Region Archives: Canada

Business & Politics

Trump vows to renegotiate USMCA free trade agreement with Canada and Mexico

By Daniel Otis
CTV News
October 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Donald Trump

Donald Trump has vowed to renegotiate the USMCA free trade agreement with Canada and Mexico if he wins the November presidential election. “I am announcing today that upon taking office, I will formally notify Mexico and Canada of my intention to invoke the six-year renegotiation provisions of the USMCA that I put in,” Trump said. Following tense negotiations, the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement went into effect in 2020 to replace the earlier NAFTA. The new agreement is up for review on its sixth anniversary in 2026. …Speaking on Thursday, Trump said he wanted to better protect the U.S. auto industry and stop countries like China from shipping products tax-free into the U.S. via Mexico. “I terminated NAFTA. That’s a pretty big thing,” Trump said. …What we have to do is make it much better even.”

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BC Forest Companies See a Future. In the US

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
October 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Canfor’s recent mill closures have hammered communities in British Columbia. But the future of the province’s once strong forest economy may face an even greater threat from what the company is doing 5,000 kilometres away. Steadily, over the course of the past two decades, Canfor has invested hundreds of millions of dollars buying, expanding or building new sawmills in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, North and South Carolina and Mississippi… a move being replicated by other companies that have long operated in the province, including West Fraser, Interfor and Teal-Jones. …When it comes to plantations, B.C. turns out to be seriously disadvantaged. In the U.S. South… pine plantations are now “among the most intensely managed” on the planet. In just 12 to 15 years, the trees in these sterile landscapes are thinned like carrots, with the thinned trees being chipped to make wood pulp or pellets. …In the foot race to grow tree crops quickly, B.C. is barely in the race.

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Western Forest Products temporarily curtails sawmill production

The Canadian Press in CBC News
October 7, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

VANCOUVER, BC — Western Forest Products says it is temporarily curtailing lumber production… from its B.C. sawmills by approximately 30 million board feet during the period from October to December of this year. The reduction will affect operating schedules at all B.C. WFP sawmill locations, including Ladysmith, Saltair, Cowichan Bay, Duke Point and Chemainus sawmills, impacting about 800 employees, said WFP’s Babita Khunkhun. The measures include temporary downtime during the last two weeks of December at those mills. …This comes on top of additional curtailments that took place earlier in the year, for a total reduction of approximately 90 million board feet, or about 10% of the company’s annual lumber capacity. Western Forest Products says the curtailments are due to a combination of market challenges, including weaker lumber demand and higher U.S. softwood lumber duty rates. Click here to read Western Forest Product’s release.

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B.C.’s forestry future tied to Canadian housing boom

By Geoff Russ
Business in Vancouver
October 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — It is not an exaggeration to declare that forestry’s fortunes in recent years have been nothing short of disastrous, with more than 9,000 jobs lost since 2018. …However, there is hope for the forestry industry in B.C., and that is Canada’s bi-partisan consensus that the country needs more housing. …The CMHC found that housing starts had declined by 7% in 2023 compared to 2022, with a particularly acute 25% reduction in detached, single-family home starts. For BC, where forestry is still a prominent industry despite its ongoing difficulties, the impact of the housing and construction downturn has harmed the province hard. …However, Canada’s political leaders have realized the need for a dramatic boost in the country’s housing supply to alleviate the chronic affordability challenges faced by ordinary Canadians. …If the softwood lumber dispute means an unfriendly American market, an explosion of new housing starts in Canada is an attractive alternative.

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How forestry could shape B.C. election’s outcome in the north

By Isaac Phan Nay
CBC News
October 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Mike Egli

When Mike Egli goes to vote in the British Columbia election, one issue will weigh heavy on his mind: forestry. Egli, who co-owns Vanderhoof, B.C.-based logging contractor Dalchako Transport, fears his business could be part of a new wave of closures in the industry. He said he’s looking to the government to help the region’s dwindling forestry sector. “We need the forest industry. That’s what we have to keep these towns alive,” he said. “I’m not sure what can be done, but they need to work with the mills.” …After recent announcements of more planned closures put hundreds more northern B.C. jobs in jeopardy, forestry could now define the election in northern B.C. — and the province’s three major parties have taken note, pitching policies that aim to prolong the industry, including measures to cut costs, change forest management and invest in the sector.

