Region Archives: Canada

Today’s Takeaway

US and global economies to slow sharply due to Trump’s tariffs

The Tree Frog Forestry News
April 22, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway
Region: Canada

Trump’s tariff policy and countermeasures will slow global economies—the International Monetary Fund warned. In other Business news: tariffs drive up homebuilding costs in Washington and Oregon; wood manufacturing is still important in rural Oregon; COFI’s Kim Haakstad opines on BC’s forestry future; and Domtar and Kruger are recognized for their sustainability credentials. Meanwhile: COFI is accepting applications for its 2025 scholarships; and the 18th annual International Biomass Conference wrapped up in Atlanta on Sunday.

In Forestry news: Colorado and Maine face spruce budworm challenges; a fungus targets the invasive spongy moth; and more on Trump’s effort to increase logging—will it help prevent wildfires, and what it means for US national forests. Meanwhile: BC Hydro trials fire-resistant pole wraps; and Trevor Hancock says the Canadian election is irrelevant—environmentally speaking.

Finally, on Earth Day—the Nature Conservancy on the significance of Canada’s forests.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

Forests Canada Welcomes Three New Members to Board of Directors

By Forests Canada
Cision Newswire
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

BARRIE, ON – Forests Canada recently added three new members to its Board of Directors: Mary-Ellen Anderson Jacob Handel , and Dr. Paula Murphy Ives . …Mary-Ellen Anderson has over 30 years of experience developing innovative practices and strategic partnerships across varied sectors while leading teams at ALUS Canada and Microsoft. …A member of Pine Creek First Nation (Minegoziibe Anishinabe), Jacob Handel brings over two decades of experience working in Indigenous relations along with a wealth of knowledge in engaging with Indigenous people in the resource industries throughout North America . …Dr. Paula Murphy Ives has been working on issues related to social capital, strategic philanthropy, and impact investing for over a decade and has significant global experience in philanthropy, sustainability, and global governance. …Replacing Cockwell as Board Chair is Christine Leduc , who has had close ties with Forests Canada since she was an Ontario Envirothon Regional Champion in 2005.

Mary-Ellen Anderson, Jacob Handel, and Dr. Paula Murphy Ives

Christine Leduc

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Canadian Forest Owners Asks Political Parties About Their Commitments to Canada’s 480,000 Woodlot Owners and Their Families

By Andrew de Vries
Canadian Forest Owners
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Canadian Forest Owners (CFO) reached out to the five federal political parties with current representation in parliament to ask how their party would support the thousands of rural communities across Canada where these forest owners live. Canadian Forest Owners represents 480,000 private forest owners from Prince Edward Island to Vancouver Island. These forest owners are largely family owned, small business, who own over a tenth of Canada’s managed forests, supporting every mill across the country, and accounting for nearly 20 percent of Canada’s total forest production. Private forest landowners provide solutions to climate change and real socio-economic development opportunities in rural communities from coast to coast. Here’s what they had to say…

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US trade policies cast shadow of uncertainty over Canadian forestry industry

By Rosa Saba
The Canadian Press in BNN Bloomberg
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

President Trump’s shifting trade policies are creating uncertainty for the Canadian forestry industry. Sean McLaren, CEO of West Fraser Timber, says the potential inflationary effects of tariffs could weigh on future demand. “Looking forward, we see considerable macroeconomic uncertainty, particularly stemming from the US’s evolving tariff policies”. He said the company is planning for multiple scenarios. …RBC’s Matthew McKellar said that the outlook for the paper and forest products industry is highly uncertain when it comes to demand. “All of this uncertainty is bad for business,” said Derek Nighbor, CEO of Forest Products Association of Canada. Nighbor added that any impact on Canadian lumber companies will also affect pulp and paper: “We’ve got all of these downstream industries that depend on those inputs.” …McKellar noted that companies like West Fraser, Interfor and Canfor are geographically diverse, meaning potential softening of demand could be the bigger concern.

