Region Archives: Canada West

Special Feature

COFI keynotes focus on forestry’s role in climate resilient housing and how wildfires are changing the public opinion

By Travis Joern, Director of Communications, COFI
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 12, 2024
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Don Iveson

On Day 2 at the Council of Forest Industries’ conference, Executive Advisor, Climate Investing and Community Resilience of Co-operators, Don Iveson, provided the opening keynote on “Forestry’s Role in Climate Resilient Housing and Communities”. The session was moderated by COFI’s Zara Rabinovitch. …Iveson set out four goals to combat this crisis: make it low-carbon, make it resilient, make it affordable, and make it at scale. He argued that changes are required such as housing density and implementing better building codes. …The second keynote David Coletto, CEO of Abacus Data led the conversation “From Crisis to Consensus: How Wildfires are Changing the Public Conversation on Forestry in BC”. This session was moderated by David Elstone. …There’s broad, cross-partisan support for government action to actively manage forests to prevent and mitigate wildfires. 73% believe that forestry has a positive impact overall, and 89% see that a strong forest sector is vital to BC’s economy.

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COFI Day 2 focuses on forestry’s future from a local government perspective, and old growth et al

By Travis Joern, Director of Communication, COFI
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 12, 2024
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Michael Armstrong

The first panel focused on the perspectives of local leaders with the Mayor of Prince George Simon Yu, the Councillor of the District of Vanderhoof Brian Frenkel and the Councillor of of Campbell River, Susan Sinnott. The session was moderated by Lisa Dominato, MA, GCB.D, Councillor of the City of Vancouver. …The panel discussed potential solutions for wildfire risks, looking to new technology such as AI and how to adjust existing projects. Long-term planning is fundamental with all stakeholders in the room, and the path towards reconciliation is what the municipal government has been wanting for a long time. In the armchair session “Old Growth, Biodiversity, Conservation Financing and Three Zone Management: Connecting-the-Dots on the Managed Landscape”, Deputy Minister, B.C. Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship, Lori Halls, and Former Chair, BC Forest Practices Board and Co-Author of Old Growth Strategic Review Al Gorley discuss the opportunity ahead. Michael Armstrong moderated the session.

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COFI morning panels focus on economics and investments, workforce resilience and strategies for stabilizing fibre flow

By Travis Joern, Director of Communications, COFI
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 11, 2024
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kicking off the first panel, COFI’s Kurt Niquidet introduced the Forest Industry Economic Impact Study, highlighting the economic benefits of the sector in BC. Forestry as an economic powerhouse. …Daryl Swetlishoff, at Raymond James discussed capital flows and the need for further investment in forestry to ensure the future for those benefits for years to come and Kimberly Burns, at Dentons, said challenges in profitability and turnaround time can deter private investors, particularly when there is uncertainty. …During a Spotlight Session, Jason Krips of Alberta Forest Products Association and Louise Bender of Mosaic Forest Management spoke about building workforce resilience through diversity. …One of the most important discussions at the 2024 COFI Convention is BC’s Strategy for Stabilizing Fibre Supply. COFI’s Linda Coady asserted the importance of stabilizing fiber supply requires an “all hands on deck” approach. The Minister of Forests Bruce Ralston, the Minister of State for Sustainable Forestry Innovation Andrew Mercier, and BC First Nation Forest Council’s Lennard Joe sat down together to discuss this critical issue.

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COFI afternoon panels focus on US Trade, forest sector resilience and CEO hopes and dreams

By Travis Joern, Director of Communication, COFI
The Tree Frog Forestry News
April 11, 2024
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

During the luncheon Keynote, Arun Alexander, Canada’s Deputy Ambassador to the United States discussed the productive and mutually beneficial trade relationship between Canada and the USA, and how this benefits the forest sector. …Susan Yurkovich at Canfor moderated a Q&A with the Deputy Ambassador, where the two discussed the trajectory of the trade relationship. …At COFI’s panel on “Wildfires, Biodiversity and Natural Disturbances: Building a More Resilient Forest Sector”, we were joined by Torchlight Resources’ Jamie Stephen, BC Forest Practices Board’s Keith Atkinson, United Steelworkers’s Jeff Bromley, and Mosaic Forests’s Molly Hudson with Sandy Ferguson moderating the session. The forest industry is constantly evolving, where forest planning must prepare for natural disturbances, account for Indigenous values, and maintain socio-economic benefits now and in the future. …The last panel of the day looked to the role of forestry leadership, with West Fraser Timber’s Sean McLaren, Western Forest Products’ Steven Hofer, Nanwakolas Council’s Dallas Smith, Huu-ay-aht First Nations’ Robert Dennis Sr. and Gorman Group’s Nick Arkle. Business Council of BC’s Laura Jones, moderated the session. 

