Region Archives: Canada

Opinion / EdiTOADial

Trudeau’s pivot on carbon pricing shows need for rural policy lens

By Derek Nighbor, Forest Products Association of Canada
The Hub
November 28, 2023
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada

Derek Nighbor

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s recent decision to relieve home heating cost pressures in Atlantic Canada has initiated an important conversation about the challenges faced by Canadians living in rural parts of the country. …The groundswell of anger there would look familiar to anyone living in many other rural communities across the country. If anything, Trudeau’s announcement was a reminder of how smaller communities and their residents often get overlooked in the national conversation, and how we lack a coherent national approach to rural Canada. …We need to put more of a rural lens on the impacts of policy that’s created in Ottawa, much as we do for sustainability and other objectives. This isn’t just a matter of fairness. It’s in our national economic interest to ensure that rural Canada thrives. Most of the critical resources that make Canada a valued trading partner originate in rural parts of the country, not in cities. 

The same holds true for Canada’s green transition, with rural Canada at the centre of climate action efforts. For example, these communities see first-hand the impacts of worsening fires and are committed to protecting residents and critical infrastructure by actively managing forests. Politicians must think beyond urban voter bases to tap into the value that rural Canada brings to the wealth of our country. …It all starts by making rural communities viable places to live. Second, it’s imperative we get the policy frameworks right to ensure rural regions remain economically healthy. …Rural Canada—home to key industries like forestry, agriculture, mining, fisheries, and energy—makes up about 30% of the country’s GDP and an even bigger share of our exports. To seize the potential of a prosperous rural Canada of tomorrow that delivers for all Canadians, we need to start by recognizing the tremendous value these regions bring to our country and take strong actions to keep them vibrant and viable.

Read More

Business & Politics

What is biomass? The latest fuel source to get clean tech tax credits

By Dave Baxter
Global News
November 26, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Ottawa plans on expanding its clean technology and electricity tax credits to include heat and electricity produced by burning biomass, as outlined in its fall economic statement. …Ajay Dalai, the Canada Research Chair on Bioenergy out of the University of Saskatchewan, said Canada is “sitting on a gold mine in terms of biomass availability of products.” …“The amount of bioenergy that we produce in the country is about seven terawatt hours compared to one thousand terawatt hours worldwide — a very small fraction coming from the Canadian biomass.”…The fall economic statement is proposing to expand eligibility to the 30% Clean Technology investment tax credit to include “systems that produce electricity, heat, or both electricity and heat from waste biomass.” …This is welcome news for the Forest Products Association of Canada. …However, some environmental groups argue that biomass is not as green as it seems, including Stand Earth. …Accompanying legislation is expected to be introduced in fall 2024.

Read More

Houston pellet plant to undergo long Christmas shut down

By Rod Link
Houston Today
November 29, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Houston pellet plant is producing its final batch of pellets for 2023 up until December 7, after which it will be closed for at least the Christmas period. The plant, which has three owners and is operated by one of them, Drax Canada, has been running on a reduced schedule anyway since the closure of the Canfor sawmill next door this spring cut into the quantity of chips and waste needed to produce pellets. “We are exploring options for our Houston plant, which may include a temporary closure as we assess our fibre supply options,” information provided September 24 by Drax Canada indicated. It says it will determine plans for 2024 during meetings with the plant’s owners. When those meetings are isn’t immediately known. Since the Canfor mill closure, the plant’s reduced production schedule as had it operating for one week on, then two weeks off or one week on and one week off.

Read More

70 Crofton paper workers face at least another 3-month closure

By Darron Kloster
The Times Colonist
November 25, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Paper Excellence says paper operations at its Crofton mill will remain shuttered until at least the end of February, which is bad news for about 70 unionized workers who had hoped to be back on the job Dec. 1. The latest extension means the curtailment will now stretch to at least eight months. The company cited continued challenging conditions in international paper markets that have not recovered as anticipated. Unifor Local 1132… local president Tanner McQuarrie said the latest curtailment is making life difficult for members. …He said if there is any silver lining to the company’s latest announcement, “at least it had the respect to give us notice of three months instead of just one.” McQuarrie also noted it’s a huge blow to union members because the promised millions in upgrades unveiled during a press conference last year to save their jobs now seems uncertain — including $18.8 million in both federal and provincial funding.