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Canadian softwood producers highlight American investments as U.S. probes lumber imports

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Major softwood producers with head offices in Canada say they have accounted for more than half of the growth in capacity in the US South over the past decade, highlighting their American investments as the Trump administration investigates lumber imports. The US South appeals to forestry companies because of the region’s abundant timber, the Canadian government said in a 57-page filing this month to the US Department of Commerce in a bid to avert potential tariffs. …In seeking to stave off tariffs, the Canadian government and several producers from Canada believe that the foray into the US South should be viewed as evidence of them being aligned with the Trump administration’s “America First” trade and investment agenda. …However, the U.S. Lumber Coalition is arguing that new tariffs are necessary. …Canadian producers are worried that if new lumber tariffs hit 25 per cent… total levies could reach nearly 60%. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Trump tariffs stack the odds against a forestry industry already struggling to survive

By Joe O’Connor
The Financial Post
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

James Furney, mayor of Port McNeill, BC… is trying to stay upbeat, but his lumber town was already suffering before the threat of Trump’s trade war. …“To think that anyone is going to be insulated from what is going on with Trump would be delusional,” Furney said. “We are a forestry town and people around town are already watching their wallets and curtailing their spending, and businesses that should be ramping up now to hire summer students aren’t going to be hiring.” …In short, B.C. has plenty of wood and plenty of potential buyers for it, especially in the US, which was a $5.69-billion export market for the province in 2024, but not enough of that wood has been getting cut in recent years. That makes for gloomy days on the West Coast; a malaise that could spread to Ontario and Quebec and push the industry to the brink of collapse.

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B.C. supports advanced manufacturing of forestry products

By Ministry of Jobs, Economic Development and Innovation
Government of British Columbia
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

New support for forestry-sector manufacturers in the province is creating sustainable jobs, strengthening local supply chains, establishing new made-in-B.C. products and reinforcing B.C.’s position as a leader in mass-timber innovation. …Through the BC Manufacturing Jobs Fund (BCMJF), the Government of B.C. is contributing as much as $11 million toward four forestry-sector capital projects in the province. The projects are helping B.C.-based forestry-product manufacturers grow their businesses by constructing new production facilities, purchasing new equipment and adding new high-value product lines, while creating and protecting hundreds of jobs.

  • Spearhead Timberworks Inc., will received $7.5 million to drive its expansion. 
  • Westlam Industries Ltd. will receive $1.5 million to construct a new production facility and install new equipment.
  • Mercer Celgar Limited Partnership will receive $1.75 million to modernize its small-log line to process smaller-diameter logs and a wider range of low-grade fibre.
  • Greyback Construction Ltd., will receive $235,000 to begin production of prefabricated exterior walls and floors.

Canadian Press in the CBC News: B.C. invests $11 million on value-added lumber manufacturing amid U.S. uncertainty

Castanet, by Timothy Schafer: Province contributes cash through Jobs Fund to help value-added wood manufacturers

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A look inside West Kelowna’s iconic Gorman Bros. Lumber mill

By Shannon Ainslie
InfoTel News
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Anyone travelling between West Kelowna and Peachland has passed the decades-old Gorman Bros. sawmill with its teal sided warehouses and tidy stacks of lumber. This video takes viewers on an educational tour through the facility as logs travel through the noisy sawmill, are dried in a kiln and sent to the planer to have the final finishing done. The logs come out of the process as smooth, beautiful boards ready to be packaged and shipped, while the wood waste is repurposed.

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Americans are still going to need our forest products

By Albert Koehler, P.Eng.
Prince George Citizen
April 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

As of 2024 there are 2,500 sawmills in the U.S. and 850 in Canada. However, these numbers have to be looked at in context of housing starts in both countries. An interesting number: The rebuilding of 16,000 houses that burnt down in California require 4,300 fully loaded eight-axle trailer trucks with dimensioned lumber. We must be innovative and need more skilled workers. We should have a few smaller mills and/or machinery producing metric size timber for Europe and Japan. …We cannot change what is happening in the US, but despite an executive order from higher up, many mills in the US are suffering from a steady lack of timber supply and do not have the manpower or loggers required to steadily feed some of the mills. In Montana for example, 36 mills have closed over the last years because of a lack of timber supply, as well as a lack of loggers.

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Quebec’s Beaucerons ain’t afraid of no trade war

By Martin Patriquin
The Logic
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

SAINT-GEORGES, Quebec — “Good year, bad year, Americans will always buy our stuff,” Vincent Boutin says. He’s one of a legion of maple syrup farmers in Quebec who export more than 100 million pounds of the stuff to the US each year—and the tariffs don’t bother him one bit. …His confidence stems in part from the caramel-coloured liquid gushing from his wood-fired boiler. It’s hot and sweet, with all the complexities of a good sherry, and you can hardly get it anywhere other than Quebec, home to 66% of the world’s maple syrup production in 2024. …Still, La Beauce’s close relationship with the US has made its economy uniquely vulnerable to the whims of the Trump administration. More than 65% of La Beauce’s businesses export directly to the US, chief among them softwood lumber, construction materials, machinery, steel and finished metal products. 