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COFI 2025 Convention – Prince George, B.C. – Save the Date

BC Council of Forest Industries
October 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC Council of Forest Industries’ Annual Convention is the largest gathering of the forest sector in Western Canada. Under the theme of “Where Do We Stand? Strategies for Competitiveness and Sustainability” the 2025 COFI Convention will tackle the factors and innovations now actively reshaping the future of the forest sector. It will provide stakeholders from across the industry, its supply chain and workforce with a critical platform for engaging with leaders in government, First Nations, and communities on the path forward. Registration will open soon, book your hotel now. April 2-4, 2025 at the Prince George Civic Centre.

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Registration is now OPEN for the 2025 TLA Convention!

BC Truck Loggers Association
October 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Since the evolution of logging began in the twentieth century, early truck loggers have used novel technologies to improve their livelihoods. They became disruptors and trail blazers, shifting steam train rail logging in favour of trucks. Since then, they have been key innovators in the forest industry using modern technologies to transform logging into data-driven, precise operations, boosting productivity and safety, reducing environmental impact, and enhancing sustainability. As proven, contemporary loggers will continue to meet industry, government and societies demands today and into the future. We invite you to join us as we celebrate the 80th Annual Truck Loggers Association Convention + Trade Show, at the Westin Bayshore in Vancouver from January 15 – 17, 2025. This year’s theme “Advancing Innovation for 80 Years” offers an opportunity to reflect on and discuss the future of an industry that has proven to meet industry, government and societies demands for decades.

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Registration Open: 2025 Forest Professionals British Columbia Forestry Conference & AGM

Forest Professionals British Columbia
October 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Join us in Victoria! We are pleased to announce the upcoming FPBC Forestry Conference & AGM, scheduled to be held in the Victoria Conference Centre from February 5 – 7, 2025. We are offering both online and in-person attendance options. We invite you and your staff to join us for professional development sessions, to hear about the latest trends in forest management, and to network with peers and colleagues.

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Provincial Election Platforms Show Support for Growth of BC’s Community Forest Program

By Carly Dow
BC Community Forest Association
October 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA and the Traditional Territory of the Lekwungen Peoples – As British Columbia prepares for the 2024 Provincial Election, political parties have included specific support for expanding the community forest program in their platforms. …“Community forests represent a future where forest management decisions, investments and benefits are realized in the community and for the land. It is great to see a recognition of community forests in BC as a way forward as we grapple with climate change, wildfire risk, watershed management and Indigenous reconciliation.” – Randy Spyksma, President, BCCFA At the mid-way point in the election campaign, the BC NDP have proposed a doubling of the area in the community forest program, and the BC Greens have proposed that 20% of the provincial Allowable Annual Cut be allocated to community forests. While others have yet to make specific commitments, “We look forward to possible support from the other political parties regarding community forestry,” said Spyksma.

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British Columbia’s Election Is a Bellwether for Climate Policy. Is the last progressive stronghold in Canada poised to fall?

By Arno Kopecky
The Walrus Magazine
October 7, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

In this year of high-stakes elections, the choice facing British Columbian voters on October 19 boils down to a familiar binary: acknowledge reality or embrace denial. Embodied by the BC NDP and the Conservative Party of BC respectively, that contrast permeates almost every field of public policy. But it is starkest, and most consequential, in questions of the land itself: BC is on the front line of climate disaster, hammered by unprecedented wildfires, heat domes, drought, and atmospheric rivers. The province is also grappling with the collapse of a resource base that sustained its economy for much of the last century: some 80% of the province’s primary forest has been logged. …Who will lead the province through this maelstrom for the next four years? …As Conservative denial sweeps much of the rest of the country, BC has become the most powerful stronghold of progressive politics in Canada. That’s what’s on the ballot in October.