Read More

Drax applauds the government of Canada’s commitment to biomass technologies

Drax Group plc
GlobeNewswire
November 24, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, US West

VANCOUVER, BC — Drax commends the Government of Canada on the inclusion of biomass-using technologies in the Clean Technology and Clean Electricity Investment Tax Credits. …Will Gardiner, CEO of Drax said, Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) is vital to energy security. Drax’s ambition through BECCS is building large-scale carbon removal facilities, creating thousands of jobs in new clean energy technology and generating dispatchable, renewable power using sustainably sourced biomass for homes and industries – while supporting the growth of the forestry sector and other intermittent energy sources. …Drax believes that Canada could be an ideal location to deploy BECCS, given its access to one of the world’s greatest fibre baskets, well-established sustainable forestry sector, and suitable geology for CO2 storage. …In Canada, Drax has invested over $830 million in the Canadian forestry sector, supporting more than 10,000 jobs and contributing $1.1 billion to the nation’s GDP in 2021.

Read More

Trudeau says Canada joining EU research program, makes water bomber deal

By Sarah Smellie
Canadian Press in Global News
November 24, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, US East

ST. JOHN’S, Newfoundland – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau kicked off a two-day summit with the top two heads of the European Union on Thursday night in a small brewpub on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean in Newfoundland and Labrador’s capital city of St. John’s. …He said Canada is joining the European Union’s $100-billion scientific research program, called Horizon Europe, which he called “the greatest research and innovation mechanism in the world right now.” Canada has also worked out a deal to build water bombers and ship them to the EU, after both regions faced devastating forest fires this past summer, Trudeau told the crowd at the Quidi Vidi Brewery. …This year’s EU-Canada Summit in St. John’s is the 19th such meeting between Canada’s prime minister and the heads of the bloc of 27 countries. 

Read More

Finance & Economics

“Weakness Is Spreading”: Economist Says Canadian Housing In For A Slow Spring

By Zakiya Kassam
Storeys Real Estate News
November 28, 2023
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

A new report looks ahead at Canadian housing in 2024, and forecasts softer sales and prices across all major markets, as well as a drop-off in homebuilding activity. Though it seems more than likely that the Bank of Canada (BoC) is done hiking rates for this cycle, the housing market is expected to remain soft through the spring. Desjardins’ latest housing outlook forecasts that most major markets will deviate from historical trends come spring, with softer sales and prices anticipated. …”Large cities in Ontario and BC have been hit the hardest and face challenging near‐term prospects given the economic weakness we forecast. …Still, we expect 2024 to bring only a mild recession by historical standards. As the Bank cuts rates, we should see sales and prices pick up. …We think homebuilding will moderate against a backdrop of still-high rates, elevated input costs and construction sector labour shortages.”

Read More

Paper, Packaging & Forest Products – What We Learned This Week

By Paul Quinn, Analyst
RBC Capital Markets
November 26, 2023
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber and OSB up w/w. According to Random Lengths, the Framing Lumber Composite increased $3 w/w to $376 and the OSB Composite increased $5 w/w to $419. For next week, RBC ElementsTM forecasts that the RL Framing Lumber Composite will increase $10 w/w to $386 and that the RL OSB Composite will decrease $9 w/w to $410.

Existing-home sales fall to the lowest level in 13 years. The U.S. National Association of Realtors reported October existing home sales of 3.79MM (SAAR) units, which was down 4.1% m/m and 14.6% y/y to the lowest level since August 2010.

Pulp shipments to China slow m/m in October. Pulp shipments in October were up 4.5% y/y (hardwood +8.7%; softwood +0.1%). On a m/m basis, shipments were down 12.7%, driven by a 3.3% decrease in softwood and a 19.5% decrease in hardwood. …Despite the steep m/m decline, we note that October was still the fourth-strongest month for shipments to China

Read More

Canadian businesses outlook unchanged since the 3rd quarter

Statistics Canada
November 27, 2023
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Real gross domestic product remained essentially unchanged for a second consecutive month in August. Inflationary pressures remain higher than recent historical trends after rising 3.1% year over year in October 2023, although this remains lower than the peak in June 2022. Also in October 2023, employment was little changed, while the unemployment rate rose to 5.7%, marking the fourth monthly increase in the past six months. …Majority of businesses expect to face cost-related obstacles over the next three months. …In the fourth quarter, when asked to indicate which of the businesses’ expected obstacles would be the most challenging, 14.2% of businesses identified rising inflation, 11.0% reported rising interest rates and debt costs, and 10.5% identified rising costs of inputs.