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N.B. Power being forced to offer larger rate discounts to forestry mills

By Robert Jones
CBC News
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — A New Brunswick government regulation, written to protect pulp and paper mills from high electricity prices, is forcing N.B. Power to increase the rate subsidies it offers mills this year by 35%, despite a deterioration in the utility’s own financial condition. The mill subsidies, which have been mandated by the New Brunswick government every year since 2012, have been set by the Department of Energy for the current fiscal year at $28.04 per megawatt hour, an increase of $7.29 over last year. The utility had not originally budgeted to finance a subsidy that large and said it has revised the expected cost of the program for this year to $16.6 million — up by $2.9 million. …Pulp and paper companies have defended the program in the past as critical to their long-term viability. But since the program began, N.B. Power’s own financial viability has become an issue.

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Finance & Economics

If high bond yields persist, timberland may find itself in a vexed position

By Russ Taylor, Russ Taylor Global
Global Consulting Alliance
April 23, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, International

Following the US government’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcements on April 2, 2025, the bond market experienced significant turmoil. …If high bond yields persist, timberland may find itself in a vexed position—caught between its traditional role as a real biological asset and inflation hedge, and its declining relative appeal compared to more liquid bonds offering higher returns. To remain competitive in this environment, timberland may face pressure to support higher discount rates, which could weigh on valuations. Additionally, tariff escalations and geopolitical tensions could disrupt wood product exports, further increasing risk. …The World Trade Organization (WTO) warned that the US tariffs could reverse global goods trade growth in 2025, reducing it from a projected 2.7% increase to a 0.2% decline. In a worst-case scenario, global trade could decline by 1.5%, weakening GDP growth to just 1.7%. …The unpredictability of current trade policy shifts is making reliable forecasting difficult.

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West Fraser reports Q1, 2025 earnings of $42 million

West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd.
April 22, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

VANCOUVER, BC – West Fraser Timber reported first quarter results of 2025. …First quarter sales were $1.459 billion, compared to $1.405 billion in the fourth quarter of 2024. First quarter earnings were $42 million, compared to a loss of $62 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. The fourth quarter included a non-cash impairment loss of $70 million. …First quarter Adjusted EBITDA was $195 million compared to $140 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. ..The Lumber segment has experienced a slower than expected start to the year, owing to transportation and weather challenges that have influenced shipments as well as uncertainty related to demand impacts from the U.S. administration’s shifting tariff policies. …The global pulp market has begun to experience disruption with the economic impact of US tariffs creating considerable demand uncertainty in Chinese markets. As such, we anticipate NBSK pricing weakness over the near- to medium-term and a potentially significant adverse financial impact on our Pulp & Paper segment.

Related in Investing.com: West Fraser Q1 2025 slides: earnings rebound as strategic shift continues

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Québec builder creates ‘a world first’ aluminium volumetric apartment project

By John Bleasby
Journal of Commerce
April 23, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Construction Éco-bâtiment, a family-owned company in Brossard, Qué., explored possibilities for volumetric modular for their multi-unit affordable housing project northwest of Montréal. …Éco-Bâtiment had been looking for a different construction method … not based on concrete with its high carbon footprint or on wood with its longevity and health problems for occupants such as mold and warping. Furthermore, it would be a construction process that would create less waste materials sent to landfills. Éco-bâtiment turned to ACAL System, a volumetric modular builder based in Québec that specializes in aluminium-framed units. …The collaboration between Construction Éco-bâtiment and ACAL resulted in what Miguel Vaillancourt, president of Construction Éco-bâtiment, called “a world-first” — a six-unit, three-storey residential complex named Lofts de l’Aluminium. The modules were built with such exact precision that the units were assembled onsite in just one day. 

