region: Canada, Canada West

At URSA, our wildfire crews are an extension of who we are: hardworking, reliable, and committed to protecting the people and places we care about. When wildfires threaten communities and landscapes across British Columbia, our crews step forward with professionalism, training, and an intense focus on safety. We take pride in being a trusted part of the wildfire response system. It’s not a job we take lightly, and it’s a responsibility we’re committed to doing well, every time we’re called to the line. Every wildfire season, our crews represent URSA in high-pressure and often unpredictable environments. That’s why we put such a strong emphasis on professionalism. …Our teams understand that their presence on the fire line reflects more than just their own work ethic. It reflects our company’s culture and values. We show up prepared, focused, and respectful of the communities we serve and the partners we work with.

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‘We Work Together with the Land’

By Líl̓wat Forestry Ventures
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 9, 2025
Category: Wildfire Resilience & Awareness Week
Region: Canada, Canada West

Líl̓wat Forestry Ventures (LFV) is a leading forestry management corporation that operates within the Líl̓wat Nation in Mount Currie, British Columbia. What began as a small woodlot has grown into an operation that now manages nearly 75 percent of the Nation’s territory. Through this expansion, LFV provides local employment opportunities while honouring traditional knowledge and practices that promote wildfire resiliency. The video, ‘We Work Together with the Land’, created in collaboration with the BC Community Forest Association and the Ministry of Forests, showcases LFV’s proactive wildfire risk reduction efforts and further emphasizes the importance of a forest management approach that considers multiple values – cultural, ecological, social, and economic. Klay Tindall, General Manager of LFV, Hayden Leo, Forestry Technician, and Jordon Gabriel, Lead Forestry Technician, shared insights into the innovative practices and holistic approach that LFV employs, highlighting the importance of collaboration for effective and sustainable forest management.

To learn more about LFV’s work and their efforts to mitigate wildfire risk to community, watch the full video here: https://youtu.be/B3OjtdTojhg?si=j7wXMwJmCJHlvFFM

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MacLeod Forest Services S100 Wildfire for Industry Training

By MacLeod Forest Services
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 8, 2025
Category: Wildfire Resilience & Awareness Week
Region: Canada, Canada West

At MacLeod Forest Services, our primary business focus is providing training and response services to a variety of customers. This includes our S100 Wildfire for Industry Program. Our aim is to provide timely, achievable, effective, up to date and cost-efficient wildfire instruction to all stakeholders that have the potential to be affected by a wildfire. By staying involved in response we can continually improve our products and services as changing conditions require. We have provided training to stakeholders from First Nations crews, the Forest, Agriculture, Outdoor Recreational and Construction Industries, Type 2 and 3 Wildfire Contractors, BC Wildfire Service crews as well as rural residents. The MacLeod S100 for Industry is a two-day BCWS S100 course enhanced to better prepare participants to be on their own until organized help arrives. Upon completion participants will be able to: assess wildfires accurately; develop an appropriate plan; and respond safely and effectively. Course runs April 29-30, 2025.

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Drawing from Cameron Bluffs Fire Learnings to Protect Forests, People and Communities

Mosaic Forest Management
April 3, 2025
Category: Wildfire Resilience & Awareness Week
Region: Canada, Canada West

In 2023 there were 41 wildfires on Mosaic’s land base, including the one at Cameron Bluffs. 70% of those were human caused. Person-caused wildfires—like those started by a discarded cigarette, an improperly extinguished campfire, or arson—continue to cause the most fires and the most damage on Vancouver Island. They often occur close to where people live and travel. This was the case with the Cameron Bluffs wildfire, which began near Port Alberni, B.C. in June, 2023 and grew to be over 200 hectares… The wildfire started from a small, unattended campfire during a fire ban and resulted in dire effects for surrounding communities including the closure of a major highway connecting Port Alberni and parts of the West Coast to the rest of the Island. Initially shut down for weeks due to safety concerns, the highway also faced intermittent closures throughout the summer tourist season, leading to local economic losses estimated at $60 million.

