Region Archives: Canada West

Business & Politics

Rustad wants action against ‘foreign interference’ by environmental activists

Prince George Citizen
February 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

John Rustad

Conservative Leader John Rustad is calling for immediate measures to protect British Columbia’s resource industries and workers from what he describes as “foreign interference” by American-funded environmental activists. Rustad proposed new legislation to prevent environmental groups based in BC from receiving financial support from American donors who campaign against local resource industries. He accused these groups of “wreaking havoc” on the economy, threatening jobs in sectors like forestry, mining, and oil and gas. “David Eby has idly watched as American-funded environmental activists have attacked our economy, undermining the livelihoods of hard-working loggers, miners, and oil and gas workers,” Rustad said in the statement. “It’s time we cut them off from their supply of American dollars.” Rustad also criticized the provincial government for allowing activists to waste law enforcement resources and violate court injunctions. He claimed their actions have led to costly litigation and stymied the progress of BC industries.

Read More

B.C. Opposition Leader Rustad wants to hit U.S. with ‘carbon tax’ on coal shipments

By Marcy Nicholson
The Canadian Press in Victoria Times Colonist
February 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

John Rustad

VICTORIA — British Columbia’s Opposition Leader John Rustad has found a carbon tax he likes, proposing such a levy on U.S. thermal coal shipped out of provincial ports as a way to pressure the White House to not impose fresh tariffs on Canadian softwood lumber. Rustad said the tax on U.S. coal could be a “tool to fight back” on softwood tariffs and duties proposed by U.S. President Donald Trump, who has also proposed tariffs on all Canadian exports. “We need to be able to create the environment to have a deal with the Americans. We can’t carry on like this on softwood lumber,” Rustad said on Monday. Rustad… has long been a critic of B.C.’s own carbon tax. On tariffs, he and the B.C. Conservatives had previously said B.C. should avoid retaliating and instead focus on growing B.C.’s economy. …But Eby said taxing U.S. coal travelling through B.C. ports to other export markets poses major challenges.

Additional coverage:

Read More

Minister Parmar reports out on BC government resolution on tariffs

By Ravi Parmar, BC Minister of Forests
Facebook
February 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Read More

Navigating US Tariffs & Compliance Measures

Shared by BC Wood
BC Wood
February 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

World Trade Centre Vancouver is hosting a free three-part webinar series designed to help businesses navigate U.S. tariffs, trade strategies, and market opportunities. These sessions will provide expert insights on mitigating risks, expanding to new markets, and strengthening business resilience in an evolving trade landscape. Each webinar will feature interactive discussions, live Q&A sessions, and practical strategies to help businesses successfully navigate cross-border trade. This series will cover key topics such as U.S. tariffs, global market diversification, and interprovincial trade to help your business stay competitive and resilient in these changing times. Each session includes expert-led discussions and a Q&A segment to address your business concerns. Don’t miss this opportunity to gain actionable insights and connect with trade experts. Register today for free access! Navigating U.S. Tariffs & Compliance Measures,Thursday, February 27, 2025 | Market Diversification – Expanding Beyond the U.S. by Utilizing Canada’s FTAs, Thursday, March 13, 2025 | Domestic Trade & Interprovincial Expansion, Thursday, March 27, 2025

Read More

West Fraser fears impact of tariffs on its operations

By Richard Froese
The South Peace News
February 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Production at High Prairie Forest Products would be impacted by potential tariffs on forest products going to the United States. General manager Brandon Marsh addressed Big Lakes County council about the negative impacts at its regular meeting Feb. 12. …“Here in High Prairie, we rely on our southern neighbours for roughly 50 per cent of our trade,” said Marsh, “This 25 per cent tariff would greatly reduce our ability to move the volume of product we produce here in our community. With the existing solid wood lumber agreements with the U.S., we already have varying levies of penalty applied to our product, which gets compounded with an additional dumping duty. …Part of West Fraser Forest Products Co. Ltd., the High Prairie operation has a staff of about 140 full-time employees while also supporting a large contractor base for other services. Those people rely an a strong market for their jobs to support families and communities, he said.