Read More

Real GDP growth in Canada is forecast to be only 0.9 per cent in 2023

The Conference Board of Canada in the Financial Post
November 27, 2023
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — Canadian provinces are feeling the pressures of restrictive interest rates, which have had a significant impact on consumer and business spending power, according to new research from The Conference Board of Canada. Real GDP growth in Canada is forecast to be only 0.9 per cent in 2023, followed by a weaker 0.6 per cent in 2024. “Strong population growth across the country continues to be a major positive for the economy, helping to sustain employment and economic activity,” according to Ted Mallett, Director, Economic Forecasting at The Conference Board of Canada. “Still, many households are feeling the pinch, high borrowing costs have added to inflationary pressures resulting in sagging housing markets across most provinces.”

Read More

The difference between B.C. and Canada’s job markets is jarring

By Jock Finlayson, Ken Peacock
Business in BC
November 27, 2023
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Nationally, job creation still looks quite healthy. …But even as employment gains hold up, there are signs conditions in labour market are shifting. In B.C. the economic indicators are also softening, including retail sales, exports, new building activity and residential home sales. But the job market here has weakened much more quickly than elsewhere in the country. Since last fall, total employment growth has slowed from around three per cent to just 1.7 per cent. …Looking ahead, there is ample reason to believe labour market conditions will continue to deteriorate. Higher interest rates are hammering consumer spending and demand, which in turn slows hiring. …At the same time, B.C.’s forest sector is still contracting, new home construction is decreasing and most segments of the province’s manufacturing sector continue to struggle. The difference between the national job market and B.C.’s is already quite jarring. 

Read More

Atlas Engineered reports positive Q3, 2023 results

By Atlas Engineering Products Ltd.
Cision Newswire
November 28, 2023
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

NANAIMO, BC – Atlas Engineered announced its financial and operating results for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2023. Revenue for the third-quarter was $14,369,546, down from $17,638,289 for the same quarter in 2022. Operating profit during Q3 was $2,050,243, down from $4,391,308 in the same quarter in 2022. Revenue for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 was $35,216,250 compared to revenue of $46,909,032 for the nine months ended September 30, 2022. During the third quarter of 2023, the Company acquired Léon Chouinard et Fils Co. located in New Brunswick, Canada. Atlas Engineered has well-established operations in Canada’s truss and engineered products industry.

Read More

Forestry

Christmas trees — and the farmers who grow them — are vanishing

By Yvette Brend
CBC News
November 28, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

This season, the hunt for that perfect tree is becoming a bit more difficult. A dwindling number of growers and a severe shortage of conifers means tree prices are soaring and sellers are shifting tactics, with some companies abandoning online orders, or ending tree sales altogether. …Ikea announced it’s not selling trees at its Canadian stores this holiday season due to the shortage. Full-grown trees are difficult to source at a competitive price in part because heat events and drought killed seedling and adult trees in the Pacific Northwest. Canada had about 1,360 tree farms in 2021 compared to 2,381 in 2011, meaning approximately 1,000 farms have vanished in the past decade. Shirley Brennan, at the Canadian Christmas Trees Association says that’s because it takes 10 to 14 years for a newly planted tree to be ready to harvest, tree farmers don’t see a return on those first trees for more than a decade.

Read More

Parks Canada starts work to build Fireguard near Alberta and B.C. border

By Hiren Mansukhani
The Calgary Herald
November 28, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Parks Canada has started building a 49-hectare fireguard in Yoho National Park intended to reduce the risk of wildfire in the communities of Lake Louise, Field, B.C., and surrounding areas. The Ross Lake Fire Guard will be adjacent to the Trans-Canada Highway, north of Ross Lake, near the boundary separating Banff and Yoho National Park. Fireguards are generally wide gaps in a forest, created by removing trees that could fuel a wildfire. The gaps are intended to prevent the blaze from spreading into communities and allow trucks to travel along the path to fight the flames. The news comes as 69 wildfires continue to rage across the province, with 19 new conflagrations since Oct. 30. Parks Canada said the project will initially focus on building temporary access roads. Tree removal will only begin once “specific conditions” are met to limit its effect, including frozen soil and snowpack.