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Preparing BC Forestry Workers for Wildfires

By the BC Forest Safety Council
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 8, 2025
Category: Wildfire Resilience & Awareness Week
Region: Canada, Canada West

Last year’s wildfire season in BC was the most destructive on record, with 2.8 million hectares burned—more than double any previous year. The fires caused significant disruption to the work and lives of many people in BC, and the impact was felt strongly by those in the forest industry. Evacuations and alerts, oppressive smoke, high heat, area closures, and lack of access to industry critical resources, including helicopters, were among the many challenges faced by the industry. …The forestry sector is vital to BC’s economy, and its workforce is the backbone of the industry. It’s crucial for forestry workers to understand wildfire risks and management to ensure their safety and the safety of forestry operations. Equipping forestry workers with the necessary skills they need to prepare themselves for the prevention, and/or mitigation wildfires is essential.

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Linking Actions, Sharing Benefits: Working Together to Reduce Wildfire Risk

By Jason Fisher, Executive Director, FESBC
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 7, 2025
Category: Wildfire Resilience & Awareness Week
Region: Canada, Canada West

With the growing threat of climate change and wildfire risk, ‘Fire Week’ presents a timely opportunity to raise awareness and highlight successful fire resilience projects led by partners throughout British Columbia. I think it’s important to begin by taking a closer look and recognize that successful landscape-level wildfire risk reduction starts right in our own backyard. Making changes to the area closest to your home, and to your home itself, can have a significant impact to reduce risk in the face of a wildfire. This isn’t to downplay the success and valuable work of hundreds of projects we’ve invested in but rather to emphasize the opportunity for even greater impact through improved coordination between programs such as FireSmart, the First Nations’ Emergency Services Society of BC, and the Crown Land Wildfire Risk Reduction Program. The Forest Enhancement Society of BC has a unique role in helping facilitate these efforts. 

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Business & Politics

Industry vet’s take on value-added wood plan as U.S. threatens higher lumber duties

By Gloria Macarenko
CBC Radio News
April 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

AUDIO STORY: John Brink, CEO of Brink Forest Products, talks to host Gloria Macarenko about the economic potential for value-added wood products in B.C. and the impact of higher duties and tariffs from the U.S.

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Premier’s statement on meeting with the prime minister

BC Office of the Premier
April 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Mark Carney and David Eby

“Our conversation focused on solutions for many of the issues facing the people we serve: from U.S. President Donald J. Trump’s attacks on our softwood lumber industry, to a national transportation corridor for goods and services, to expediting major projects and affordable housing. It is clear B.C.’s interests support Canada as a whole. “The prime minister and I spoke about building more housing with B.C. mass timber. At a time when Canadian forestry exports are facing an escalation in an ongoing trade war, we welcome an opportunity to meet the growing domestic and international demand for value-added wood products. “The American president’s renewed assault on our forestry sector needs the same Team Canada response as the manufacturing and auto industry jobs in Ontario and Quebec. The prime minister confirmed his understanding of the seriousness of the softwood issue and his commitment to work with us to address it proactively.

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General tariffs a “major threat” for Alberta forestry as additional softwood lumber duties loom

By Ethan Montague
My Grand Prairie Now
April 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Brock Mulligan

ALBERTA — “Slightly perplexed”- that’s the sense among Alberta’s forestry leaders following the announcements out of the US that tariffs on the already highly disputed softwood lumber export industry are not considered “off the table.” Senior VP of the Alberta Forest Products Association Brock Mulligan says the province’s forest industry continues to operate with a “wait and see” mood, with the understanding that additional duties or tariffs could pose a “major concern” for Alberta’s forest product producers. …Still, Mulligan maintains that there are solutions to protect the province’s forest industry. To start, he says maintaining a line of communication between the service providers in Alberta and the customers across the border. …It’s not just American consumers the AFPA is calling on either. Mulligan is calling on developers maple-side to consider utilizing more domestic wood products.

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Premier’s statement on softwood lumber

By The office of the Premier
Government of British Columbia
April 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

Premier David Eby’s statement in response to the U.S. Department of Commerce announcement that it plans to raise softwood duties against Canadian producers to 34.45%: The U.S. Department of Commerce is more than double countervailing duties imposed on Canadian softwood lumber, driving up housing costs for Americans who voted for a President who promised to lower costs. This is an attack on forest workers and British Columbians. …To every forestry worker in British Columbia …know this: We have got your back and your government will fight for you. In Canada, the continued unjustified softwood lumber duties, combined with additional U.S. tariffs and other trade actions, have united Canadians. We have friends and family in the United States who need Canadian lumber to build or rebuild their homes, and both Canadians and Americans need an end to this trade dispute. …I am meeting with the Prime Minister on April 7 and will raise this issue with him directly.