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Province provides $7.5 million for proposed Spearhead development near Nelson

By Samantha Holomay
Castanet
April 23, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The province announced $7.5 million in support funding today for Spearhead Timberworks Inc. for a proposed new facility and to advance its glulam technology, a move expected to create 60 jobs. …“These investments couldn’t come at a more critical time,” said Parmar. … Spearhead applied to the Regional District of Central Kootenay (RDCK) to rezone three lots adjacent to its existing facility, which they have operated since 1998. The project would bring 60 new jobs to Nelson and will now be supported in part by the provincial government. …Community members have pushed back on the expansion efforts, expressing concerns about the potential impact on nearby aquifers, noise pollution and the potentially increased trucking traffic on Highway 3A. Many residents have urged the company to build the additional facilities in another location to preserve the rural landscape in which the current facilities reside.

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Legal and practical strategies for contractors to manage tariff impacts

By Don Procter
The Daily Commercial News
April 23, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

CALGARY — The one constant of Trump’s tariff plan seems to be that it is in a constant state of flux. “The time is now to start planning for what those impacts could possibly be and develop the mitigation strategies and tracking mechanisms…so that as they (tariffs) evolve in real time you are prepared to deal with them,” said Rick Moffat. Moffat moderated a webinar panel recently on legal and practical strategies for managing the impacts of the tariffs on construction projects in Canada. …Stressing the importance of detailed contingency plans that account for potential cost hikes caused by tariffs, Bulut Cinar said contractors would benefit by including “multiple scenarios” illustrating how their contingencies help manage their costs. …If contractors consider delay-causing tariffs a force majeure event, but the contract deals with tariffs differently they might be “precluding themselves” from compensation, he added.

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Listen to UBC researchers play a guitar made of sustainable mahogany

CBC News
April 23, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

University of B.C. forestry professor Phil Evans and PhD student Joseph Kim say that mahogany trees were logged heavily, to the point that the species is now considered endangered. The scientists argue that making musical instruments out of mahogany wood produces superior results.

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Save the Date: Wood Solutions Conference Halifax | Nov 19–20, 2025

Canadian Wood Council
April 24, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

Mark your calendars! WoodWorks Atlantic and the Canadian Wood Council are pleased to present the Wood Solutions Conference in Halifax this fall — and we want you there. Join us November 19–20, 2025, at the Lord Nelson Hotel & Suites for Atlantic Canada’s premier event dedicated to wood design and construction. This two-day conference and trade show will feature expert-led seminars, cutting-edge innovations, and valuable networking opportunities for professionals in architecture, engineering, and construction. Full conference details and registration info coming soon. Whether you’re focused on sustainability, looking to expand your toolkit, or just want to see what’s possible with wood, this is an event you won’t want to miss.

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Forestry

Forest Stewardship Council Leadership Awards nominations now open

Forest Stewardship Council
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

The FSC Leadership Awards recognize excellence in the use of FSC-certified products, materials, and commitment to responsible forest management across industries, as well as in advocacy, conservation and individual leadership in the FSC community. Submissions are due Friday, July 25, 2025. Categories for submissions for people, organizations, and projects in the United States and Canada:

  • Built Environment – a commercial, institutional, mixed-use or residential building project, completed in the last three years that utilized at least 50% FSC-certified materials across all wood products.
  • An FSC-Certified Company or Organization 
  • An FSC Promotional License Holder 
  • A Nonprofit Organization – Partnership or shared goal with the Forest Stewardship Council.
  • An Uncommon Partnership – A campaign, event, or project that your company or organization completed in tandem with another company or organization brought about by your common interest in FSC and responsible forest management.
  • An Individual Champion – leadership in innovating and advancing FSC and responsible forest management

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B.C. supports land stewardship at Pipi7íyekw/Joffre Lakes Park

By Ministry of Environment and Parks
Government of British Columbia
April 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A temporary closure will take place at Pipi7íyekw/Joffre Lakes Park to provide time and space for members of the Líl̓wat Nation and N͛Quatqua to reconnect with the land and carry out cultural and spiritual practices. Pipi7íyekw/Joffre Lakes Park has become one of the busiest parks in the province. As more people go to the park, there is a need for enhanced visitor-use management, ensuring the park is not degraded by heavy use. Temporary closures to the park for recreational visitors will occur from April 25 until May 16, 2025. Beginning Saturday, May 17, adults and youth older than 12 will require a free day-use pass to visit the park. …The park is collaboratively managed with Líl̓wat Nation and N’Quatqua with the primary goal of maintaining the natural environment, and so the Nations can continue their cultural practices on their territory. 

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More than 60 projects will reduce wildfire risk, support forestry in B.C.