Read More

The unlikely love story of an endangered tree and the little bird who eats its seeds

By Matt Simmons
The Narwhal
November 28, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

When a little gray bird with black wings flies into a bushy tree on the edge of a steep mountain slope, ecologist Alana Clason scrambles to find her binoculars. …Clason studies mountain ecosystems and leads an extensive, complex restoration project in northwest B.C. focused on protecting whitebark pine, an endangered tree species. Between climate change, deforestation, competition from other tree species and an invasive fungus called blister rust, whitebark has been in decline for over a century. It’s the only tree in Western Canada on the federal list of endangered species. …But scientists working to save the species from extinction are far from defeated. Studying the bird — a member of the corvid family called Clark’s nutcracker — is one part of figuring out how to keep the tree around for generations to come. “The nutcracker is the only dispersal agent for whitebark,” Clason explains.

Read More

First Nation’s ‘salmon parks’ on Vancouver Island aim to spare old-growth forests for the future

By Justine Hunter
The Globe and Mail
November 29, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Backed by a $15.2-million commitment from the federal government, a First Nations community on the west coast of Vancouver Island intends to buy out forestry tenures to stop old-growth logging in selected watersheds around Nootka Sound. The Mowachaht/Muchalaht First Nation has declared a string of “salmon parks” in its traditional territories that includes more than 66,000 hectares of watersheds. The parks are designed to protect critical salmon habitat by maintaining and restoring the land where it intersects with marine ecosystems. Logging can damage the rivers where salmon spawn, and deforestation has been tied to warmer rivers that reduce survival rates for young fish. The salmon parks of Nootka Sound offer an example of a shift that is coming across the province as a result of the new $1-billion Nature Agreement signed on Nov. 3 between Canada, B.C. and the First Nations Leadership Council. Significantly more land will be designated for conservation, which in turn will change how and where the province exploits its natural resources.

Read More

Heal your forests

By Matteo Cimellaro
The National Observer
November 29, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

When he was a boy, Ron Tomma would leave after breakfast to run freely with his brother through their ancestral territory. …Now, when Tomma hunts, he has to move carefully so he doesn’t trip or twist an ankle. Tomma, a knowledge keeper in his First Nation in B.C., has to push through undergrowth in a forest that was once as clear as hiking trails. Most of the berries are gone and the water is undrinkable. He blames the change on pesticide use by cattle ranchers and logging companies. So, it was no surprise to him when the Bush Creek fire tore through Skwlāx te Secwepemcúl̓ecw, his First Nation about 70 kilometres from Kamloops. …Tomma has a message for other bands. Take a good look at your forests and do what you can to clean it up. Harvest it for firewood or other resources, and ensure the community is protected.

Read More

Nature Trust of BC rallies community to protect wetlands and riparian forest in Prince George

The Prince George Daily News
November 27, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Nature Trust of British Columbia, one of the province’s leading non-profit land conservation organizations, has started a fundraising campaign to protect 129.2 hectares (319 acres) of wetland, riparian forest, and mixed forest ecosystems. The property, known as Ferguson Lake-Wetlands, is located in the city of Prince George. The land is adjacent to the Ferguson Lake Conservation Area, a 31-hectare conservation area owned by The Nature Trust of BC. With the purchase of Ferguson Lake-Wetlands, the contiguous protected land will expand to be 160 hectares. These private conservation parcels are connected to provincial Crown land parcels, forming a natural wildlife corridor and increasing connectivity within the region. Ferguson Lake – Wetlands has merchantable timber value and its purchase will ensure that its mature and old growth riparian forests and wetlands are protected in perpetuity.

Read More

Towns of Okotoks and High River request a logging moratorium for Southern Alberta

By Harrison O’Nyons
High River Online
November 27, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Towns of High River and Okotoks are requesting a moratorium on logging in Southern Alberta. Both were approached by the Calgary Climate Hub (CCH) requesting signatures of support for a pause on a planned logging project from Spray Lake Sawmills. The project would see the company harvest 1,100 hectares of Kananaskis Country forest and has seen opposition from several groups in Alberta, particularly due to the claim that the project was accelerated from 2026 to 2023 in a matter of months. CCH reasons for a moratorium include potential negative impacts on the Highwood Watershed, harm to several threatened species, a lack of engagement with First Nation Communities, harm to Kananaskis Country despite the province’s stated goal of protecting the region, and a claim that “Spray Lake Sawmills does not have a proven track record of restoring clearcut areas in the timeframe that demonstrates the forest is regenerating.”