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J.D. Irving Unable to Get Around Antidumping Procedures

By Bernie Pazanowski
Bloomberg Law
October 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

  • Wanted to have suit heard in US Court of International Trade
  • Should have sought administrative review in binational panel

The US Court of International Trade properly dismissed the challenge by a Canadian lumber producer to an antidumping duty imposed by the US Department of Commerce, the Federal Circuit said Thursday. JD Irving Ltd. can’t make an end run around the procedures established in the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement for disputing antidumping duties between the three countries, Judge Kara F. Stoll said. Under the USMCA, judicial review of final antidumping determinations is replaced by a binational panel review, Stoll said. A decision by the panel is final and not subject to judicial review, she said. [to access the full story a Bloomberg Law subscription is required]

 

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Legal clock ticking on New Brunswick Indigenous title claim

By John Chilibeck
The Telegraph-Journal
October 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — Whoever wins the provincial election in two weeks will be working against the clock in one of the biggest legal cases ever to face New Brunswick. Justice Kathryn Gregory of the Court of King’s Bench has until late December to rule on several preliminary motions in the Wolastoqey Nation’s Aboriginal title claim, which has named the provincial and federal governments and several large landowners, including big timber companies, as defendants. At stake is the legal title for more than half of New Brunswick’s territory, on the western side, centred on the St. John River, or Wolastoq. …The pressing question before the new government after the Oct. 21 vote is whether to keep fighting the lawsuit in court or to seek talks with Indigenous leaders who say their peoples’ ancestral lands were never surrendered. …An opinion poll suggests New Brunswickers are split on the issue.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Sustainable building effort reaches new heights with wooden skyscrapers

By Kurt Kleiner
Knowable Magazine
October 8, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, United States

At the University of Toronto, workers are putting up a 14-story building with space for classrooms and faculty offices. What’s unusual is how they’re building it — by bolting together giant beams, columns and panels made of manufactured slabs of wood. …The tower uses a new technology called mass timber. …Though still relatively uncommon, it is growing in popularity around the world. …But a lot of the current enthusiasm over mass timber’s climate benefits is based on some big assumptions. …There are also concerns that increasing demand for wood could lead to more deforestation and less land for food production. …“A lot of architects are scratching their heads,” says Stephanie Carlisle, an architect and environmental researcher at the nonprofit Carbon Leadership Forum, wondering whether mass timber always has a net benefit. “Is that real?” She believes climate benefits do exist. But she says understanding the extent of those benefits will require more research.

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Climate and Construction: New study spotlights logging industry carbon emissions

By John Bleasby
Daily Commercial News
October 9, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Questioning the benefits of incorporating wood into ever-larger construction can feel like swimming against the tide. Considerable efforts over the past several years have promoted the increased use of mass timber construction through a lens focussed on embedded carbon, environmental sustainability and CO2 reduction. …However, a report released last month titled 2024 Logging Emissions Update questions one of the foundational arguments surrounding the carbon reduction benefits of wood. The report authors say the Canadian government has failed to report transparently and has significantly understated the logging sector’s carbon emissions in its annual GHG emissions report. …Importantly, the report uses methodology that takes into account that even though carbon is stored in long-lived wood products, the forest floor becomes a carbon emission source for a number of years after harvest. …If the forest’s carbon sequestration capability is truly important to those concerned about carbon emission reductions, perhaps trees should just be left alone.

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Timber trail blazers see new growth in green building drive

By Darius Snieckus
The National Observer
October 8, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Wood, one of the world’s oldest building materials, could make a comeback in the next decade if mass timber can overcome a range of challenges as the green transition gains momentum in Canada’s construction industry. …Lighter than concrete or steel but strong enough for use in load-bearing beams and columns, mass timber has environmental and construction virtues that could dramatically change the building landscape, green construction advocates say. …An industrial roadmap from the Transition Accelerator, an Ottawa-based think tank, argues that using mass timber in place of conventional construction materials could cut “embodied carbon” – the emissions produced during manufacturing – by 40%. …How sustainable is mass timber? It depends on several factors, including the source of wood, how it was harvested and the ongoing health of the forest. …Nevertheless, mass timber proponents believe there is a clear economic development angle for the sector in this country.