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
April 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Communities and workers throughout British Columbia are benefiting from 64 new Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC) supported projects that reduce wildfire risk, enhance forest health and get more fibre into the hands of mills and energy producers. “The projects will remove almost 11,000 truckloads of flammable waste fibre from our forests,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “…This fibre that once would have been burned in slash piles will instead support workers and help keep communities safe.” With $19 million in provincial funding, projects will take place in all eight of the Province’s natural resource regions. This includes 31 led by First Nations and another 14 with First Nations involvement, demonstrating the critical leadership role First Nation communities are playing in restoring and protecting B.C.’s forests. This funding is part of the $90 million allocated in 2025 for wildfire-prevention initiatives through BC Wildfire Service, FireSmart initiatives and FESBC.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

By Jason Fisher, Executive Director
Forest Enhancement Society of BC
April 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jason Fisher

Indigenous Peoples in British Columbia have long stewarded our forests with a deep connection to the land, imparting their valuable cultural knowledge. Since its establishment in 2016, the Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC) has been honoured to work alongside Indigenous partners and communities by investing in projects that are making a transformational difference in our forests. We are honoured to continue funding projects led by Indigenous proponents that reflect their vision for forest management, create opportunities for Indigenous People, and make their communities safer. Today…we released our Spring 2025 Accomplishments Update, showcasing newly funded projects – many of which are led by First Nations and rooted in local values, innovation, and sustainability. A more comprehensive report will be coming out this Fall… these initiatives are helping shape a more inclusive forest economy in B.C., one in which First Nations have an even greater leadership role to the benefit of all British Columbians.

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With Jasper’s devastation in mind, Alberta communities gear up for wildfire season

By Adrienne Lamb
CBC News
April 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Nicholas Nissen

Memories of the destruction wrought by a wildfire that roared through Jasper National Park last summer are fuelling wildfire prevention efforts across the region. The July 2024 wildfire destroyed one-third of the structures in Jasper’s historic townsite, 365 kilometres west of Edmonton. “The situation we watched last summer was absolutely devastating,” says Nicholas Nissen, mayor of Hinton, Alta., a town 80 kilometres east of Jasper. Since then, many displaced Jasperites have been calling the town of 10,000 home. “I’m certain those people feel nervous when they look out at a big forest and see a summer coming.” That’s part of the reason Nissen says they’re digging in this spring to prepare for the worst by reinforcing the firebreak south of town. “You can see around us — the grass grows, the shrubs grow, the trees grow up so those firebreaks need to be re-done,” Nissen said this week, pointing to a machine mulching the 58-hectare fireguard.

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Firefighting drones could change the way B.C. fights wildfires, especially during the night

By Denise Ryan
Vancouver Sun
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

[Alex Deslauriers watched the Downton Lake wildfire in 2023 where his home was destroyed by the fire.] Since then, Deslauriers, an aerospace engineer, has been focused on just one thing: how to make sure it never happens again. …He shifted his entire career, almost overnight, to solving the problem. …Now there is: firefighting drones. …Now his company, FireSwarm Solutions, is adapting a Swedish-made jet engine-powered heavy-lift UAV (Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle) to fight wildfires. FireSwarm has partnered with Strategic Natural Resource Group, an Indigenous-owned company based in Prince George that specializes in forestry, emergency response and remote site development, to bring the drones to the frontlines of firefighting. …Rapid wildfire growth at night is an emerging phenomenon that has become increasingly problematic… That nighttime gap in firefighting response is exactly what Deslauriers wanted to address

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A Tsilhqot’in First Nation builds capacity as fire season begins

By Ruth Lloyd
Clearwater Times
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Xeni Gwet’in First Nation is building capacity in a remote part of the Chilcotin Plateau as the wildfire season gets underway. The Tin Towh crew is an experienced forestry crew with Xeni Gwet’in, a community a three hour drive south-west of Williams Lake. Along with a lot of work doing fuel management, the crew is also continuing to build their skills as firefighters. Alexis Stowards is the crew coordinator, working both in the field and in the office, and Steve Quilt is the crew supervisor, overseeing field work. Based in the remote Nemaiah Valley, Tin Towh, which loosely translates to “in the woods” in Tsilhqot’in, the crew was well-positioned to respond to a fire reported on April 21. The fire was approximately three hectares and was located in an area about 20 km west of the Xeni Gwet’in community.