Read More

Alberta Forest Products Association has suggestions to help

By Richard Froese
The South Peace News
February 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Brock Mulligan

Potential tariffs on forest products going to the United States could have a significant impact on the forestry operations in the High Prairie region and across Alberta, according to a provincial forestry association. Alberta Forest Products Association senior vice-president Brock Mulligan expressed concern to Big Lakes County council at its regular meeting Feb. 12. U.S President Donald Trump recently announced proposed tariffs shortly after he was inaugurated Jan. 20. “In the Big Lakes region, forestry supports 314 direct jobs in mills and several hundred additional jobs in forestry harvesting and management,” Mulligan said. …The AFPA is travelling to communities to talk about supportive steps that can be taken for Alberta’s forest industry in light of damaging trade barriers being contemplated by the U.S. “The U.S. is approximately 50 per cent of our market,” Mulligan said.

Read More

As Trump flags timber tariffs soon, B.C. minister says impact would be ‘devastating’

Canadian Press in Victoria Times Colonist
February 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA — B.C.’s Forests Minister Ravi Parmar says the expectation of more duties and additional tariffs piled onto Canadian softwood lumber would “absolutely be devastating” for the country’s industry. Parmar says the government expects the U.S. Commerce Department will issue anti-dumping duties by Friday of as much as 14 per cent, on top of the current 14.4 per cent duty. It comes after U.S. President Donald Trump told media on Air Force 1 that his administration was eyeing a 25 per cent tariff on lumber some time around April. Parmar says he knows many forestry workers are going to be worried about their jobs and he’ll continue to fight for them. He says the extra tariffs are “very likely” and Canada should take Trump at his word. …He said provincial and federal governments need to continue to make the case that while such tariffs hurt Canadians, they will also hurt Americans.

Read More

Council supports advocacy for Alberta Forest Products Association

By Tyler Waugh, The Hinton Voice
Alberta Forest Products Association in LinkedIn
February 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Hinton Town Council will add its voice in support of the Alberta Forest Products Association (AFPA) advocacy efforts. Nicole Galambos of the AFPA – of  which both West Fraser and Mondi are members – appeared as a delegation before council with a presentation called Trade Barriers and Albert’s Forest Industry. “Today [there are] some pressing trade challenges facing our sector, particularly some of the softwood lumber duties and tariffs, in addition to emerging US trade barriers and global competition,” Galambos told council, asking for their help. …AFPA suggested there are six steps the Government of Alberta can take to support the forest industry, the first of which is advocate for Alberta forest products in the US. The second is keep Alberta’s regulatory costs low, with Galambos pointing out that high costs have led to mill closures in BC. The third is … a Build With Alberta Wood Act similar to those in BC and Quebec.

Read More

Sea to Sky builder FraserWood Industries faces economic uncertainty

By Liz McDonald
Whistler Pique Magazine
February 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Sea to Sky Gondola in SquamishSQUAMISH, BC — Peter Dickson has owned FraserWood Industries, a Squamish-based timber manufacturer, since 1998. He has grown his business, earning contracts near and far, including the Sea to Sky Gondola service building and log cabins at Walt Disney World. One third of his business is exported to the US. …“The biggest problem is our American customers will be reluctant to sign moving forward with the uncertainty.” …David Girard sits on the government relations committee for the Sea to Sky Canadian Home Builders Association, and he said the tariffs would have an outsized impact on consumers and demand for Canadian products, and cause reduced employment. According to a recent survey by KPMG, 48% of Canadian companies contacted said they would invest or produce in the U.S. to retain American customers and reduce costs. But for FraserWood, that’s not an option.

Read More

B.C. Forests Minister appeals to southern neighbours in lumber dispute

By Wolf Depner
Comox Valley Record
February 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar

B.C.’s Forests Minister Ravi Parmar said his government will do everything to protect forestry workers in the face of new tariff threats, but also issued an appeal to politicians and others south of the border. “In our case, we are going to stand up for workers,” Parmar said Thursday morning (Feb. 20). “(To) our friends in the United States, we are looking to you to stand up to your president, because right now, when these duties go, when this tariff is in place, if it is in place, it going to mean that that for those who are most vulnerable, those that lost everything in wildfires and hurricanes, they may not be able to rebuild their home, they may not have insurance…they may have to pay even more because of duties and tariffs.” 