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Friends and colleagues gather at the COFI Conference 2024 kick-off reception

By Kelly McCloskey and Sandy McKellar
The Tree Frog News
April 10, 2024
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) kicked-off their annual forestry conference in Vancouver, with a sold-out Ice Breaker (more than 700 delegates and 51 booths). The two-day conference promises to be an outstanding event given the expected attendance and high profile speakers such the Hon. David Eby, Premier of BC, Regional Chief Terry Teegee, BC Assembly of First Nations, Arun Alexander, Canada’s Deputy Ambassador to the United States; BC Minister of Forests, Hon. Bruce Ralston and BC Minister of State for Sustainable Development, Hon. Andrew Mercier. Linda Coady, President and CEO of COFI opened the conference noting her delight to be in a room connecting with so many provincial, municipal and First Nation leaders as well as the many firms and individuals that service and supply our mills. The event sponsor, KPMG Partners John Desjardins and Andrew James shared the stage, emphasizing their firm’s work with many forest industry clients, the challenges industry currently faces and the importance of working together to address the issues of concern.

The JW Marriott Park Hotel and Conference centre was the scene of a forest sector reunion of sorts. This evening was a demonstration of the camaraderie and support within the forest sector as delegates and exhibitors mingled, snacked, shook hands and hugged in a display of mutual respect and friendship. Sandy had so much fun pulling all of these willing faces together for group photos. 

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Economic Impact Study Affirms Forest Industry Vital To BC’s Economy

BC Council of Forest Industries
April 9, 2024
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER – A new economic impact study released by the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) confirms BC’s forestry industry is a vital part of the province’s economy, generating billions in wages and government revenues, sustaining about 49 thousand direct forestry jobs and contributing $17.4 billion in GDP in 2022. “This Study demonstrates that the BC forest industry is one of the main drivers of BC’s economic base, providing outsized benefits to living standards and government revenue by generating employment, value-added activity, and exports,” said Kurt Niquidet, Chief Economist. …“The industry has been challenged by rapidly changing market conditions, high costs, natural disturbances like fire and insects, and the impact of new public policies. Timber harvesting on provincial crown land has declined by about 30% since 2021.” To capture the impact of these changes the Study provides projections for 2023 that point to a loss of jobs and other benefits delivered by the sector. “We need to find ways to stabilize fibre supply and build a more predictable and sustainable path forward for the sector”, said Niquidet. Among the key findings… BC’s forest industry:

  • Contributes $17.4 billion annually to BC’s GDP
  • Sustains close to 100,000 jobs, including 48,725 direct forestry jobs
  • Contributes $9.1 billion in wages, salaries and benefits
  • Generates $6.6 billion in government revenue
  • Sustains one out of every 28 jobs in BC
  • Represented 24% of all merchandise exports by value in 2022
  • Invested approximately $15.8 billion in construction, machinery, equipment, repairs and maintenance from 2013 – 2023, through local companies & suppliers

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Business & Politics

B.C. forest industry faces investor exodus amidst uncertainties

By Jennifer Ellson
Canadian Forest Industries
April 16, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — Industry players gathered at COFI’s convention in Vancouver last week, delivering a stark message: the province’s forestry sector is in the midst of a crisis. With dwindling wood fibre supply and regulatory uncertainty looming large, private equity experts and industry heads warned of an alarming trend – investment in BC’s forests is plummeting. COFI president and CEO Linda Coady highlighted a significant decline in wood harvest at 32 million cubic metres annually, which is only about half the volume compared to five years ago. “There’s been too much change happening at the same time,” she added, emphasizing the urgent need for certainty in the industry. …Coady highlighted positive developments in First Nations involvement, noting an increase in revenue sharing, more equity agreements, and emerging collaborations in technology. …“We need more of these breakthrough agreements – that would be such a powerful signal to send to the investors,” Coady asserted.

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B.C. pulp and paper mill fined $22,000 for leaking toxic gas into atmosphere

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
April 15, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Howe Sound Pulp and Paper Mill owned by Paper Excellence has been handed $22,000 in penalties for releasing toxic gases into the atmosphere. The fines included 201 failures to comply with limits on the release of sulphur dioxide from its power boiler. In some cases, gas concentrations climbed 81 per cent above the daily limit, according to a decision from director of the Environmental Management Act Jason Bourgeois. In high concentrations sulphur dioxide can cause “breathing problems, respiratory illness, changes in the lung’s defences, and worsening respiratory and cardiovascular disease,” noted the decision. …The director increased the penalty to the mill for the repeated nature of the violations, finding “there was no detectable decrease in the rate of failures” over the nearly three years of contraventions. But Bourgeois decided they were not deliberate and reduced the penalty further after finding Paper Excellence had spent some money to ensure they did not occur again. 