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Forestry

Documentary on Fairy Creek protests premiering in Toronto this month

By Curtis Brandy
Victoria Buzz
October 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

A documentary about the protests against logging in an old-growth forest on Vancouver Island is being premiered at the Planet in Focus International Film Festival later this month. The film titled FAIRY CREEK will be shown to audiences for the first time on October 17th, then it will be made readily available through its distributor, Cinema Politica. The film documents the protests against Teal-Jones Group in the logging of old-growth groves near Port Renfrew, which to date is the largest act of civil disobedience in Canadian history. …The RCMP faced massive scrutiny during and following this protest for their ethics in arresting the activists involved as well as their gatekeeping of the media, who were often kept from the site where they were trying to report from. “The protests at the Fairy Creek blockade were record-breaking, with nearly 1,200 people arrested,” said Jen Muranetz, director of Fairy Creek.

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Government of Canada launches Indigenous Fisheries Monitoring Fund

By the Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada
Cision Newswire
October 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) recognizes that fisheries, oceans, aquatic habitat and marine waterways are of great social, cultural, spiritual and economic importance to many Indigenous peoples. Working with Indigenous peoples as they increase their capacity to monitor fisheries is key to providing dependable, timely, and accessible information for sustainable fisheries management. Today, the Honourable Diane Lebouthillier, Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, announced the launch of the $5-million Indigenous Fisheries Monitoring Fund. This funding supports Indigenous groups as they increase fisheries monitoring and catch reporting activities, which is crucial for maintaining sustainable fisheries. Fishery monitoring provides accurate information on fishing activities, such as how many fish are caught from each stock, and how many bycatch species are caught during a fishery.

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De Havilland Canada and the EU: Fighting forest fires with new Canadair 515

By Rene Steuer
Aviation.Direct
October 7, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

The European Union (EU) and De Havilland Canada recently concluded a crucial agreement that will significantly strengthen the fight against forest fires in Europe. The procurement of 22 new Canadair 515 amphibious aircraft, formerly known as DHC-515 Firefighter, was agreed as part of the rescEU programme. This strategic partnership marks a milestone in the EU’s efforts to fight forest fires more effectively and optimise joint crisis management between Member States. …The decision to rename the new model Canadair 515 reflects the brand’s high level of recognition in Europe. “When people in Europe are near a forest fire, they ask when the Canadairs will come to protect their community,” said Brian Chafe, CEO of De Havilland Canada, aptly when announcing the name change. In many European countries, the term “Canadair” has become synonymous with efficient and reliable firefighting aircraft that have been used successfully to fight forest fires for decades.

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Vancouver Park Board to continue Stanley Park looper moth logging

By Charlie Carey
CityNews Everywhere
October 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation is moving ahead with the second stage of removing looper moth-damaged trees in Stanley Park. During Tuesday night’s Park Board meeting, commissioners approved a plan to fell the trees killed by the hemlock looper. The hemlock looper insect experiences population outbreaks roughly every 15 years, however, the most recent outbreak resulted in significant tree mortality in the park causing an elevated risk to public safety,” the Park Board stated. Phase two is set to begin by the middle of this month, finishing by early 2025. Replanting is set to follow in the spring of next year. …“Our response efforts in Stanley Park have been vital to ensuring the continuing safety and well-being of park users, park infrastructure and wildlife species in the park,” said Bastyovanszky. “Further, it’s an opportunity to build a stronger Stanley Park that can better withstand future insect outbreaks and climate change impacts.”

Additional coverage in Global News by Simon Little and Alissa Thibault: Vancouver to remove a fraction of 160K Stanley Park trees it originally estimated

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Calgary Forest Area facing extreme wildfire danger due to unseasonably warm fall

By Mackenzie Rhode
Calgary Herald
October 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Wildfire danger across the Calgary Forest Area (CFA) remains extreme, as October continues to see unseasonably warm weather. Derrick Forsythe, a provincial information officer with Alberta Wildfire, said the warning is due to extreme dryness in the area exacerbated by the heat. He said the CFA typically stays warmer longer and experiences drier conditions than other parts of Alberta, putting it at risk of fires later into the fall season. …The wildfire danger level being extreme, however, is not typical. Strong winds combined with warm temperatures and a lack of precipitation triggered the danger in the area for the next several days, said Forsythe. These conditions, in combination with seasonal grass curing, create ideal wildfire conditions. …Calgary’s warm October is atypical, according to Shelley, with Environment Canada forecasting temperatures of 25 C into next week… 

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Jasper mayor condemns ‘finger pointing’ around wildfire

CityNews Everywhere
October 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jasper Mayor Richar Irland called for an end to the “finger pointing, blaming and both partial and misinformation” surround the Jasper wildfire and forest management. Telling reporters, the rhetoric is harming his communities recovery.