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Environmental groups want BC to refocus measures to protect old-growth forests

My Coast Now
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) and Endangered Ecosystems Alliance (EEA) are calling for better protection of old-growth forests from the BC Government. [They want the] province to refocus their measures, implement their draft biodiversity, and Ecosystem Health Framework to ensure a transition to a sustainable forest industry. Executive Director of EEA Ken Wu said there is two directions the government can go in response to tariff threats from the U.S. “Either take the easy but foolish route by falling back on the destructive status quo of old-growth logging and raw low exports, or instead take the opportunity to invest in a modernized, sustainable, value-added, second-growth forest industry that is the future of forestry in BC, while protecting the last old-growth forests.” …The groups are also issuing a warning which commercial logging must not be permitted in protected areas under the guise of wildfire risk reduction.

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Squamish Nation hope to be recognized as part of Stanley Park

By Min Kerr-Lazenby
CTV News
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation) is calling for better education on Stanley Park’s Indigenous history after a First Nations group threw their connection into question during a logging protest earlier this month. A “sacred fire” lit March 15 was kept ablaze for over a month at Brockton Park’s totem poles by a woman who identified, according to protest group Save Stanley Park, as a “matriarch” of the land. The woman claimed to be a descendent of “Portuguese Joe”, an early B.C. settler with Musqueam lineage, and was in protest of the Vancouver Park Board’s ongoing project to remove hundreds of trees affected by the looper moth disease. Squamish Nation elected councillor Wilson Williams says the claims are still yet to be verified, and his own community is left reeling at the group’s failure to address the history of the Squamish people that dates back thousands of years within the park.

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Pipeline Habitat Restoration: Strategies and Innovations

Silvacom Ltd.
April 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Silvacom is hosting a free webinar titled “Pipeline Habitat Restoration: Strategies and Innovations” MAY 14, 2025 9:00 AM MDT | 11 EST. This event will bring together industry experts, environmental scientists, and key stakeholders to discuss the latest developments and best practices in habitat restoration in areas affected by pipeline projects. Join Our Webinar on Pipeline Habitat Restoration: Successfully Navigating Key Challenges of New SRP Requirements on Active Pipelines (Upper Smoky Sub-Regional Plan). With Alberta’s Sub-Regional Planning Process introducing new regulatory requirements for caribou habitat restoration, the energy sector must adapt and implement  habitat restoration on active pipeline corridors. Unlike decommissioned or abandoned pipelines, active right-of-ways (ROW) present unique operational, regulatory, and ecological challenges. This webinar will explore the complexities of meeting habitat restoration objectives while balancing: Ecological restoration goals; Operational efficiencies; Regulatory requirements; and Indigenous community and stakeholder values.

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BC Premier’s, minister’s statements on Earth Day

Government of British Columbia
April 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Premier David Eby has issued the following statement marking Earth Day: “On Earth Day, people in British Columbia join other Canadians and people around the world in celebrating our planet as we rededicate our efforts to protect it. British Columbia is lucky to have so many marvelous natural wonders, from snowcapped mountains to verdant valleys to spectacular coastlines. Our government is working in partnership with more than 60 First Nations on stewardship projects embracing local and Indigenous knowledge to protect nature. Our unique biospheres are our inheritance. We have an obligation to preserve them as our legacy for future generations.” …Tamara Davidson, Minister of Environment and Parks, said: “Earth Day allows us to reflect on where we are and where we need to go to build a cleaner, sustainable future. I am committed to do my part in stewarding our environment for future generations to benefit from, care and enjoy.”

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Canfor passes forestry audit, uses notable practice

BC Forest Practices Board
April 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

CRANBROOK – The Forest Practices Board has released its audit of Canadian Forest Products Ltd. (Canfor) Forest Licence A19040 in the Rocky Mountain Natural Resource District. The report finds overall compliance with forestry legislation but highlights a notable practice and a fire-hazard abatement issue. The audit examined Canfor’s forestry activities, which covered an extensive area near Cranbrook, Kimberley, Sparwood, Wasa and Elkford. The board found that Canfor met its legal obligations for operational planning, timber harvesting, road construction and maintenance, silviculture and most wildfire protection requirements. Canfor’s operations included harvesting in 90 cutblocks and maintaining more than 4,600 kilometres of forest roads. “The way Canfor managed its forest operations was very well done, given its size and complexity,” said Gerry Grant, vice-chair of the board. “We also saw a notable practice in this audit: Canfor’s use of a new predictive pine rust tool that can be used to model forest-health risks and support healthy, resilient forests.” 