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B.C.’s Haida ‘milestone’ not likely to be example for rest of country

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
April 15, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jason Alsop

Premier David Eby was in a self-congratulatory mood at a signing ceremony where the province recognized Haida aboriginal title over the entire Haida Gwaii archipelago. …“It will also be an example and another way for nations, not just in B.C. but right across Canada, to have their title recognized.” Not likely, given the still undefined implications of the agreement between the province and the council of the Haida Nation. The agreement is unique, and so are the circumstances that enabled it. …“This agreement is not a treaty… it is part of a reconciliation process.” …Along with the supposed end to litigation, the New Democrats claim that the agreement has no implications for owners of private property. …But the government’s version has been challenged. …Rather than follow B.C.’s lead on the agreement with the Haida, other provinces will likely wait for the text of a final deal or — better yet — a treaty.

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Will Canada Deport a Student Climate Activist on Earth Day?

By Keerti Gopal
Inside Climate News
April 16, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Muhammad Zain Ul Haq and Sophia Papp

Muhammad Zain Ul Haq, a 23-year-old university student and climate activist in British Columbia may be deported to Pakistan in less than a week. Haq who helped spearhead campaigns for campus fossil fuel divestment and to save Canadian old growth forests, has been arrested for nonviolent civil disobedience about 10 times in Canada. In 2022, the Canadian Border Services Agency revoked his temporary student visa and issued an exclusion order alleging that he was not making adequate progress toward his degree at Simon Fraser University. At that time, he had not yet been convicted of any charges. Now, he’s facing a removal date of April 22—Earth Day. Haq’s story has drawn attention from climate activists who have questioned the speed with which the CBSA mobilized to remove Haq from the country, alleging that the government seems eager to remove someone they have identified as a movement leader and a thorn in their side.

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Skeena sawmill, pellet plant ownership remains unresolved

By Rod Link
The Terrace Standard
April 14, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

TERRACE, BC — A complex legal case continues in a Vancouver Supreme Court courtroom to decide the ownership of Skeena Sawmills and the adjacent Skeena Bioenergy pellet plant. The two businesses were placed into receivership last fall after amassing debts they could not pay. Over a number of hearing dates, the court has been asked to approve a pathway to restore the two facilities to the owners, the Cui family, who asked for them to be placed in receivership in the first place. That pathway involves creating a new company into which unwanted debts and other obligations would be placed. That company would then be declared bankrupt and those debts and obligations wiped out, returning the sawmill and pellet plant to the Cui family under an agreement made with receiver Alvarez and Marsal Canada. …But the agreement presented to the court has drawn opposition from creditors, businesses, First Nations and the provincial and federal governments.

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B.C. continues investments to support forest sector

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
April 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

The Province is partnering with forestry manufacturers to build a strong forest-products sector and support good jobs in B.C. through significant capital expansion in their operations. “While workers and businesses in the forest sector have faced significant challenges over the past few years, there are tremendous opportunities out there in producing made-in-B.C. sustainable forest products,” said Premier David Eby. “That’s why our government is working together with the sector to help them transition to high-value product lines that make the best use of every tree harvested, while creating and protecting good, family-supporting jobs. …Through the $180-million BC Manufacturing Jobs Fund (BCMJF), the Province has committed as much as $70.3 million to forest-sector transition and diversification…. Through the BCMJF, the Government of B.C. is contributing as much as $9.5 million to A-1 Trusses’ significant expansion that will create 125 jobs as the company diversifies its product offerings to include prefabricated wall panels and floor cassettes. 

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‘We were born knowing this is ours’: B.C. signs deal recognizing Haida Nation title over Haida Gwaii

The Canadian Press in CBC News
April 14, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government and the Council of the Haida Nation have signed an agreement officially recognizing Haida Gwaii’s Aboriginal title, more than two decades after the nation launched a legal action seeking formal recognition. The province announced last month that it had reached a proposed deal with the Haida, which Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation Minister Murray Rankin called a “foundational step in the reconciliation pathway of Haida Nation and B.C.” On April 6, the nation announced that more than 500 Haida citizens had voted 95 per cent in favour of approving the Gaayhllxid/Gíhlagalgang “Rising Tide” Haida Title Lands Agreement. “This does not mean that the government is granting us anything. We have always held our inherent rights and title to our lands,” said Tamara Davidson, a representative for the Council of the Haida Nation. …it does not impact private property or government jurisdictions…