Read More

Dix gives Williams Lake hope of saving Atlantic Power plant

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
February 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

WILLIAMS LAKE, BC — The City of Williams Lake has cancelled a lobbying junket to Victoria on the news Adrian Dix, minister of Energy, plans to meet with BC Hydro to discuss the imminent shut-down of the Atlantic Power station. The plant, which generates electricity through the burning of wood waste, is Williams Lake’s biggest industrial taxpayer. The company that owns it plans to shut down soon, unless the province can assure it better power rates and reliable fibre supply. The city has been lobbying the provincial government to prevent the power plant from shutting down, and had planned to converge on the BC Legislature tomorrow for the first day of the new BC legislative session. …The Atlantic Power plant is an independent power producers with a power purchase agreement with BC Hydro. The plant is owned by I Squared Capital, an American private equity investment firm.

Read More

Finance & Economics

B.C. construction industry warns of increased costs as Trump talks tariffs against lumber

CBC News
February 20, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The looming trade war with the United States has sparked uncertainty in B.C.’s housing market, with developers worried that the already sky-high cost of new construction is about to be driven up even further. Carla Guerrera, CEO of Purpose Driven Developments, said the threatened U.S. tariffs are making it difficult to anticipate prices for things like appliances and plumbing fixtures, making it impossible for builders to project final costs and keep projects on track. “Right now, we and our partners are frantically trying to look at where we can source Canadian products and divert away from some of the U.S. suppliers,” she said. There are tens of thousands of active housing projects at various stages of development in B.C., all now grappling with the uncertainty, not to mention the potential viability of projects planned for the future.

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

Introducing DowelLam, a division of StructureCraft dedicated to the delivery of Dowel Laminated Timber

By Gerald Epp Jr.,
StructureCraft
February 20, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

In 2017, we brought this all-wood mass timber panel to the North American market with the world’s largest automated DLT manufacturing line.  Since then, StructureCraft has delivered over 150 projects with DLT across nearly every typology… Now, StructureCraft has made the strategic decision to separate DLT manufacturing services into a separate brand, DowelLam. This differentiation will give clients – including developers, contractors, architects, and structural engineers – a direct line of service for DLT sales, technical support, and design assistance. …the two brands will maintain their services: As StructureCraft – structural consulting engineering and construction using all structural materials, including steel, concrete, glass, and timber; and As DowelLam – design-assist, engineering, manufacturing, and supply of DLT products. All DLT product inquiries will be addressed through DowelLam, allowing us to serve clients in a more focused way throughout the design, manufacturing and delivery phases. DowelLam has also launched its new website. Learn more here: www.dowellam.com

Read More

City of Vancouver staff oppose single-staircase residential buildings due to safety risks

By Kenneth Chan
The Daily Hive
February 20, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Government of British Columbia recently approved and enacted changes to the BC Building Code to enable just a single staircase for new small multi-unit residential buildings. However, in response to Vancouver City Council’s approved directive requesting City staff to consider similar changes to the separate Vancouver Building Code, City staff are strongly opposing such a flexible allowance, primarily due to safety concerns. This negative recommendation to City Council takes into account critical feedback previously provided by fire rescue departments in BC during the provincial government’s consultation on its proposed changes. The provincial government’s new regulations enable residential buildings up to six storeys — designed for no more than 24 residents per floor — to have just one egress staircase. Previously, such buildings with three or more storeys required at least two egress staircases.

Read More

Forestry

B.C. government defends withholding details of shíshálh Nation deal

By Vaughn Palmer
Vancouver Sun
February 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA — The New Democrats last August committed the province to paying more than $100 million over five years to the Sunshine Coast-based shíshálh Nation. But they kept the amount and related terms secret until well after the provincial election. …Those payments are in addition to $32 million provided to the nation for land purchases and implementation costs in an agreement signed by the previous John Horgan government in 2018. …The New Democrats initially excused the delay in making the other terms public, saying they wanted to release the agreement — honest, they did. …The ministry challenged my view that the agreement signed last year and released this year broke new ground with commitments to negotiate Aboriginal title and also to negotiate “exclusive decision-making” with the shíshálh nation. …It was about providing enough time to, you know, start a proper conversation with anyone gullible enough to trust this government on such matters.

Read More

Okanagan producers of a documentary focused on wildfires ask for funds to finish their project

By Rob Gibson
Castanet
February 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A retired forester and a Kelowna entrepreneur have joined forces to produce a documentary focused on British Columbia’s wildfire crisis by exploring forest management solutions. The project is the brainchild of Rick Maddison, who lost his home in the 2003 Okanagan Mountain Park wildfire, and retired forester Murray Wilson. The pair teamed up to create a film focused on solutions rather than the devastation. The documentary is being produced by the Kelowna’s Distill Media, and filming has taken place throughout B.C., Nevada, and California. The documentary focuses on innovative forest management techniques designed to make wildfires more controllable and less destructive and features interviews with leading experts… The team is hoping to raise $45,000 to finish the production and distribution of their film.