Additional coverage in Town and Country Today by Peter Shokeir: Jasper mayor condemns ‘divisive rhetoric’ around wildfire

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Parliamentary hearings on Jasper wildfire reveal need for more long-term planning

By Emma Zhao
CBC News
October 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Witness testimony during a parliamentary hearing Wednesday detailed how the Jasper wildfire could have been prevented with better planning. Meetings started in September to examine the reasons why the Jasper wildfire started this summer. …Experts expressed concerns about how the federal government addressed the disaster. Forester Ken Hodges said he penned multiple letters to Parks Canada and the minister of Environment from 2017-18, expressing concern over an inevitable wildfire in the region. He found that they didn’t respond well to his recommendations. “…they had seven years in which to do something and come up with a plan of some sort, I think they could have prevented the loss of Jasper town itself,” he said. …Randy Schroeder, president of the Alberta Fire Chiefs Association said he wants a national fire administration put in place to streamline the co-ordination and communication between municipal, provincial and federal fire agencies. 

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Two BC Parties ‘Playing Catch-Up’ with Glyphosate Pledges

By Amanda Follett Hosgood
The Tyee
October 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s two leading political parties say they would reduce or phase out the use of the herbicide glyphosate in forestry if they win the upcoming election. …The BC NDP’s platform …says the party would protect “communities and local watersheds by phasing out the use of the herbicide glyphosate” in B.C. forests. This followed the BC Conservatives’ promise last month to stop the aerial spraying of glyphosate in the forest industry. James Steidle, who is running for the BC Green Party in Prince George-Mackenzie, has been fighting the use of glyphosate for over a decade. In 2011, he started Stop the Spray BC, to raise awareness about glyphosate use. He said B.C.’s two main parties are “playing catch-up.” …A June 2023 briefing note prepared for Minister of Forests Bruce Ralston said that glyphosate use in forestry represents a “small fraction” compared with its use in agriculture, something it attributed to First Nations and public pressure.

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Chilcotin River helps inspire Indigenous forest leadership

The Clearwater Times
October 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

CHILCOTIN REGION, BC — A new video features the Chilcotin River and the importance of the river and the salmon it brings is aimed at inspiring First Nations leadership in forestry and conservation. Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation (CCR), a joint venture of Tŝideldel First Nation and Tl’etinqox Government, released The Focus on Water Tuesday, Oct. 8. …CCR has been salvaging and rehabilitating large areas of land in the Cariboo Chilcotin to help the forest regrow, mitigate wildfire risk to communities, and to improve wildlife habitat. …Additionally, instead of burning wood waste left over from harvesting work in slash piles, CCR has utilized this excess residual fibre to help create green energy that supports local industries. 

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ConocoPhillips Canada and Northern Alberta Institute of Technology agree to a ten year research partnership

By Breanna Driedger
The Whitecourt Star
October 7, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

ConocoPhillips Canada and the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology (NAIT) have agreed to a ten year research partnership. NAIT’s centre for boreal research, located at Northern Lakes College in Peace River, is set to host a funding announcement on October 11 for work geared towards forest reclamation efforts. ConocoPhillips Canada and NAIT also plan to expand facilities with funding coming from Alberta’s research capacity program, the Canada foundation for innovation’s college fund, and the NSERC technology access centre program. Peace River’s boreal forest plant and seed technology access centre studies seed collection, treatment, propagation, and deployment. Their team is made up of scientists and technicians in forestry, agrology, and biology. “We provide scientific findings, practical methods, technologies and services to advance the capacity of industry to use native plants to lessen the environmental footprint in the boreal forest”.