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First Nations take the lead – Insights from B.C. delegation’s Japan mission

Wood Business – Canadian Forest Industries
April 15, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Forestry, by its very nature, is intimately interconnected with the land and its custodians – the First Nations peoples whose stewardship spans generations. For far too long, Indigenous voices have not been at the forefront in discussions concerning the management and utilization of forest resources. In recent years, however, the forestry sector has witnessed a significant shift toward inclusivity and recognition of the Indigenous voice to help shape its future. This transition was highlighted by the participation of First Nations in the Japan mission delegation from B.C., including members from the BC First Nations Forestry Council (BCFNFC). BCFNFC CEO Lennard Joe noted, “First Nations people are no longer bystanders; we are emerging as leaders in the global conversation on forestry and reconciliation. As we step into the room, we carry with us the weight of responsibility and the power to shape a more sustainable future for our generations.”

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A ‘vicious cycle’ is scaring away investment from B.C. forests, says industry

By Stefan Labbé
The Delta Optimist
April 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A dwindling supply of wood fibre and the B.C. government’s move to create a “paradigm shift” in the forestry industry is leading to a “vicious cycle” that is scaring investment away from the province, warned private equity experts and industry leaders Thursday. The comments, made at the BC Council of Forest Industries annual meeting in Vancouver, came following a year in which about 32 million cubic metres of wood was harvested — nearly half of what it was five years ago, said COFI’s president and CEO Linda Coady. …Andrew Mercier, who was appointed as B.C. Minister of State for Sustainable Forestry Innovation about three months ago, said he has been relentlessly touring the province to understand what is ailing forestry. …“There’s a short-term crunch here,” he conceded. …While industry says bad policy pushed B.C.’s forest industry to suffer unnecessary losses, others have suggested the situation is of their own making.

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One out of every six manufacturing jobs in B.C. from forestry

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
April 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kurt Niquidet

The forest sector in B.C. may have shrunk dramatically over the past 20 years, but it remains an important pillar of the economy, providing one out of every six manufacturing jobs in B.C., according to a study released by COFI, in advance of this week’s COFI conference. The forest sector still supports 49,000 jobs, the study found, and contributes $17 billion annually to B.C’s gross domestic product. …But it’s a sector that has been battered by a declining timber supply, high operating costs, and American softwood lumber duties, all of which have contributed to major sawmill and pulp mill closures in recent years. …“In the short term we are faced with a critical shortage of timber for BC mills. Left unchecked, reduced access to fibre supply will drive further losses in the investment, infrastructure and workforce needed to meet those new opportunities,” said Kurt Niquidet, VP and Chief Economist at COFI.

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Mayor hopes for Canfor update this week

By Rod Link
Houston Today
April 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Mayor Shane Brienen says he expects to learn more about Canfor’s plans to build a sawmill here while attending the 2024 Council of Forest Industries convention this week. The company closed its existing mill here last spring, citing its age and unprofitability, resulting in the loss of hundreds of jobs and ongoing economic uncertainty. Although Canfor announced last fall it would build a new mill to produce higher value lumber, a project that would take between 28 to 32 months, the company has been largely silent since then. But rumours have now been spreading of a delay in demolishing the old sawmill, a necessary step to allow the construction of a new facility. “I have a feeling the teardown is delayed,” said Brienen. But, added Brienen, he has not heard that Canfor is shelving its building plan. Brienen did add that the overall ongoing forest industry situation in B.C. is challenging.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Would You Choose Wood Tiles over Ceramic Ones? This Startup Is Betting Yes

By Andrew Findlay
The Tyee
April 15, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Timber Tiles workshop in Port Alberni was founded in 2020. The startup makes decorative, waterproof wooden tiles that can be used in kitchens, bathrooms and pretty much any other place you’d find traditional ceramic tiles. Mark Anson, architect and co-founder of Timber Tiles, said his company offers a compostable alternative to climate-harming ceramic tiles, which are manufactured through a carbon-intensive process and often end up smashed in landfills. “It’s about education and getting our story out there to designers and architects,” Anson said over the phone from Gibsons Landing, where he’s mid-construction on a home that will showcase Timber Tiles and be built to multiple green building standards. That story took a vital turn last year when Huu-ay-aht First Nations on Vancouver Island became majority owner of Timber Tiles, finding it a good fit with the community forest it manages on its territory.