Read More

Kaslo and District Community Forest Society meeting discusses salvaging burned trees and fire mitigation

By Samantha Holomay
Castanet
February 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Kaslo and District Community Forest Society (KDCFS) revisited previous board discussions about future logging plans needed to mitigate fires. During a Feb. 20 meeting, KDCFS members highlighted the demand for cedar and fir while highlighting that several blocks of hemlock trees have been damaged by past fires, rendering some unusable. The Briggs Creek fire that occurred in 2022 led to the destruction of many hemlock trees that will need to be harvested in the next two years before deteriorating. Society forester and treasurer Jeff Mattes explained that the society’s logging plans for the year 2025 will include utilizing a patch-cut system to reserve some of the trees. A patch-cut system refers to the removal of an entire stand of trees less than one hectare.

Read More

Northeastern co-op student in Vancouver develops affordable wildfire detection technology

By Kate Rix
Northeastern Global News – Northeastern University
February 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Devices used to detect and prevent wildfires in remote forests are expensive, but the one that Northeastern University student Anson He is making will be cheaper to launch on drones over dense woodlands. He is pursuing his master’s degree in computer science at Northeastern’s Vancouver campus. In January, he started a co-op at Bayes Studio — a Vancouver company that uses robotics and machine learning to make forest fire detection tools. He is helping to produce a device that uses less expensive components than others on the market. His role is core to the small company’s success: He is in charge of prototyping the hardware and coding the software for what Bayes calls its Edge device.  Other team members work on integrating artificial intelligence into the device’s functionality and connecting the device to servers.

Read More

Canada and Northwest Territories sign nature agreement

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
Cision Newswire
February 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

YELLOWKNIFE, NT – The Governments of Canada and the Northwest Territories are working together to protect nature. The Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, alongside the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change for the Government of Northwest Territories, jointly announced the signing of the Canada–Northwest Territories Nature Agreement to advance nature-related priorities, in collaboration with Indigenous governments, across the territory. The 10-year Agreement reflects the governments’ shared commitment to long-term environmental sustainability and addresses the critical challenge of biodiversity loss. This is done by providing support for Indigenous-led Protected and Conserved Areas, improving outcomes for key species at risk, supporting Indigenous leadership in conservation and stewardship, and facilitating data exchange. The Government of Northwest Territories will work with Indigenous governments and organizations toward the protection and conservation of 6% of the territory by 2028, with the potential to protect and conserve up to 9.6% of the territory by 2035. 

Read More

BC called on to protect caribou with logging moratorium

By Stefan Labbe
The Prince George Citizen
February 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A Kootenay-based conservation group is calling on British Columbia to enact an interim logging moratorium in the critical habitat of endangered mountain caribou. The call from Wildsight comes four years after the B.C. and federal governments signed an agreement committing to immediate and long-term actions to stabilize endangered caribou population. Over that time, B.C. has blown past deadlines to release recommendations that would protect the species. With one year left before the agreement expires, Wildsight says caribou habitat continues to be logged. …Responding to the call for a logging moratorium, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship said in an email it has made “significant progress” recovering southern mountain caribou in the four years since signing the bilateral agreement. That includes implementing logging moratoriums on over 724,000 hectares of land, read the statement unattributed to any individual at the ministry.

Read More

Vancouver Island has a ‘relative abundance’ of the kinds of bats considered to be at risk

By Jessica Durling
Nanaimo News Bulletin
February 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Bat species considered to be at risk seem to be in “relative abundance” on the east coast of Vancouver Island. Scott Wilson, wildlife research biologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada, gave a first look into data he’s been gathering during a presentation Feb. 20 hosted by Nanaimo and Area Land Trust and Nature Nanaimo. “I’ve worked on migratory birds most of my life and the bats a bit more recently, and we know so much less about bats in comparison to migratory birds,” said Wilson. “I’d say we’re where we were 30 years ago with birds in terms of understanding their habitat needs and their ecology.” …The data shows that in the Nanaimo area, wetlands were significantly preferred by the myotis species, with a relative abundance 6-10 times higher compared to non-wetlands. They were also preferred by the silver-haired hoary and big brown group, but less significantly, with the species also frequenting meadow bluffs. 