Read More

Draft policy could be a game-changer for B.C. old-growth protection, conservationist says

By Simon Little & Paul Johnson
Global News
November 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Conservationists say they have high hopes a proposed shift in B.C. policy could result in revolutionary change for forest protection. The province is currently conducting consultations on its draft Biodiversity and Ecosystem Health Framework, which it describes as “a new and strategic direction for a more holistic approach” to stewarding land and water resources for future generations. …“Despite a very boring name, it may actually be one of the most consequential conservation policies in Canadian histories if it lands correctly,” Ken Wu, executive director of the endangered ecosystem alliance, said of the proposed framework. …The industry group B.C. Council of Forest Industries told Global News Thursday that it was still reviewing the plan. “Its potential direct impacts on our sector are not clear yet, and will depend on what the final policy looks like,” the council said in a statement.

Read More

Harvesting 400,000 cubic metres of timber is not enough for Lakes Timber Supply Area

By Saddman Zaman
Burns Lake Lakes District News
November 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Regional District of Bulkley Nechako (RDBN) summarized timber supply area apportionment decisions from the Ministry of Forests at their meeting on Nov. 9. The summary indicated that the ministry has allocated 400,000 additional cubic metres of harvest in the Lakes Timber Supply Area (TSA) on top of the 970,000 cubic metres listed in the apportionment from Community Forest Agreements, Woodlots and First Nations Woodland Tenures. Director of RDBN from Electoral Area B [Burns Lake] Michael Riis-Christianson pointed out that more than 400,000 cubic metres for Lakes TSA are needed to harvest two sawmills within the area. Director of RDBN from Electoral Area E [Francois/Ootsa Lake] Clint Lambert said Cheslatta Carrier Nation lost $3.8 billion in timber this summer because of Lucas Lake, Wells Creek and East Ootsa Lake wildfires. He said these timber feed the sawmills and the town’s economy.

Read More

RCMP delaying investigation into unit that polices B.C. resource protests: watchdog

By Darryl Greer
The Canadian Press in the Toronto Star
November 24, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

OTTAWA – The federal agency tasked with reviewing complaints against the RCMP says the police force is causing “significant delays” to an investigation of a unit set up to deal with protests against energy and logging projects. In an investigation update this week, the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the RCMP says it has received “little information or records” since July from the police force’s E Division, headquartered in Surrey, B.C. The commission says it has made progress in its probe of the controversial Community-Industry Response Unit, but says finishing the investigation will be delayed. It says a recent meeting between the commission and the RCMP outlined “concerns about the delays,” and the force has since provided it with more than 400 files, though “significant” information is yet to be provided.

Read More

North Shuswap residents demanding changes to wildfire response in B.C.

By Lachlan Labere
Revelstoke Review
November 24, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…On Thursday evening, Nov. 23, about 300 people packed into the North Shuswap Community Hall in Celista for a meeting hosted by resident Jim Cooperman. Titled Shuswap Firestorm: The Last Straw, the meeting offered an opportunity for the public to see a PowerPoint presentation Cooperman has provided as evidence for the B.C. Forest Practices Board’s investigation into BC Wildfire Service’s planned ignition that took place around 4 p.m. on Aug. 17 in an attempt to prevent the spread of the Lower East Adams Lake wildfire (later renamed Bush Creek East when the two wildfires combined). “When I started talking… you could hear a pin drop,” said Cooperman, noting the crowd was there to take in the information he’s gathered with help from others, including registered professional forester Rob Morrow who, after viewing the planned ignition site on Oct. 3, shared his own findings with Cooperman.

Read More

Massive red cedar near Nitinat Lake surrounded by threatened trees, say activists

By Roxanne Egan-Elliott
The Times Colonist
November 25, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A massive western red cedar tree found near Nitinat Lake is large enough to be protected by provincial legislation, but it’s surrounded by trees that could be logged, which activists say highlights the need to protect intact old-growth ecosystems. Joshua Wright, an old-growth activist who documents large trees before they’re cut, found the tree in Looper Creek near Nitinat Lake. He measured the largest at 3.88 metres in diameter.  Its size puts it just above the province’s threshold for protection from being harvested. The province sets out the minimum diameter at which trees must be protected, by species. The threshold is highest for western red cedars in coastal zones, at 3.85 metres. For several others, the threshold is above two metres, including yellow cedars, black cottonwoods in coastal zones and Douglas firs on the coast.