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Inside Burnaby’s new NHL-sized ice rinks under a mass-timber roof

By Kenneth Chan
Daily Hive – Urbanized Vancouver
April 12, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

The much-anticipated Rosemary Brown Recreation Centre finally opened its doors to the public last week, marking a significant milestone for the City of Burnaby’s network of community and recreation centre facilities. Contained under a mass-timber roof, the $54 million facility, 92,000 sq ft building features two NHL-sized ice rinks, each rink containing about 200 seats. …Mass-timber materials are exposed on the ceiling, walls, and other surfaces. The complex is designed by architectural firm HCMA. …But some patience was required — this facility saw extensive delays due to construction issues, initially due to supply-chain issues early on in the pandemic, such as delays in the shipment of the pre-fabricated mass-timber components.

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Timber-framed construction free to climb 6 storeys higher in B.C

Canadian Press in the Nelson Star
April 10, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

The use of mass timber in British Columbia is moving up and expanding to schools, libraries and other construction. The province says it’s making building-code changes allowing for the use of mass timber in buildings up to 18 storeys, an increase from the previous 12-storey limit. …The expansion also includes building with mass timber for housing, retail, light and medium industrial construction and care facilities, as part of government efforts to streamline provincial housing permits and authorizations. Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon says in a statement the changes will help reduce carbon pollution, support forestry, create jobs and build more homes. …Betsy Agar, director of buildings at the clean energy think tank Pembina Institute, says the expansion to mass timber is a tangible solution to the twin challenges of housing affordability and the climate crisis being delivered through the B.C. Building Code.

Additional coverage: BC Government press release, by Ministry of Housing: B.C. builders can now use mass timber in taller buildings

naturally:woodThe case for tall wood buildings

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B.C. building code changes allow for higher mass timber buildings

By Claire Wilson
Business in Vancouver
April 10, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

A greener future is taking root in B.C. with the province updating its building code to encourage more mass timber construction. The latest updates allow encapsulated mass-timber construction (EMTC) buildings to reach as high as 18 storeys for residential and office buildings, up from 12 storeys. EMTC is a type of construction that has achieved a certain degree of fire safety thanks to the mass timber components being encapsulated in fire resistant materials. In addition to increasing building height, encapsulated mass timber can now be used for a greater variety of building types such as schools, libraries and care facilities as well as retail, light-and-medium industrial buildings. “These expanded provisions for mass timber will enhance the innovation already happening in the province, offering designers, developers and municipalities the opportunity to pursue high-performance, low-carbon wood construction in a wider range of buildings,” Rick Jeffrey, president and CEO of the Canadian Wood Council, said.

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Canadian Wood Council Applauds BC Government for Mass Timber Code Leadership

By Sarah Hicks
Canadian Wood Council
April 10, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Rick Jeffery

Today the BC Ministry of Housing made an important announcement regarding mass timber construction in BC. Following an intensive national review process, BC has expanded mass timber construction opportunities, with immediate effect, that enable Encapsulated Mass Timber Construction (EMTC) for buildings up to 18 storeys high, and in more building types such as restaurants, shops, care facilities, and warehouses. The Canadian Wood Council applauds BC’s code leadership. “These expanded provisions for mass timber will enhance the innovation already happening in the province, offering designers, developers, and municipalities the opportunity to pursue high performance, low-carbon wood construction in a wider range of buildings,” said Rick Jeffery, President and CEO of the Canadian Wood Council.

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M5 at Main Alley: A 25-storey mass timber tower prototype

By Grant Cameron
The Journal of Commerce
April 10, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC —  M5, a 25-storey, mass timber rental housing tower, one of the tallest in the world, will be the first residential building constructed at Main Alley, a tech campus in the Mount Pleasant area of Vancouver. The structure will be a net-zero lifecycle carbon tower. …The project, proposed by Westbank Corp. and Henriquez Partners Architects, was given the green light recently by Vancouver City Council. It will be 260 feet tall and have 210 rental homes. The panels of the exterior wall assembly will resemble the scales of a pine cone. The intention is to make the tower a replicable prototype to help British Columbia achieve a significant reduction in lifecycle carbon emissions, while addressing the crisis of affordable housing. “It is an open-source prototype for mass timber,” says Henriquez. This is a hybrid mass timber project which is almost 67 per cent timber.”

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Forestry

Selkirk College Presents Renowned Environmental Activist Tzeporah Berman

By Bob Hall
The Castlegar Source
April 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Tzeporah Berman

A Mir Lecture Series event on May 1 will feature renowned environmental activist Tzeporah Berman who will reflect on 30 years of advocacy for old-growth forests and climate justice—and the surprising lessons she has learned about finding common ground with logging executives and with the oil industry. From behind the bullhorn at one of Canada’s largest acts of civil disobedience to working diligently behind the scenes with the leaders of the nation’s fossil fuel industry, environmental activist Tzeporah Berman has spent three decades as a crusader for urgent change. In 1993, Berman was one of the main voices of what became known as British Columbia’s “War in the Woods.” A protest to stop clearcut logging in ancient Vancouver Island temperate rainforests, the Clayoquot Sound camp that Berman helped establish saw more than 10,000 people show up during a tumultuous summer that ultimately helped change how government directs the forest industry.