Read More

If a tree falls in a private forest …

By Karan Saxena
The Narwhal
February 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In 2019, the residents of Glade, B.C., learned they had no right to clean drinking water, after members of the Kootenay community waged a legal battle against forestry companies logging in their watershed. A judge sided with the timber companies, arguing that their economic interests outweighed the community’s concerns about its water supply. A similar story has emerged in Wynndel, B.C. — another town in the drought-stricken region — as residents worry about planned logging in their watershed, Duck Creek. Here, in the Kootenays, logging on both private and Crown land is pretty widespread. One resident told reporter Steph Kwetásel’wet Wood that forestry in the area has gotten out of hand, and lack of management on sustainable practices has turned the practice into “corporate slaughter.” …about five per cent (or 4.5 million hectares) of B.C.’s forests are privately owned, which means that the public has little insight, and even less say, into what happens.

Read More

B.C. is Burning Documentary Nears Completion, Seeks Community Support

By Murray Wilson
BC is Burning
February 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kelowna, B.C. – A new documentary, B.C. is Burning, is tackling British Columbia’s wildfire crisis by exploring forest management solutions. The project was sparked in 2024 when Kelowna entrepreneur Rick Maddison, who lost his home in the 2003 Okanagan Mountain Park wildfire, came across an article by retired forester Murray Wilson about wildfire prevention. The two teamed up to create a film focused on solutions rather than devastation. “I’m hoping if these ideas in the film are adopted, more communities can be protected from this ongoing threat,” says Maddison. …The documentary features interviews with leading experts, including scientists, carbon specialists, and forestry professionals, providing a comprehensive look at the problem and potential solutions. “We’ve spoken with some of the leading people in the field,” says Wilson. “Their insights could change how we manage our forests—and how we protect our communities.” The team is hoping to raise $45,000 to finish production and distribution of their film.

Read More

Eby vows to cut ‘red tape’ for B.C. resource and energy projects — citing tariff threats

By Shannon Waters
The Narwhal
February 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s main response to the tariff threat from the United States so far is a vague plan to “expedite” 18 energy and mining projects — a commitment reiterated in the throne speech, which said the province will “speed up permitting and regulatory approvals” for major resource and energy projects. The selected projects include nine previously announced wind projects the government had already exempted from environmental assessments.  The preliminary list of expedited projects also includes the& North Coast transmission line to power the liquefied natural gas (LNG), mining and other industries, the Cedar LNG export facility the government had already approved, two natural gas pipelines and four mining projects. Eby had already announced that the transmission line, which will dodge an environmental assessment, will get speedy permitting… Details on exactly how the province intends to approve those projects faster remain scarce, but the push to fast-track major projects is drawing criticism from some environmental advocates, First Nations and opposition MLAs.

Read More

The Kootenays are getting drier. A small B.C. community worries more logging puts its water at risk

By Steph Kwetasel’wet Wood
The Narwhal
February 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Wynndel is about halfway between Nelson and Cranbrook in the Kootenays in southeast British Columbia. Private logging is widespread in the region. Some communities have tried pushing back, but their efforts have run up against private ownership and lax regulations. After residents of Glade, a nearby community, mounted a legal challenge to private logging near their community water supply, a B.C. Supreme Court judge concluded British Columbians do not have any inherent right to clean drinking water… In 2019, the province announced a review of the Private Managed Forest Lands Act, but no amendments to the act have been made. The ministry said it is still working with the Private Forest Landowners Association and Managed Forest Council “to modernize the Private Managed Forest Land Program.”.. According to the province, just over one million hectares (or around one per cent of the province) is privately managed forest land.

Read More

Old-growth logging was ‘goal’ of Interfor: BC Forest Appeals Commission decision

By Brenna Owen
The Canadian Press in the Financial Post
February 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC-based Interfor reaped an estimated $1.8 million in net profit from logging in old-growth areas that were meant to be preserved, a decision by the province’s Forest Appeals Commission says. The commission upheld the finding that Interfor committed eight contraventions of the Forest and Range Practices Act with the logging between 2012 and 2016 in the Arrow Lakes area of southeastern BC. …Interfor’s forest stewardship plan for the area stipulated that logging should not take place in old-growth management areas except in certain circumstances. It said Interfor’s site plans didn’t meet those requirements. Instead, it said the configuration of the cut blocks “indicates that the harvesting of (old-growth management areas) was a goal for Interfor, rather than confining such harvesting to exceptional circumstances,” as required by the stewardship plan. …Interfor acknowledged that its operations had involved logging old-growth management areas. But the company claimed it had complied with its forest stewardship plan.