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Dutch Elm Disease found in Prince Albert

By Nick Nielsen
Sask Now
October 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The threat of Dutch Elm Disease is something that cities around Saskatchewan have to monitor or they run the risk of the disease running rampant through their elm tree population. While Prince Albert hasn’t dealt with Dutch Elm Disease in the past, one case of the disease was found in a survey of the city’s trees in 2023, meaning the disease is here and it’s something to be monitored even if there were no trees found with the disease this year. Tim Yeaman, parks manager with the City of Prince Albert, said the city has been working with a third party organization, Living Tree Environmental, since 2021 to conduct two surveys per year on the trees in the city. The summer surveys include trees on public, private or residential land. …the City is doing maintenance on the elm trees now that the ban on pruning is out of season.

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‘It’s path-breaking’: British Columbia’s blueprint for decolonisation

By Arno Kopecky
The Guardian
October 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A wild experiment is under way in British Columbia, Canada: the government is rewriting its laws to share power with Indigenous nations… Decades in the making, this transition entered history in 2019, when BC became the first jurisdiction to sign the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) into law. This means the regional government would share decision-making power over land management matters with First Nations, potentially affecting leasing and licences for forestry, mining and construction. …“We’re building a plane while flying it,” says Terry Teegee, chief of the BC Assembly of First Nations and chair of BC’s UNDRIP implementation committee. “It’s unique to anywhere in the world.” “It’s path-breaking,” agrees Sheryl Lightfoot, an Anishinaabe scholar and member of the UN expert mechanism on the rights of Indigenous peoples. “What we see in BC is such a deliberate, intentional approach to implement the Declaration,” Lightfoot says.

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Jasper wildfire: Alberta minister urges improved unified command structure

By Phil Heidenreich
Global News
October 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Parliamentary hearings focused on this summer’s devastating wildfire in Jasper National Park continued on Monday where more discussions were had about what could potentially be done better the next time disaster strikes. Alberta Public Safety and Emergency Services Minister Mike Ellis told the hearing committee that he believes provincial authorities should have been better integrated into the unified command structure tasked with dealing with the emergency. “The fact is that Jasper is surrounded by a national park where the fire originated,” he said. “The challenge was that the Parks (Canada) superintendent has oversight for all emergency management decisions for both the park and municipality. This places the province in a position where we can certainly influence but not decide.” …Ellis noted that Alberta has approved a disaster recovery program with a budget of about $149 million but that only a portion of those costs will be eligible for reimbursement…

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Vancouver Park Board to vote on second phase of Stanley Park tree removal

By Abigail Turner
CTV News Vancouver
October 7, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — The second phase of a planned massive tree removal in Stanley Park is on the agenda at the park board Monday night. About 160,000 trees have been classified as dead or dying as a result of a hemlock looper moth outbreak and will be cut down. The number works out to about one-third of all trees in the beloved green space. Crews cut down about 7,000 trees earlier this year, drawing criticism from some residents. 25% of Stanely Park’s area was targeted in the first phase of the project and 11% will be targeted in the next phase – with plans to begin in mid-October. Michael Caditz believes the science does not support the plans to remove the trees. …Brennan Bastyovanszky, the park board chair, says the trees are being removed as a safety precaution. Since the removal started, there have been 25,000 new seedlings planted.

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Generating power, revenue and knowledge in the Alex Fraser Research Forest

By Andie Mollins
The Williams Lake Tribune
October 7, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Since the 2017 wildfires, the Alex Fraser Research Forest (AFRF) has been moving away from logging and finding new ways to substitute its revenue. The research forest’s manager Stephanie Ewen says some ideas are coming to fruition. …These businesses aren’t just about money but are innovative projects seeking to develop peoples’ connection with nature and their ability to contribute to local industry. Wild & Immersive (W&I) is a business aiming to bring people, especially children, closer to nature. It was first started at UBC’s research forest in Maple Ridge, and in 2021 expanded to Williams Lake. …The latest business project, the Combined Heat and Power Academy (CHP) was created to enable people from remote locations to help their communities transition from diesel-based power to biomass power. …Finally, the AFRF is working on the Cariboo Wood Innovation Training Hub (CWITH) …initially proposed in 2018, with funding from the Fraser Basin Council. 