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PG Mayor says younger workers needed as forestry sector deals with state of flux

By Brendan Pawliw
MY PG NOW
April 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Simon Yu

A common enhancement of BC’s battered forestry sector is needed according to Prince George Mayor Simon Yu. Yu took part in the Council of Forest Industries Conference in Vancouver – as part of a panel that included District of Vanderhoof Councillor Brian Frenkel. He added various curtailments and shutdowns including Canfor shutting down its pulp line at the PG Pulp and Paper Mill was a massive blow. “Prince George is very much the centre of the forestry industry around northern BC. The shutdown of the pulp mill is very devastating to our local tax base – it represents over one percent of our tax base.” Yu says in order for the industry to survive, more young people need to be brought on.

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Wildsight asks Revelstoke council for no cutting permit in old-growth forest

By Barb Brouwer
Revelstoke Review
April 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Following a delegation to Revelstoke Council on March 12, Wildsight Revelstoke’s concerns were returned to council at the April 9 meeting. Chief among the concerns presented were that the forest industry is changing rapidly and dramatically as are societal expectations, resulting in the need to adapt to a new future. “The old paradigm of logging superseding other values is no longer acceptable and there are economic alternatives to protect these forests,” noted the report. “We are asking Revelstoke Community Forest Corporation that no cutting permit or road permit moves forward on Goldstream CP 310 Block L before a field trip happens in the spring or summer.” Wildsight also asked council to explore alternative economic models and ways to manage the Tree Farm Licence for the long-term benefit of the ecosystem and the community. …Mayor Gary Sulz noted that deriving carbon credits from the community forest will not be possible until the province changes current legislation…

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Petition circulating in Chetwynd calls for more community consultation on decision to move Northern Initial Attack Crew

By Jeff Cunha
CJDC TV
April 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A petition calling for more consultation on the relocation of the North Initial Attack Crew has been started in Chetwynd. Earlier this month, in a letter addressed to Chetwynd Mayor Allen Courtoreille and city council, Bruce Ralston confirmed the closure of the facility and its staff lodging on December 15th, 2023. Ralston citied the absence of a full-time staff and aging infrastructure resulted in the closure, with crews being relocated to the Dawson Creek Fire Centre. “We didn’t have proper consultation at all,” said Rebecca Hallaert, a small business owner who has the petition posted in her store Inner Sage Therapies. … According to the Forest Minister, the intention of the province is to replace the current Chetwynd facility with a forward attack facility. “When crews are not located at the Chetwynd forward attack base, travel by helicopter would be 20-30 minutes from the crew’s assembly point in the Dawson Creek Fire Zone,” said Ralston.

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How attribution science can explain the rising number and intensity of floods in BC

By Branchlines
UBC Faculty of Forestry
April 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Younes Alila

Devastating floods have become an increasingly common part of life in British Columbia. In the late 1990s, BC’s Cariboo region experienced numerous floods and landslides. The ‘flood of the century’ happened in fall 2003 when hundreds of Squamish and Paradise Valley residents were forced to evacuate their homes. Later, a 2018 flood event in Grand Forks caused extensive damage, impacting more than 400 homes, farms and businesses. In 2021, successive atmospheric rivers in BC’s Pacific north-west caused billions of dollars in damage from catastrophic flooding and triggered landslides that killed five people. Urban encroachment on floodplains and climate change are partly to blame. However, they cannot fully account for a trend that has many researchers, including UBC Forestry Prof. Younes Alila, ringing alarm bells. Through scientific inquiry and the application of a framework known as attribution science , Younes’s investigations have revealed important data on the root causes of more frequent and severe flooding in the province. [See page 29 in the Read More link]

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Silvicola screens to full house in Williams Lake

By Monica Lamb-Yorski
The Williams Lake Tribune
April 14, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

WILLIAMS LAKE, BC — A Williams Lake screening of the film Silvicola attracted more than 130 people Wednesday, April 3. Directed by Jean-Phillippe Marquis, the film takes viewers to B.C. forests through the eyes of tree planters, loggers, sapling nursery workers, foresters and wood manufacturers. After seeing the film, there are several images lingering in my mind. …One is watching a tree planter as she maneuvers through a heli-logged site near Port Alberni where she can count on one hand how many times her feet touch the ground in a day. …Another scene is watching ants move along an “ant road” in a thriving lush forest. …I also enjoyed being immersed in a large old growth forest as a Haida man explains how his people harvest bark from trees for various medicinal and cultural purposes. Fourth would be watching a crew make cedar shakes from scraps salvaged from larger logging operations.