Read More

Kaslo and District Community Forest Society meeting seeks to discuss fire mitigation long-term community forest sustainability

By Samantha Holomay
Castanet
February 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The next Kaslo and District Community Forest Society meeting is scheduled for Thursday, Feb.20. Society chair Chris Webster said the society has been refocusing on fire mitigation efforts, community protection and the significant costs associated with fighting fires. Webster also touched on the broader implications of climate change and the need for pragmatic measures to protect tree health. “Cedar has been a big part of our forest, and we’ve got a ton of hemlock, and nobody wants hemlock,” said Webster, adding that other species have been affected and deemed undesirable in part due to diseases. “(Hemlock is) having a real hard time, especially with the heat and the drought.” Webster also reflected on the changes to community engagement and the financial facets that have impacted the society’s operations.

Read More

All 6 spotted owls released in Fraser Canyon now dead

By Kemone Moodley
Hope Standard
February 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The mission to save the Northern Spotted Owl has hit another setback after its latest released owls were found dead near Hope over the winter. This means all six owls, raised through the conservation breeding program in Langley and released into the wild, are dead. “In June 2024, two male spotted owls were moved to an aviary in a protected forest area in the Fraser Valley and subsequently released into the wild. Unfortunately, both were found deceased later that year,” said the Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship via email. “A necropsy on one determined that he was emaciated, and his diminished condition was severe enough to cause death. It is likely the other succumbed to a predator.” Both birds were part of a partnership between the province’s Spotted Owl Breeding and Release Program and Spuzzum First Nation…

Read More

Hope’s new wildfire plans suggest town at only moderate fire risk

By Grace Giesbrecht
Fraser Valley Current in the Penticton Herald
February 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Big, dense forests full of highly flammable wildfire fuel surround Hope. But the town itself isn’t as doomed to fiery destruction as one might initially fear. While there is plenty of potential for wildfires in the area, a new report presented to Hope council says Hope itself benefits from several geographic features that keep the risk to homes and businesses to moderate levels. The wildfire risks facing Hope have been comprehensively catalogued in the community’s first wildfire resilience plan, a draft of which was presented to council earlier this month. The report warns that a severe wildfire could burn wide swaths of the forests surrounding the town. The forests are dense and full of coniferous trees that bake in hot, dry summer weather. In Hope, the highest risk areas are those that buttress the nearby woods. 

Additional coverage in Fraser Valley Current by Tyler Olsen: Why Hope’s surrounding forests pose only a ’moderate’ risk

Read More

Clearwater County gets provincial grant to help protect Nordegg from wildfires

Red Deer Advocate
February 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Clearwater County’s West Country and communities such as Nordegg are vulnerable to wildfire. The wildfire risk was brought home last summer. In July and August 2024, two large wildfires burned for weeks and got within 25 kilometres and 50 kilometres of the Nordegg townsite before they were brought under control. To prepare for future wildfires the municipality applied for a grant from the Forest Resource Improvement Association of Alberta for a grant to help reduce the opportunities for wildfires to threaten homes and cabins in the growing community west of Rocky Mountain House. Last month, the municipality was approved for a $200,000 grant for vegetation and fuel management efforts. The money will be used to mulch about 70 acres of tree cones from the forest floor Nordegg’s north subdivision. …Alberta Minister of Forestry and Parks Todd Loewen has made it clear that communities vulnerable to wildfires need to step up efforts to reduce the risk.

Read More

B.C. forges ahead on wildfire resilience amid cross-border uncertainty

By Doug Donaldson and Oliver Brandes
The Northern View
February 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Doug Donaldson

Oliver Brandes

B.C. recently demonstrated its deep reciprocal relations with the U.S. by sending a team of highly trained wildland firefighters to assist with the devastating blazes in the Los Angeles area. This genuine spirit of cooperation and care is the opposite of the sentiment exposed in President Trump’s tariff approach. Historically, we’ve always been there for them, and they’ve always been there for us. But now, as B.C. and Canada fight back against the U.S. tariffs, we don’t know how an erratic leadership south of the border will react. And we don’t know how our longstanding and effective reciprocal relationship around wildfire will be affected. Thankfully, B.C. is a leader in wildfire management nationally and plays an important role globally. Although more needs to be done here at home, a recent report from the B.C. Wildfire Service shows progress on how we plan for and address wildfires in our province. …Now, we just need to go farther faster.