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B.C. Forests Minister announces new Forestry Support Bureau, promising action to protect jobs and strengthen the sector

By Scott Lunny, USW Western Canada Director
United Steelworkers
April 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Statement from Scott Lunny, United Steelworkers Western Canada Director, on new Forestry Support Bureau announced by B.C. Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar: At the recent meeting of United Steelworkers union (USW) Local 1-2017, B.C.’s Minister of Forests, Ravi Parmar, spoke about acting on a proposal that has been pushed for over two decades by the USW, our Wood Council and our local unions: a government office or commission to help protect jobs and sustain manufacturing operations in the face of trade, financial and other challenges. In the early 2000s, the Office of the Job Protection Commissioner was shut down by the B.C. Liberals. For years we have been trying to restore such an agency so that we have the means and mechanisms to fight to keep mills open and members working. …this is a strong step forward in protecting USW members and British Columbians who rely on the forest sector for their livelihoods.

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Logging Legend and Marine Maverick: Remembering Mark Sydney Ponting – A Life Built on Grit and the Coast

Memesita
April 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Mark Ponting

Campbell River, BC The rain’s been relentless here in the Comox Valley, a fitting backdrop for mourning the loss of Mark Sydney Ponting, a man synonymous with the rugged beauty – and brutal demands – of British Columbia’s coastal forest industry and a surprisingly avid member of the Coast Guard Auxiliary. He was 66. Ponting, a respected logging road builder with a spirit as expansive as the Pacific Ocean, died peacefully on February 24th, leaving behind a legacy woven from decades spent carving paths through ancient forests and navigating the waves. …Beyond his professional and recreational endeavors, Ponting was deeply involved in the Truck Loggers Association (TLA), a vital advocacy group for the independent logging contractors who form the backbone of the BC forest industry. While the TLA has faced criticism for its stance on logging practices, Ponting consistently championed a “responsible logging” message, publicly advocating for sustainable forestry and the importance of respecting the environment. [see obituary]

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Indigenous law centre fulfills Truth and Reconciliation Commission Recommendation 50

By Jean Sorensen
Journal of Commerce
April 9, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

When the University of Victoria’s new National Centre for Indigenous Law (NCIL) opens this summer it will be a major step in fulfilling Recommendation 50 of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission… The structure’s footprint will be firmly rooted in Indigenous design, culture and values. The new structure built by Chandos Construction as an addition the Fraser Building will showcase the home for Canada’s first British common law and Indigenous legal practices degree program started in 2018. But it will also combine innovative North American building concepts such as mass timber with the Indigenous values and environmental concerns. A highly-sophisticated moisture control system was developed for its mass timber construction. …The structure features a CLT roof on supported timbers, some of which were repurposed trees removed from the site. The sculptural cladding panels echo the silhouettes of Coast Salish canoes and paddles.

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Heating with waste wood fibre is good for the city, council hears

By Colin Slark
Prince George Citizen
April 7, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Prince George city council took the first step in renewing its contract with Lakeland Mills Ltd. to supply fibre for the Downtown Renewable Energy System through 2026 with options to extend it through 2027 and 2028 at its Monday, April 7 meeting. From a central location near the intersection of Second Avenue and George Street, the system uses wood waste to power boilers that pump heated water to buildings across downtown Prince George like city hall, the Prince George Public Library, the Canfor Leisure Pool, the Ramada Hotel and more. The original contract with Lakeland Mills to supply the products used to power the boilers ran from 2012 to 2022. If the bylaw creating the new agreement eventually passes fourth reading, the new agreement would stretch retroactively from July 1, 2022 to Dec. 31, 2026 with options to extend it through 2027 and 2028.