Read More

B.C. foresters return from Finland with ideas for better management

By Jim Hilton
The Quesnel Cariboo Observer
November 26, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The following is from the Nov. 9 issue of Tree Frog News entitled “Forest Management in Finland –Learnings for BC Forestry” by Cam Brown, Ken Day and eight others. I discussed some of the basic comparisons in an August 2023 article but this report provides some important differences such as Finlands “extensive private land ownership, greater resolution of Indigenous ownership, more homogeneous ecosystems, gentle topography, extensive road and bio-energy infrastructure. …The large amount of privately owned forest may seem too extreme to B.C. residents who are used to lots of crown land to recreate on but in Finnish policy, Every Person’s Right, “allows everyone access to private lands which helps support a positive societal view of forest lands. The culture appears biased toward ‘active forest management’ outside of national parks. …It is the differences in the management of their forests that we should take a close look at.

Read More

Is B.C. finally getting real about protecting nature?

By Arno Kopecky
The Narwhal
November 26, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

It’s been an extraordinary month for nature protection in British Columbia. A slew of unprecedented funding and legislative announcements have come in almost too fast to keep up with. Taken together, they underscore a sea change in the stewardship of Canada’s most biodiverse province. This marks a historic turning point for B.C., and a potential road map for the rest of Canada — one that was unimaginable when Premier David Eby first took office under the cloud of an ugly tussle with the environmental movement just one year ago. …What’s happening before our eyes is a whole-of-society restructuring … trying to recover from the hangover of 150 years of colonial plunder. …In light of those developments, we should pause to acknowledge and celebrate the moves that B.C.’s NDP is making. Not just to be nice, but to show them — and the rest of Canada — that these kinds of deals can win elections, too. 

Read More

Protesters expand opposition to clearcutting Kananaskis

By Howard May
Mountain View Today
November 26, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A group of protesters gathered at a controversial Spray Lake Sawmills bridge in Kananaskis Saturday to highlight their demand for an immediate pause in plans to clearcut over 2,700 acres in the Upper Highwood drainage. They say extreme drought and water shortage conditions are expected to continue, necessitating a pause in logging. Their call represented a new rationale for clearcutting opponents in Alberta and also highlighted the addition of significant new members to the list of those seeking a pause to the impending logging operation, which could start as soon as Dec. 1. In addition to opponents like environmental and recreational groups and wildlife advocates, Okotoks Mayor Tanya Thorn sent a letter dated Nov. 24 to Minister of Environment and Protected Areas Rebecca Schulz requesting a moratorium on logging in southern Alberta, and High River Mayor Craig Snodgrass has sent a letter to the Calgary Climate Hub supporting their call as well. 

Read More

New Indigenous forestry deal will benefit entire region, Strathcona Regional District board hears

By Grant Warkentin
My Campbell River Now
November 26, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Island First Nations are looking forward to finalizing a deal with Western Forest Products that will give them more say over logging activities in their territories. Earlier this year the Nanwakolas Council, which represents nations from the Comox Valley to Campbell River and north, signed an historic deal with the forestry company to gain a 34% interest in a new partnership. It will create and oversee a new tree farm licence in the Campbell River-Sayward region, providing annual production of more than 900,000 cubic metres of wood. Ted Nash with Nanwakolas says the new deal will benefit everyone. “We’re in a partnership on both sides: developing the future forest management regime, and benefitting economic development in the area,” he said. “We think through doing that we’re going to create significant stability on a go-forward basis.” Nash told the Strathcona Regional District board that the new partnership will be finalized sometime next spring.

Read More

Quesnel part of University of Alberta research on wildfire evacuation

By Darin Bain
My Prince George Now
November 27, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Researchers are working on ways to make life easier for anyone facing a wildfire evacuation. University of Alberta Civil Engineering Assistant professor Stephen Wong along with two other researchers are collecting data from five communities in BC and Alberta that includes Quesnel. “We are mostly first interested in identifying communities that have high fire exposure.” Wong said, Finding places that you would have that high level of risk but then would also have risk related to it’s transportation system.” Wong said when it comes to the transportation system they were interested in places that had limited ways of egress or ways to get out of a city in the event of an evacuation. …Wong said the primary need of this research is that wildfire evacuations unfold in a very dynamic interaction between forest, roadway infrastructure as well as people.

Read More

Public feedback wanted for Sunshine Coast Forest Landscape Plan

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
November 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

People in B.C. are invited to provide input to help inform the next stage of the Sunshine Coast Forest Landscape Plan (FLP). The FLP is being co-developed with First Nations, with input from communities, subject-matter experts and forest licensees. FLPs are a new approach to forest stewardship that establish clear direction for the management of old growth, biodiversity, ecosystem health, climate change, watershed health, wildfire risk and other forest-related values. The FLP area includes the Sunshine Coast Timber Supply Area and portions of the Pacific Timber Supply Area, encompassing roughly 1.25 million hectares of land from Howe Sound in the south to the summit of Mount Waddington (B.C.’s highest peak) in the north. The area features some of the most biologically diverse forests in British Columbia and overlaps the territories of 15 First Nations.