Read More

EarthDaily Analytics Acquires SkyForest, Enhancing Wildfire Risk and Forestry Solutions

By EarthDaily Analytics
Cision Newswire
February 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC– EarthDaily Analytics, a global leader in Earth Observation data and analytics, is redefining environmental intelligence with its acquisition of SkyForest, a cutting-edge platform specializing in wildfire risk assessment and forestry analytics. This strategic acquisition strengthens EarthDaily’s robust Earth Intelligence offerings, reinforcing its position as an indispensable partner for industries and governmental organizations managing the mitigation of environmental risk. EarthDaily’s expansion is driven by a commitment to providing real-time, AI-powered geospatial insights that address today’s most critical environmental challenges. The integration of SkyForest technology will significantly strengthen EarthDaily’s ability to address key areas like natural disaster mitigation, sustainable forestry management, insurance analytics, and critical infrastructure protection. These enhanced capabilities will be further amplified by the EarthDaily Constellation’s global data coverage and higher frequency, providing improved thermal measurements and multi-band soil moisture analytics.

Read More

What is a ‘private forest’ in B.C.? And how much logging is allowed there?

By Julie Gordon
The Narwhal
February 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

… private forests are subject to far less stringent regulations than publicly owned forests in B.C. According to Ken Wu, executive director the Endangered Ecosystems Alliance, lax regulations for privately owned forests threaten species at risk of extinction, Indigenous land rights, climate security and the economy. …just over a million hectares, or around one per cent of B.C., are classified as “private managed forests,” meaning they can be harvested for commercial purposes. … Mike Ekers, at the University of Toronto says, “the old growth and the hyper-valuable timber that’s been protected through activism on the west coast of Vancouver Island has generally been liquidated” within privately owned forests. …Ekers says the Private Managed Forest Land Act doesn’t make provisions for cultural, spiritual or recreational values to be protected. …In 2022, Mosaic introduced the BigCoast carbon credit initiative, deferring harvesting on 400,000 hectares of private land, trading the timber revenues for carbon credits.

Read More

Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Can this ‘burnt toast’-like substance be a key tool in the fight against climate change?

By Philip Drost
CBC News
February 23, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

It might be considered an odd retirement hobby, but Greg Porteous spends his spare time making biochar. Biochar is a black, charcoal-like substance created by applying high heat to organic materials such as wood, plant matter and even sewage sludge. He makes it in his own backyard in Courtenay, B.C., where he has a kiln that he bought online. In goes the organic matter, like brush or old wood pallets, high heat is applied with little to no oxygen and, since there is minimal fire, the fuel is turned into biochar. …It’s a carbon removal tool that has been picking up steam over the past decade. The United Nations has said biochar is a good way to deal with wood waste because it can hold carbon in the soil.

Read More

Research Seminar: Integrating Biomass Supply Scenarios and Advancing Open Systems for Cumulative Effects Management

By the Faculty of Forestry
The University of British Columbia
February 21, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

This event is open to all and will be held in person only. Emerging research on the forest-based bioeconomy often assumes an infinite supply of low-cost, zero-impact forest harvest residues as feedstock for future biosector production facilities. Such assumptions can undermine the feasibility and sustainability of bioenergy initiatives. This research seeks to ground these discussions in a more realistic context by leveraging and extending existing forest estate modeling frameworks to forecast a range of plausible future scenarios for low-grade forest harvest and sawmill residue biomass feedstocks. This involves predicting biomass volume, cost, quality, and geographic distribution over extended time horizons and large regions, using integrated and adaptive modeling approaches. Central to this work is the development of an open modeling system for cumulative effects within Canada’s managed forests. …we are advancing the interoperability of forest estate models favored by foresters and spatial discrete event simulation models used by ecologists.