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Global Buyers Mission 2025 Save the Date

BC Wood Specialties Group
April 4, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

We’re thrilled to announce that the 22nd Annual Global Buyers Mission (GBM) is confirmed for September 4th to 6th, 2025, set against the stunning backdrop of Whistler, British Columbia, Canada. Following the success of our 21st GBM in September 2024, where nearly 700 delegates from around the world gathered and generated over $37 million in new business, we’re excited to invite you to join us this year! This international event continues to connect buyers and suppliers, fostering valuable opportunities and lasting partnerships. Save the date and stay tuned for more updates!

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Forestry

Parmar’s suggestion about ‘wildfire resilience’ logging called a ‘timber grab’

The Prince George Daily News
April 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

On Friday, at the Council of Forest Industries conference in Prince George, Forest Minister Ravi Parmar suggested that provincial parks and Old Growth Management Areas could be logged for so-called “wildfire resilience.” “Parks and Old Growth Management Areas should be safe from logging, period,” said Jenn Matthews. “Minister Parmar is using peoples’ fear of fire to lessen resistance to the idea of logging in areas that are supposed to be industry-free.” …In central-interior BC, landscapes have become homogenised from colonisation, fire suppression and resource management, which is making them less resistant to wildfire. …“We need prudent fire hardening directly around communities to protect human life and property, but what Minister Parmar suggested at COFI sounds like a timber grab,” said Michelle Connolly.

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West Vancouver dedicates another 262 acres of forest as park

By Nick Laba
North Shore News
April 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

On Monday, members of council, dignitaries, developers and elementary students gathered under rain-soaked tent tops to witness 262 acres of forest be dedicated as park. “This is a true milestone for our community,” Mayor Mark Sager said, reflecting back on the work of previous councils and activists to put the park dedication project – known as the Upper Lands – into motion. “Combining this parkland with the other areas [of previously dedicated park], we’re now creating 3,400 acres of continuous parkland, and I’m told it’s one of the largest urban parks in the world,” Sager said. Last May, the district dedicated 1,932 acres in the Upper Lands region as park.

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Protecting B.C. old-growth forests could yield $10.9B in benefits, report finds

By Stefan Labbe
Coast Reporter
April 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Protecting the most at-risk old growth forests in two B.C. timber supply areas would lead to $10.9 billion in economic benefits over the next century, a new report has found.  However, those gains would be wiped out if logging were to carry on as it is today across the Prince George and Okanagan timber supply areas, concluded the environmental consulting firm ESSA Technologies in a report published Monday. Together, the two timber supply areas (TSA) contain about 10 per cent of B.C.’s total old-growth forests mapped in 2021. If they were fully protected, modelling in the report found the two regions’ old-growth forests could generate up to $43.1 billion in net economic benefits over the next 100 years. That accounts for $4.1 billion in losses in timber production across the two supply area.

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Ministry of Forests outlines future of Cai Creek not sold by April 24 deadline

By Samantha Holomay
Castanet
April 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Ministry of Forests have responded to questions about what will happen to Cai Creek just outside of Castlegar if B.C. Timber Sales fails to sell it by April 24. In a written statement to Castanet, the ministry explained that if it is not bid on by April 24, it will be reposted for auction until it is sold. “Public comments are considered within the context of all information compiled to help inform the decision maker about local concerns, but they are only one aspect in a broader determination, which also includes First Nation consultation,” Ministry representatives stated in an email. BCTS Kootenay Business Area is planning to sell off three cut blocks in the Cai Creek area under timber sales license (TSL) TA2185.

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Province takes action to improve wildfire resiliency, enhance forest stewardship

By the Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
April 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Province is taking action to adapt B.C.’s forests to ensure long-term sustainability and good-paying jobs by enlisting BC Timber Sales (BCTS) to play a larger role in reducing wildfire risk and enhancing forest and community resilience through its operations. This work is increasingly urgent given the threat of sector-specific tariff threats coming from the United States. … BCTS manages forest harvesting on more than 20% of B.C.’s public land. In January 2025, the Ministry of Forests initiated a review of BCTS, undertaken by an expert task force, to create pathways for a stronger, more resilient forestry sector. A progress update was announced at the Council of Forest Industries convention on Friday, April 4, 2025. “We have all witnessed the impacts of wildfire on B.C.’s communities, and we are uniting all parts of my ministry to tackle this challenge head on,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests.