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Rethinking Stanley Park

By Barb Sligl
MONTECRISTO Magazine Limited
April 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Wander along any of Stanley Park’s more than 27 kilometres of trails …and you may have to dodge the glossy strands of Lambdina fiscellaria larvae as these mottled greyish-brown inchworms descend from the overstorey. It’s these innocuous-looking little caterpillars that morphed into western hemlock looper moths during the “mothpocalypse,” an outbreak that has plagued Vancouver for a few years and helped kill 25 per cent of the trees in the park. Some 160,000 affected trees have died and are being cut down by the city. The moth is also known as the mournful thorn, and the name fits … this wee creature has caused in Vancouver’s most-beloved park. The fluttering miscreants are native—their natural cycle of infestation lasts about three years every two decades—yet have been an ongoing issue in the park since its inception in 1888. A 1914 report stated that 25 per cent of western hemlock trees had died and 60 per cent were affected by the insects.

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Wildfire report shows 6.6% of Alberta’s forests burned in 2023

By Scott Hayes
Mountain View Today
April 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Last year’s wildfire season was certainly historic, but how historic was it and what was the bigger ecological picture? The Alberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute recently produced a science letter called “Effects of 2023 Wildfires in Alberta” that helps to make it easier for laypeople and decision-makers alike to understand the answers to both of those questions. …last year’s wildfires burned 6.6 per cent of the forested area of the province. At approximately 3.3 million hectares in size, that area disturbed as much forest in Alberta as the 11 previous wildfire years combined. “I think some readers of these large numbers get a little bit overwhelmed,” said applied ecologist Brandon Allen. “I think people’s minds go a little blank. We try to contextualize that to be an area similar to Vancouver Island. You could start to capture that a little bit of, ‘Oh, that’s a big place that was impacted by the fires.’”

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Wildfire-damaged wood recovery underway in B.C.

BC Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
April 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Andrew Mercier

In a move to increase the use of wildfire-damaged timber and support land recovery, the Province has introduced new measures to streamline the salvage process, making it easier for the forestry sector to recover and repurpose damaged wood and regenerate the forests. “Wildfires are increasingly having devastating impacts on our communities and economies,” said Minister Andrew Mercier. …Changes to the Interior Appraisal Manual, effective April 1, 2024, have increased flexibility and established pricing policy for forestry operations and First Nations wanting to salvage wildfire-damaged timber in B.C. The updated pricing guidelines better reflect the price of wildfire-damaged wood in government’s stumpage fees and in the associated costs of salvage logging, making it more economic for businesses to salvage damaged wood. …Joe Nemeth, BC Pulp and Paper Coalition said, “Wildfire salvage is yet another sustainable source of fibre. With government increasing the ability to access this burned timber, our mills have greater stability.” 

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Vancouver Park Board releases first Stanley Park logging stats

By Bob Mackin
The Breaker News
April 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — Crews cut down almost 2,700 trees in Stanley Park during the month of January alone, according to records released under the freedom of information law. Last November, the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation announced 160,000 trees would be removed due to wildfire and safety risks caused by the Hemlock looper moth infestation and drought. The monthly report, submitted by main contractor B.A. Blackwell and Associates, showed 2,159 of the trees, measuring more than 20 centimetres in diameter, were cut around the Stanley Park Causeway. Between 98% and 100% of falling in the area was completed by the end of the month, but tree and debris removal was finished in only one of the four designated quadrants. Elsewhere, crews cut 287 trees around Prospect Point and 247 around the Stanley Park Railway. The Park Board has yet to release the figures for October to December or February and March.

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Alberta eyes greater reliance on wildfire technology

By George Lee
The Canadian Press in MSN.com
April 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

ALBERTA — What if you showed up for an Alberta wildfire and your water source was frozen over? That was just one of the many challenges crews faced last year in a long, arduous and record-breaking season that burned a combined area the size of Prince Edward Island – times four. Todd Loewen, the minister of forestry and lands, said an internal review followed the unprecedented season. Among its recommendations are more use of high-tech support like night vision and thermal imaging. Effective wildland firefighting overnight is key to Alberta doing a more effective job, the member for Central Peace-Notley said. Fires tend to settle down at night because of cooler, sometimes humid conditions. The overarching goal is keeping communities, their residents and firefighters as safe as possible in 2024, Loewen said. Loewen witnessed the situation up-close. “…The experience convinced him that more night firefighting is a viable approach.