Read More

Supporting Japan’s Climate Goals with Canadian Wood Pellets By Gordon Murray

By Gordon Murray, Executive Director, Wood Pellet Association of Canada
Wood Pellet Association of Canada
February 15, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

Gordon Murray

In November 2024, I was part of an Alberta forest industry Trade Mission to Japan… Participants included Alberta ministry officials and wood products manufacturers, as well as Canada Wood and the Alberta Forest Products Association. The mission’s focus was to strengthen partnerships and showcase Alberta as a trusted supplier of wood products. It included the annual Wood Pellet Association of Canada customer appreciation dinner, Canada Wood’s Wood Forum, the BC Council of Forest Industries 50th Anniversary Reception… Japan is the fastest-growing import market in the world for wood pellets, driven by the government’s policy initiatives to mitigate pollution from coal and supported by a long-term feed-in-tariff (FIT) for biomass energy. The country aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to zero to make Japan a carbon-neutral, decarbonized society by 2050 and aims to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 46 percent by 2030. Canadian wood pellets are part of the solution for Japan.

Read More

Health & Safety

Company fined $9K after falling tree kills worker

By Colin Dacre
Castanet
February 24, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

A B.C. company has been fined just under $9,000 for the death of a worker. A WorkSafeBC penalty summary posted online says Crescent Bay Construction Ltd. was fined $8,995.26 on Jan. 23 for the incident at a worksite in Beaton, located south of Revelstoke on the shores of Upper Arrow Lake. “This firm was performing maintenance work on a bridge deck on a forest service road,” said the penalty summary. “WorkSafeBC attended the site after a worker was struck by a tree that fell from a cliff face above the work area. The worker sustained fatal injuries.” WorkSafeBC says their investigation determined “the firm did not adequately identify the hazard of dangerous trees or assess the risks they presented to workers.” The company also failed to “conduct a dangerous tree assessment by a qualified person before work began and failed to ensure the health and safety of all workers at the worksite, both high-risk violations.”

Read More

Consultation on proposed B.C. Exposure Limits (ELs) based on the new or revised ACGIH TLVs for selected chemical substances

By Lori Guiton Director, Policy, Regulation and Research Department
WorkSafeBC
February 24, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Consultation on proposed B.C. Exposure Limits (ELs) based on the new or revised 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 ACGIH TLVs for selected chemical substances. The American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH) regularly publishes a list of substances for which they have set new or revised Threshold Limit Values (TLVs). A TLV is the airborne concentration of a chemical substance where it is believed that nearly all workers may be exposed over a working lifetime and experience no adverse health effects. TLVs may be expressed as an 8-hour time-weighted average (TWA), 15-minute short-term exposure limit (STEL), or ceiling limit. Before adopting new or revised TLVs published by the ACGIH, WorkSafeBC reviews relevant data on health effects and the availability of validated sampling methods. …We are requesting stakeholder feedback on the proposed B.C. ELs for 22 substances. Feedback will be accepted until 4:30 p.m. on Friday, March 14, 2025.

Read More

Appeal court rules a forest service road is not an industrial road

By Bob Mackin
The Prince George Citizen
February 19, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

A BC Court of Appeal tribunal has overturned a lower court ruling that said the province was immune from a negligence claim for injuries on an alleged unsafe forest service road. Leonard Chisholm sued Valemount Forest Products Ltd. and the Ministry of Forests, Land and Natural Resources Operations after his motorcycle hit a log and crashed June 16, 2010 on the West Canoe Forest Service Road near Valemount. Chisholm claimed the province was liable for failing to maintain the road in a safe condition. The province responded that road use permit holder Valemount Forest Products Ltd. was responsible for maintenance. The company said the road was not being used for logging at the time, so the province was responsible for the maintenance. A BC Supreme Court judge dismissed the claim after the province argued in 2023 that the Industrial Roads Act provided statutory immunity. …“The key point for present purposes is that all parties agree that the road was a forest service road at the material time,” said the decision. “Therefore, the road was not an industrial road, and the immunity in section 24(3) has no application.”

Read More

Workplace emergency readiness | New return-to-work tools

WorkSafeBC
February 19, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Are you ready for a workplace emergency? In this month’s newsletter you’ll find all this and more:

  • Employers are responsible for planning for potential emergencies. Learn how you can prepare to respond in an emergency to keep your workers safe. 
  • Regulatory Updates: OHS Regulation amendment, OHS Policy and Guideline updates.
  • New incident investigation report summaries: #roofing, #marine, #construction
  • New and updated resources: risk assessment template, inventory of hazardous substances, crane rigging failures
  • Return-to-work resources
  • Safety Spotlights: A safety culture and first aid assessments
  • Spring Home Shows
  • 2025 WorkSafeBC Student Video Contest
  • Day of Mourning – April 28

Read More