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Over $150 million in forestry equipment displayed at DEMO International 2024

Recycling Product News
October 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

QUEBEC — The 2024 DEMO International concluded on September 21 after five full days of groundbreaking displays, industry networking, and the latest in forestry innovations. Hosted by SBC Cedar and organized by the Canadian Woodlands Forum, the event marked the successful return of DEMO International, continuing its 55-year legacy as one of the world’s largest live, in-forest equipment demonstrations. With over $150 million in forestry equipment and machines on display from top manufacturers and suppliers internationally, over 6850 attendees had plenty to see and experience along the 3.2 km loop. …As one of the premier forestry events, DEMO International has been a platform for showcasing innovative solutions for more than five decades. The 2024 edition was no exception, highlighting advancements that promise to drive the industry forward for years to come.

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Should $700K in Ontario caribou recovery funding have gone to the forestry industry?

By Emma McIntosh
The Narwhal
October 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Ontario government gave $700,000 of caribou conservation funding to a forestry industry group that is pushing back on whether habitat loss is a major cause of caribou decline. …The Forest Products Association of Canada received the funding to partner with Lakehead University on a DNA study to estimate the caribou population in the Churchill Range. …Environment and Climate Change Canada’s caribou strategy focuses on the idea — backed by a wealth of evidence — that the main cause of caribou decline is the loss of their habitat, which logging can contribute to. The association has argued the science isn’t so certain and the government’s plans fail to account for other factors like climate change and predators. Association spokesperson Kerry Patterson-Baker said it is involved in caribou research, also putting up its own money, because accurate population estimates are needed if forests in Canada are going to be managed effectively.

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Contrary to industry claims, forests left alone are best able to combat climate change

By Joan Baxter
The Halifax Examiner
October 3, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Forests … subjected to intensive industrial forestry are the least capable of storing and sequestering carbon. This is the conclusion of a recent study published in Environmental Reviews, which looks at the capacity of Wabanaki-Acadian forests in the Maritime provinces to store carbon, and to sequester it out of the atmosphere. The literature review shows Wabanaki-Acadian forests that are left alone store and sequester the most carbon. …Notably, forests managed for “modern” intensive forestry… fare worst of the three forest management regimes on carbon. …In recent years, forest industry associations have gone to great lengths and spent millions of dollars trying to convince the public that industrial forestry is a force for good in our forests and for the climate. …As for Canada being a leader in sustainable forestry, which is what FPAC and its Forestry For The Future campaign claim, Megan de Graaf of Community Forests International, is skeptical.

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Forest sector plays a key role in New Brunswick’s economy

Letter by Kim Allen, Forest New Brunswick
The Telegraph-Journal
October 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kim Allen

New Brunswick’s forest products industry employs more than 24,000 New Brunswickers and encompasses more than 600 businesses, including small and medium sized and Indigenous-owned businesses. …The forest sector maintains healthy, growing forests that provide fibre, support conservation, and protect species, land, and waters through carefully planned management strategies and responsible operations. …Like other industries and businesses in New Brunswick, the forest sector is pressured by increased costs for electricity, fuel, and taxes, market uncertainties, and workforce challenges that impact the sector’s global competitiveness. Unresolved Aboriginal title claims add further complexity and uncertainty. Our association and its members are committed to reconciliation. Negotiating settlements is an easy campaign promise, but we firmly believe including the forest sector in these discussions and working alongside Indigenous communities is the path to finding solutions that benefit everyone.

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Atlantic Wildfire Centre to Provide Leadership and Expertise in Wildfire Fighting, Training and Prevention

Government of Newfoundland and Labrador
October 7, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Newfoundland and Labrador is taking the lead to establish a world-class Atlantic Wildfire Centre in Central Newfoundland that will strengthen and enhance efforts to protect Atlantic Canada’s communities and forests. Related initiatives will be supported in part through a $32 million cost-shared, four-year investment in partnership with Natural Resources Canada under the Fighting and Managing Wildfires in a Changing Climate: Equipment fund. Located at Gander International Airport, the Centre will provide leadership and expertise in wildfire fighting and prevention, focusing on: Specialized Wildfire Management Expertise; Applied Science and Data Localization; Training and Education Programs; Wildfire Response and Service Delivery; and Wildfire Management and Training Facilities. …Newfoundland and Labrador has the largest forest landscape in Atlantic Canada, with many communities located in the heart of fire-driven ecosystems…. The province has a culture of fire-prevention that has been established for generations and a wealth of experience fighting large wildfires.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Wood Pellet Association of Canada conference presentations now online