Read More

Nature group wants Crown land in Kings County protected from potential logging

By Josh Hoffman
CBC News
November 28, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A Nova Scotia environmental group is calling on the province to protect a section of Crown land in Kings County from potential logging and development. The Blomidon Naturalists Society wants the Nova Scotia government to conserve a portion of land in the southwest corner of the county next to the Cloud Lake Wilderness Area that includes vulnerable and endangered species and old-growth forest. …The Nova Scotia government has a goal of protecting 20 per cent of the province’s land and water by 2030. Approximately 14 per cent is currently protected, according to the province. …The society has asked the Municipality of King’s County to support its request, but the county has one condition — wind turbines need to be allowed in the protected land. …The Nova Scotia government has released the locations where clear cutting may be allowed. Some of the locations are near the area the society wants protected.

Read More

Moncton researchers developing artificial intelligence to fight wildfires

By Alexandre Silberman
CBC News
November 27, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Moulay Akhloufi

NEW BRUNSWICK—Researchers in New Brunswick are developing a new approach to tackling Canada’s growing threat of wildfires: teaching artificial intelligence to find them faster. A team of engineers at the Université de Moncton is fine-tuning an algorithm that works with satellite and drone images to detect fires more accurately than humans. The technology also predicts where a blaze will spread, helping firefighters know where to send resources. Moulay Akhloufi, a computer science professor and head of the Perception, Robotics and Intelligent Machines Laboratory, said it can help spot signs of a fire the human eye would miss. “It’s very accurate. Some of the algorithms are able to get to more than 99 per cent performance when we want to detect fires,” he said. …While in early stages of development, some firefighters are already using artificial intelligence to inform decisions on the ground.

Read More

Local environmentalist wins coveted award for forest stewardship

Orillia Matters
November 27, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Cam Douglas, Sandy Agnew and Doug Frost

The Huronia Woodlot Owners Association recently held their 43rd White Pine Award meeting, and the 2023 recipient is Oro-Medonte resident Sandy Agnew. Agnew is a Certified Engineering Technician, a graduate of Niagara College’s Ecosystem Restoration program and a Managed Forest Plan Approver. He has been involved in ecological restoration for over 35 years with such groups as Black Creek Project of Toronto, Trout Unlimited Canada and the Severn Sound Environmental Association. He is a former councillor in Oro-Medonte Township and former member of the Lake Simcoe and Nottawasaga Valley Conservation Authorities boards and the Couchiching Conservancy land trust board. …Agnew holds memberships and has held Board positions in numerous environmental groups including the Ontario Society for Ecological Restoration, the Ontario Woodlot Association (Huronia Chapter), Forests Ontario and Ontario Nature. …The White Pine Award is given to a deserving person to recognize and celebrate their dedication to good forestry practices.

Read More

Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Canada To Make Waste Biomass Eligible For 2 Clean Energy Tax Credits

By Erin Voegele
Biomass Magazine
November 27, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

The Government of Canada on Nov. 21 announced plans to allow systems that utilize waste biomass to produce heat and/or electricity to claim the country’s Clean Technology Investment Tax Credit and Clean Electricity Investment Tax Credit. …In its announcement, the agency said it is proposing to expand eligibility for the 30 percent Clean Technology Investment Tax Credit to include systems that produce electricity, heat, or both electricity and heat from waste biomass. …Department of Finance Canada is also proposing to expand eligibility for the 15 percent Clean Electricity Investment Tax Credit to include systems that produce electricity or both electricity and heat from waste biomass, which would be available as of the date of Budget 2024 for projects that did not begin construction before March 28, 2023. …Drax Group plc released a statement on Nov. 24 commending the Government of Canada on the inclusion.

Read More

Desperation—the Mother of Creativity

By Gordon Murray, Executive Director
Wood Pellet Association of Canada
November 24, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

John Swaan

Do you know it’s been 25 years since our first shipment of pellets from Canada? What might have seemed like a pipe dream is very much a reality. Today, Canada’s pellet sector is a global powerhouse not just in producing pellets but in the global fight against climate change. We’ve taken what was niche and moved mainstream. And so, how did we get here? While it’s the collective efforts of companies, employees, suppliers, customers and others, it all started as the brainchild of one man: John Swaan, also known as the “godfather” of the pellet sector. It began with John’s idea of taking the wood waste residues from Northern B.C. sawmills and, instead of burning the shavings and sawdust in bee-hive burners (as was standard practice at the time), turning them into wood pellets. He planned to sell them in the growing Seattle market.