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Drought persists in some parts of B.C. as crews gear up for wildfire season

By Michelle Gomez
CBC News
April 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The B.C. Wildfire Service is gearing up for the approaching season, noting drought conditions persist in some regions of the province. A seasonal outlook from the services says a less aggressive start to the fire season is expected in the coastal and southeast regions of the province, due to above-average precipitation this winter. However, forecasters expect drought to persist in B.C.’s northeast and southern Nechako regions, elevating fire risk, even if they receive average or above-average rainfall. It said there is also a higher fire risk in the western Chilcotin area. Much of the province is currently experiencing warmer-than-usual temperatures, said the service, but the intensity of the wildfire season will depend on the amount of rain during May and June. …Households should start preparing for fire season, Minister of Emergency Management and Climate Readiness Kelly Greene said at a news conference last week. 

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BC Hydro on wildfire risk prevention tactics in face of hot and dry forecasts

By Spencer Hall
Energetic City
April 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. — BC Hydro says it’s taking proactive steps to address wildfire risks due to higher-than-average temperatures and dry conditions anticipated in the coming months. BC Hydro has been trialling fire-resistant pole wraps between Fort Nelson and the Alberta border. These wraps are made of steel mesh that is coated with a heat-activated barrier, which protects power poles from “radiant heat and flames while allowing water evaporation to prevent decay.” Northern community relations manager with BC Hydro, Mike Kellett, told Energeticcity.ca that in early 2024, crews cleared vegetation along the right of way of the transmission line running from Rainbow Lake to Fort Nelson from the Fort Nelson River to the Alberta border. This work included installing the fire protection wrap on about 1,000 structures and over 90 per cent of the line.

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Quebec Aims to Modernize Forest Management with Bill 97

World Today News
April 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Maïté Blanchette Vézina

Quebec’s goverment, led by the minister of Natural Resources and Forests, Maïté Blanchette-Vézina, introduced Bill 97 to modernize its forest regime. The legislation, presented in the National Assembly on Wednesday, addresses forest zoning, licensing, and wood auction oversight. This strategic move aims to improve sustainability, offering longer-term licenses. For more on this, watch our upcoming coverage. The proposed legislation focuses on several key areas to streamline and enhance forest management practices across the province. …The bill introduces a zoning system that divides public forestry territory into three distinct zones: Priority forest development zones; Multi-use zones; and Conservation areas. The bill also introduces Sustainable Forest Development Licenses (supply guarantees for forestry companies would be replaced with sustainable forest development licenses, extending the duration from five to ten years.); eliminates the wood marketing office; and provides for administrative criminal sanctions to ensure compliance.

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Newfoundland and Labrador government commits to repairing 5th water bomber 7 years after grounding

By Jenna Head
CBC News
April 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

All of Newfoundland and Labrador’s five water bombers will be in service for the 2026-27 wildfire season, promises the provincial government. On Wednesday the Department of Transportation and Infrastructure announced a $17-million contract has been awarded to aircraft manufacturer De Havilland Aircraft of Canada to repair the province’s fifth CL-415 water bomber. The water bomber has been out of service since 2018, when it hit a rock in a lake on the Burin Peninsula, causing significant structural damage. Previously announced as a $14.8-million contract, the province says it did not include the costs of HST in the initial statement. According to department spokesperson Maria Browne, the contracts value is subject to change. The multi-million dollar contract will address the structural repairs required so that the water bomber can return to the fleet next year. Additional maintenance will also take place, which is not accounted for in the contracts current price point.

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Environment groups raise alarm about Ontario bill that would weaken species protection

By Muriel Draaisma
CBC News
April 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — Environmental groups are raising concerns about newly tabled Ontario legislation that they say will be “catastrophic” for wildlife and weaken government protections for “species that are the rarest” in the province. Ecojustice Canada said Bill 5…  would repeal Ontario’s existing Endangered Species Act passed in 2007, and replace it with a significantly watered down version of the original act called the Species Conservation Act. The legislation has passed first reading. …Ecojustice Canada said the legislation would gut environmental assessment processes, speed mining and infrastructure development and take a “register-first, ask-questions-later” approach that would allow developers to begin projects before their environmental implications are fully known. …Ontario’s Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks denied that the bill would weaken species protection. …”These changes will be supported by an enhanced Species Conservation Program, which will see funding more than quadrupled to $20 million each year,” Catherwood continued.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Canadian carbon credit firm sues former executives for US$40M, alleging fraud and ‘unjust enrichment’