By the Wood Pellet Association of Canada
Canadian Biomass
October 10, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada’s 2024 conference last month focused on the critical role of biomass and wood pellets in the transition to a greener and brighter future. Over 160 people from nine countries came to Victoria, B.C., to examine the electrification revolution across Canada and worldwide. Participants tackled powering the shift from fossil fuels to renewable and responsible energy, innovations, solutions, current and future market conditions, new opportunities, emerging markets, and potential headwinds. …PowerPoint presentations from the WPAC 2024 Annual Conference: Powering Sustainability: The Role of Biomass in Electrification have been posted to the association website.

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Conference examines Indigenous-led forestry

By Mike Stimpson
Superior North Newswatch
October 10, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jason Rasevych

THUNDER BAY – A National Summit on the Indigenous Forest Bioeconomy got underway Wednesday in a Thunder Bay hotel, concluding Thursday. “They’ve done a great job to bring people from across Canada that are involved in the forest sector, mainly Indigenous-led forest management companies and also government and some of the technical capacity that communities work with,” participant Jason Rasevych said of the National Aboriginal Forestry Association, which organized the conference. As president of the Anishnawbe Business Professional Association and director of Waawoono Consultancy, Rasevych made a presentation on “Heavyweights of Indigenous Forest Tenure.” Rasevych told Newswatch many communities in Northern Ontario “have been able to increase their participation in the forest sector through a process of having a stronger voice and decision-making role on the forest units that are within their traditional territory.

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The Township of Chapleau becomes part of the clean energy revolution

Wawa News
October 7, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Chapleau is initiating the Chapleau District Heating Project, in partnership with Commercial BioEnergy Inc., a Northern Ontario biomass energy company dedicated to assisting communities in reducing their dependence on fossil fuels. The Chapleau District Heating Project will determine the feasibility of constructing a centralized biomass fuelled heating plant to deliver heating to potentially seven public buildings within the community. This will involve converting existing heating sources from propane or electricity to biomass generated heat, using locally sourced wood chips. This innovative project will be the first project in North America of this scale. …The Chapleau District Heating Project is currently in the feasibility phase which will determine the potential for the project’s implementation in 2026. The feasibility study will include a community consultation and stakeholder engagement process, which the project team anticipates beginning soon.

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Health & Safety

Health Canada invests $12.3 million in prevention and treatment of cancer for firefighters

By Health Canada
Government of Canada
October 7, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — Across Canada, firefighters put themselves in harm’s way to keep our communities safe, including by helping to fight wildland fires. …Because of their regular exposure to toxic chemicals from burning materials and firefighting foams, firefighters face a higher risk of being diagnosed with cancer. … The Honourable Mark Holland, Minister of Health, tabled the National Framework on Cancers Linked to Firefighting in Parliament and announced an investment of $12.29 million over 5 years and $220,000 ongoing, to advance firefighter health and safety. New investments will support the development of guidance for diagnostic testing and new tools to address training needs within the health care sector. This could lead to earlier diagnoses that may result in better health outcomes. To address gaps in equipment and health and safety standards, investments will also support the development of standards for wildland firefighters to support improved occupational health and safety for their unique needs.

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Forest History & Archives

‘It’s very historic’: Grande Prairie Museum gifted old fire lookout tower

By Jesse Boily
CTV News Edmonton
October 10, 2024
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Grande Prairie Museum has added another building to its historic village. A fire lookout tower was relocated to the museum on Sept. 30. “It’s very historic; it will help us tell the story of forestry in Alberta,” said Charles Taws, Grande Prairie museum curator. “The museum does have a small forestry section and we’d like to have forestry represented in a larger way.” The tower was in disrepair, and Alberta Forestry offered it to the museum. “This has been a project that we’ve been working on for a while with the Grande Prairie Museum and the Peace Historical Society, and also with the Forest History Society of Alberta,” said Kelly Burke, Alberta Wildfire information co-ordinator for the Grande Prairie Forest Area. “We’ve been working with them for 10 years to put together a forestry display for the museum, linking the past with future generations, and strengthening our partnerships with the community.”

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