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Nine-axle trucks to be allowed on some logging routes

By Colin Slark
Prince George Citizen
April 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Nine-axle lumber truck-and-trailer combinations are now approved to travel on some BC logging routes, Premier David Eby announced at the 2025 Council of Forest Industries convention in Prince George on Friday, April 4. …Eby presented more forestry-specific commentary and announcements this time around to hundreds of delegates in the Civic Centre’s main hall. The premier said as part of the conversation on making it easier and less costly for fibre products to get to mills, the province was approving the use of nine-axle truck and trailer combinations. A media release sent out by the provincial government the same afternoon said approval was granted for “some logging routes” without providing further specifics. The province has mulled over granting permission to nine-axle combinations for years, at one point appointing a committee to investigate the safety and road impacts they would have on BC highways.

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As wildfire season approaches, how at risk is Metro Vancouver?

CTV News
April 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s wildfire season is fast approaching, and experts are warning that urban areas of the province – including Metro Vancouver – may be at risk as fires grow more frequent and intense. A panel of experts – including bestselling author of Fire Weather John Vaillant and UBC Centre for Wildfire Coexistence co-director Dr. Lori Daniels – spoke about urban wildfire risks at the university’s Vancouver campus Thursday night. Daniels told CTV News a combination of climate change, forest management practices and urban expansion into fire-prone areas has contributed to a rise in the amount of land and structures burned in recent years. While in some parts of the province – such as the Okanagan Valley – there is a sense that it’s “not if, but when” a destructive wildfire will hit, Daniels said Metro Vancouver is also vulnerable.

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Federal funding for forestry projects includes $180K for Kamloops-area study on wildfire rehabilitation

By Luc Rempel
Castanet
April 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The federal government is pitching in more than $180,000 for a Kamloops-area study to determine whether rehabilitating wildfire-damaged landscapes can provide an economic opportunity through carbon credits. It’s part of a total $20 million the federal government will be injecting into B.C.’s forestry sector. Jonathan Wilkinson, minister of energy and natural resources, said 67 projects in the province will receive funding, including a number of Kamloops and Shuswap-area initiatives. The Secwepemcul’ecw Restoration and Stewardship Society will receive $184,355. …Tolko Industries will be getting $400,000 in federal funding to conduct further research into a finger jointing process for parallel laminated veneer products produced at its Heffley Creek facility. Local Indigenous groups are also set to receive funding as part of the Indigenous Forestry Initiative program. …And as part of the Global Forest Leadership program the Wood Pellet Association of Canada based in Revelstoke is set to receive $180,000 to help advance international standards for wood pellets.

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Lil’wat Forestry featured in new documentary

Pique News Magazine
April 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Lil’wat Forest Ventures (LFV) is the focus of the first episode of a new documentary series launched by the B.C. Silviculture Innovation Program (SIP). The multi-part series, Out On A Limb, is sharing innovative forest management practices from around the province. …The B.C. SIP was born of the 2020 Old Growth Strategy Review, which provided 14 recommendations for old-growth forest management aimed at boosting the adoption of alternative forestry practices in the province. …In March 2023, the Government of B.C. announced a $10-million investment to establish the Silviculture Innovation Program, administered by the Bulkley Valley Research Centre (BVRC)—A not-for-profit organization operating out of Smithers, B.C. …SIP’s release said LFV’s approach serves as a reminder of the important role First Nations play in “effective and sustainable forest management.” …To see the full episode, visit sip.bvcentre.ca/ooal-episode1.

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BC court rules against logging company in Haida Gwaii dispute

By Sonal Gupta
National Observer in APTN News
April 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC Supreme Court has dismissed a lawsuit from Teal Cedar Products, a forestry company, which claimed it lost millions of dollars due to new timber rules in Haida Gwaii. The company argued that the new regulations unfairly devalued their forest tenures. The rule changes included reducing the amount of timber that could be harvested and implementing conservation measures. Teal, which owned forest licenses affected by the regulations, claimed these changes amounted to “constructive expropriation,” meaning the government’s actions took away the value of their property rights, without formally seizing the property. Chris Tollefson, a University of Victoria law professor and public interest lawyer who represented the Haida Gwaii Management Council, said private operators need to know rules evolve based on changing values and science, and companies aren’t owed compensation “where the change is bona fide, is not being used to discriminate or target them.” 