By Jeff Lagerquist
Yahoo! Finance
April 22, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

A Canadian carbon credit firm is seeking more than US$40 million in damages in a lawsuit against its former CEO and several ex-directors and associates over alleged unjust enrichment, fraud, and breach of fiduciary duty. A statement of claim filed in the Ontario Superior Court by Carbon Streaming Corporation describes diverted six-figure advisory fees, as well as lavish trips and retreats without a business purpose, over the span of multiple years. Toronto-based Carbon Streaming provides capital to carbon capture projects around the world via streaming or royalty agreements for carbon credits, which they sell to buyers looking to offset emissions, or other investors. …Last week, Carbon Streaming filed a lawsuit with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice against founder, former CEO and company director Justin Cochrane, as well as several other past executives, directors, consultants, and affiliated entities.

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Turning forestry waste into industrial fuel

Emissions Reduction Alberta
April 23, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada West

EDMONTON, AB – Alberta leads the market in developing new ways to produce low-carbon fuels and energy. By creating world-scale CCS capacity for detecting and capturing methane, Alberta continues to advance global technologies to decarbonize hard-to-abate industrial sectors. Hydrogen is the next stage in this effort, and Alberta has an opportunity to be a global leader in low-carbon and carbon-negative hydrogen. This $3 million investment from Emissions Reduction Alberta will help Hydrogen Naturally develop a project that converts forestry harvest residuals and fire-kill fibre – wood damaged by wildfire – into hydrogen. It will then capture and sequester the carbon typically released into the air during this process underground, transporting it to saline aquifers or depleted gas reservoirs. Carbon-negative hydrogen will then be blended with natural gas to produce carbon-neutral energy.

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B.C. company aims to commercialize carbon capture on a global scale

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
April 22, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada West

Burnaby-based Svante Inc. has adapted a roll-to-roll lithium battery production line to produce a carbon-sucking laminate the company says it hopes will transform humanity’s fight against climate change. “It never stops.” said Laliberte, Svante’s chief operating officer. “We need to show the world we’re ready to commercialize.” When the machines go into production next month, Svante’s new factory will become the first plant in the world to commercially produce filters that can snatch carbon out of a smokestack or even thin air. For now, the facility is powered by roaring shipping-container-sized generators as it awaits a massive electrical upgrade from BC Hydro. At full capacity, Svante claims the production line will be able to manufacture enough filters to remove 10 million tonnes of carbon a year — equivalent to the emissions from 27 million cars. …BIV was shown the technology on condition it does not reveal details that could be stolen by competitors.

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Nova Scotia Invests in Canada’s First-of-Its-Kind Bioinnovation Centre

The Government of Nova Scotia
April 22, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Nova Scotia will soon be a major player in the world of bioinnovation thanks to the newly opened Neptune BioInnovation Centre in Dartmouth. The centre will transform Nova Scotia’s bioindustrial landscape and will be a world-leading biofermentation centre, allowing Nova Scotia to compete globally, strengthen domestic supply chains and foster biotechnology advancements across critical sectors, including life sciences, pharmaceuticals, forestry and agriculture. …The Neptune BioInnovation Centre is a world-class, multi-user facility that is the first of its kind in Canada and one of three in the world. It is projected to create more than 2,400 jobs, $175 million in salaries and $74 million in tax revenue and contribute $334 million annually to the province’s gross domestic product. The Province is investing $5 million to help transform the 4,738-square-metre facility into new state-of-the-art wet and dry labs.

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Health & Safety

Crews respond to leaking rail car at Saint John railway yard

By Andrew Bates
The Telegraph-Journal in Yahoo! News
April 23, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Saint John Fire Department’s hazardous materials team responded Wednesday to a “slow leak” of sulfuric acid from a rail car at a west-side Saint John rail yard. …The rail yard is owned by N.B. Southern Railway, a J.D. Irving company. Arrand said the hazmat team was called and firefighters established a 150-foot perimeter around the rail car while they waited for removal specialists from the Canadian Transport Emergency Centre and RST Transport to arrive. JDI VP of communications Anne McInerney said “All emergency procedures were followed,” and while it’s not confirmed how much acid leaked, the release occurred in a “very small area” and could not have been more than five litres. Arrand said that sulfuric acid presents an inhalation hazard, which was the reason for the perimeter.

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