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B.C. loggers to get quicker access to fire-damaged timber

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
April 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government is making regulatory and pricing changes to allow for quicker recovery of timber from wildfires for use in sawmills, pulp and pellet mills. Timber salvaged after forest fires can still have value, if only for pulp and pellet production, and can reduce the risk of future fires. But it needs to be salvaged quickly. …Bruce Blackwell, estimated there may be up to five million cubic metres of fibre each year – about 11% of the province’s total annual allowable cut – that could be salvaged after forest fires. But after about a year, fire-damaged trees dry out, crack and become useless for any kind of sawmilling. That requires some regulatory streamlining. …”Salvaging wildfire-damaged timber on a timely basis can help restore areas for wildlife and recreation, make communities safer, and provide residual fibre that can help sustain jobs and local economic activity,” added COFI president Linda Coady.

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Minister’s statement on drought preparedness

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
April 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Nathan Cullen, Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship, has released the following statement in response to the April 2024 snowpack bulletin: The latest snow survey and water supply bulletin from the River Forecast Centre indicates we may be facing drought conditions in B.C. once again this year. The April survey shows that the overall snowpack level for B.C. is at 63% of normal, the lowest in 50 years. The experts at the River Forecast Centre tell us these low levels and the impacts of year-over-year drought are creating significantly higher drought risk for this spring and summer. We know this is concerning news. Communities around B.C. experienced serious drought conditions last summer. It fuelled the worst wildfire season ever, harmed fish and wildlife, and affected farmers, ranchers, First Nations and industry. 

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Media’s role a balancing act as Northwest Territories’ next fire season looms

By Harry Miller
Canada News Media
April 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Rebecca Alty

YELLOWKNIFE, N.W.T. —As wildfire season approaches and Yellowknife’s the review of last year’s evacuation continues. The majority of Yellowknife’s media was not present in the city after the evacuation order was issued last August. Most left with the general public. To some, the media’s responsibility is to be present and document the major events of climate change firsthand — but only with proper gear and training. To others, little is to be gained from being present and the more likely scenario is the media using up precious resources. Rebecca Alty, Yellowknife’s mayor, said that is a tough balancing act. She said the media does have an important role, but with last year’s evacuation reaching international news outlets, there would need to be limits. Alty said journalists with proper safety training would make the situation safer, but there’s still a limited amount of food and medical care available under an evacuation order.

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Kelowna town hall event targets forestry sector practices

By Colin Dacre
Castanet
April 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

KELOWNA, BC — A community town hall on the “future of our forests” is planned for UBC Okanagan. Planned by the Interior Watershed Taskforce, which includes the Peachland Watershed Protection Alliance, the event will bring together a panel of speakers. “It’s more important than ever to learn about the measures we can take to safeguard our forests,” says event organizers. “The B.C. community needs informing. Trees can no longer be seen as only dimensional lumber profits.” Prince George-Mackenzie MLA Mike Morris will serve as keynote speaker. He has been critical in recent years of the impacts of clearcutting on the ecosystem. …The town hall will take place Saturday, April 13 at UBC Okanagan in the arts and sciences centre.

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Health & Safety

Wildland firefighters’ respiratory health to be studied by UBC

CBC News
April 11, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

…In recent years devastating fires have burned in all corners of the province as thousands of firefighters inhale wildfire smoke with little protection. But new research aims to shed light on how those conditions are impacting firefighters’ respiratory health. The B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS), in collaboration with the University of British Columbia, is embarking on what they’re considering “groundbreaking” research, looking at the respiratory health of wildland firefighters. “We don’t know a lot about how their vessels are reacting or not reacting to wildfire smoke,” said Madden Brewster, postdoctoral research fellow at UBC’s Okanagan campus. Researchers will track firefighters’ cardiorespiratory systems over the next two years collecting data before, during and after the fire season — something Brewster says “hasn’t really been done before.”

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Forest Fires

Southern Vancouver Island has 1st official 2024 wildfire near Shawnigan Lake

By Mark Page
North Island Gazette
April 11, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Fire season is underway. Southern Vancouver Island’s had its first officially reported wildfire on April 5 — though the small human-caused spot fire near Shawnigan Lake was quickly dealt with. “We had dispatched a response officer who attended and determined that our crews were not required, as the fire was quickly brought under control by people on site who had remained on site until the fire was extinguished,” said Rebecca Grogan, a fire information officer for BC Wildfire Service. The fire grew to about two metres by five metres before it was put out, Grogan added. It was about 1.5 kilometres east of Shawnigan Lake in the Strathcona Heights area, which put it in the Shawnigan Lake Fire Department’s jurisdiction. BC Wildfire had responded before they had accurate coordinates for the fire.

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