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Clearcuts Came. The Martens and Lynx Left

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
April 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Don Wilkins

A lot has changed in the 40 years that Don Wilkins has spent trapping in the forests of north-central British Columbia. …As more primary forests fall in industrial logging operations, marten, lynx and other species once easily caught by trappers are plummeting in number… Fisher and marten, two members of the weasel family, “like big branches where they can rest and watch for prey species,” Wilkins says. “You don’t get those resting areas in tree plantations after logging. The trees are too young and they’re so close together. You can’t see anything.” Wilkins, who once worked in one of B.C.’s last steam-driven sawmills near Christina Lake, says he wants to be clear that he has never been opposed to logging. “It’s the extent of fibre extraction that bothers me,” he emphasizes as we head east on Highway 16, leaving his hometown of Prince George behind.

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Free webinar for outdoor recreation groups on wildfire mitigation, preparedness

By Luc Rempel
Castanet Kelowna
April 2, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Outdoor Recreation Council of B.C. is offering a free webinar on wildfire resilience and how outdoor recreation groups can lead in mitigation and preparedness. In its latest newsletter, the Shuswap Trail Alliance include a link to register for a wildfire resilience webinar set for April 8, 1-2 pm. The one-hour panel discussion will focus on how outdoor recreation groups can be prepared for wildfires in their areas. John Palozzi, communications officer from the BC Wildfire Service will discuss FireSmart activities and how to access provincial funding for mitigation projects. Kevin Kriese, past chair of the Forest Practices Board and wildfire resilience consultant will talk about his role as the trail coordinator of the Bulkley Valley Cross Country ski club and fuel treatment projects the club has undertaken.

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Health & Safety

Proposed amendments to policy on societies and volunteer firefighters

By Policy, Regulation and Research Department
WorkSafeBC
April 8, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Workers Compensation Amendment Act, 2019 (Bill 18) expanded the definition of “firefighter” and changed the definition of “worker” in the Workers Compensation Act, resulting in implications for society fire brigades that engage volunteer firefighters. Our Policy, Regulation and Research Department is releasing a discussion paper with proposed amendments to policy in the Assessment Manual to provide guidance on how WorkSafeBC determines the employer of a volunteer firefighter, and to remove outdated language. The discussion paper and information on how to provide feedback can be found here: Proposed amendments to policy on societies and volunteer firefighters You’re invited to provide feedback until 4:30 p.m. on Friday, May 2, 2025. 

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Changes to policy on Duration of Benefits (Retirement Age)

By Policy, Regulation and Research Department
WorkSafeBC
April 8, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

WorkSafeBC is releasing a discussion paper concerning changes made to policy on duration of benefits (retirement age). To reflect legislative amendments to the Workers Compensation Act, policy changes related to retirement age determinations were effective on January 1, 2021. After reviewing the implementation of the initial changes, WorkSafeBC’s Board of Directors approved further policy changes, effective January 1, 2024, on WorkSafeBC’s determination of whether a worker “would retire” after the retirement dates set out in the Workers Compensation Act. The Board of Directors approved these policy changes in advance of public consultation. Our Policy, Regulation and Research Department is now consulting on the 2024 changes to determine whether further changes are necessary. The discussion paper and information on how to provide feedback can be found here: Changes to policy on Duration of Benefits (Retirement Age) You’re invited to provide feedback until 4:30 p.m. on Friday, June 6, 2025. 

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13 charges laid in death of worker at Grande Prairie lumber mill

By Wallis Snowdon
CBC News
April 7, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Charges have been laid in the death of a man fatally injured on the job at a Grande Prairie lumber mill in the winter of 2023. According to Alberta Occupational Health and Safety, Weyerhaeuser Company Limited is facing 13 charges in the workplace fatality. On Nov. 18, 2023, the man was clearing a blockage from a wood chipping machine when he was fatally struck. The worker was using a pike pole to clear an obstruction from a canter machine when the pole came in contact with the energized rotating side heads of the machine. The pike pole … was ejected from the machine, striking and fatally injuring the worker. The March 31 charges include a failure to ensure the safety and welfare of a worker, a failure to ensure the worker was adequately trained and for allowing a worker to clear a blockage in a machine without shutting it down. 

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