Read More

‘Not a crisis’: B.C. Conservatives promise to scrap climate taxes, programs

By Wolf Depner
Victoria News
November 23, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

Conservative Party of BC Leader John Rustad said a government under his leadership would scrap the provincial carbon tax, low-carbon fuel requirements and other climate-related programs in promising to return $2.8 billion to British Columbians. A Conservative government would also reduce British Columbia’s reliance on imports of food and refined fuel by “dramatically” increasing domestic food production and developing domestic refining capacities. Rustad also promised to have a conversation with British Columbians about using nuclear power. Rustad announced these broad coordinates of his party’s environmental policy Nov. 22 in the provincial legislature. Rustad said his party’s environmental policies will about adaptation and prosperity. …Rustad opened his announcement quoting from Bjorn Lomborg’s book False Alarm: How Climate Change Panic Costs Us Trillions, Hurts The Poor, And Fails To Fix The Planet. Climate change scientists consider him to lack credibility on the subject.

Read More

Health & Safety

Consultation on proposed B.C. Exposure Limits for selected chemical substances

WorkSafeBC
November 24, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Each year, the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH) publishes a list of substances for which they have set new or revised Threshold Limit Values (TLVs). A TLV is the airborne concentration of a chemical substance where it is believed that nearly all workers may be exposed over a working lifetime and experience no adverse health effects. Before adopting new or revised TLVs published by the ACGIH, WorkSafeBC reviews relevant data on health effects and the availability of validated sampling methods. WorkSafeBC also consults with stakeholders on potential implementation issues. WorkSafeBC’s existing B.C. Exposure Limits (ELs) continue to be in effect until the Board of Directors makes a decision on which new or revised ACGIH TLVs to adopt as B.C. ELs. We are requesting stakeholder feedback on the proposed ELs for 24 substances.

Read More

WorkSafeBC Board of Directors approves amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation

WorkSafeBC
November 24, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

In April 2023, WorkSafeBC’s Board of Directors approved amendments to Part 3 of the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation, relating to the provision of occupational first aid. These amendments will take effect November 1, 2024. In summary:

Guidance on “less-accessible” workplaces
“Less-accessible” workplaces include workplaces that cannot readily be reached by an ambulance travelling by land, as well as those where a BC Emergency Health Services ambulance attendant may not be able to safely access an injured worker. The backgrounder now includes guidance on identifying “less-accessible” workplaces.

Alignment with the CSA standards
Information has been added on updated first aid training program names and shortened course duration for Intermediate First Aid (currently OFA 2). Basic information on new first aid kits and equipment requirements has also been added.

Emergency transportation
The amended Occupational Health and Safety Regulation requires that written first aid procedures identify how workers will be accessed and moved if there are barriers to first aid, and the location and method of emergency transport where required. Information on the minimum requirements for emergency transportation has been added.

For detailed information:

Read More

Coroner’s inquest ordered into death of mill worker near Fredericton

By Bobbi-Jean MacKinnon
CBC News
November 27, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

William Russell

NEW BRUNSWICK — A coroner’s inquest into the death of a mill worker in Tracyville, south of Fredericton, nearly three years ago, will be held next week. William (Bill) Russell died at the Saint John Regional Hospital on Feb. 11, 2021, several days after being injured in a workplace accident at Marwood Ltd., a family-owned wood products company. He was a 51-year-old married father of three and grandfather of one, according to his obituary. An inquest into Russell’s death has been scheduled for Dec. 4 and 5 at Marysville Place in Fredericton, the Department of Justice and Public Safety announced Monday. Presiding coroner Emily Caissy and a jury will publicly hear evidence from witnesses to determine the facts surrounding Russell’s death. …A coroner’s inquest is not a criminal procedure and does not involve any finding of guilt or responsibility.

Read More

Forest Fires

Alberta Wildfire monitoring 19 new forest fires, two in Grande Prairie region, since Halloween

By Ethan Montague
My Grande Prairie Now
November 27, 2023
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

After a record-breaking wildfire season, regions like Grande Prairie have been subject to unseasonably warm and dry conditions heading into the winter season, meaning more wildfires could come before the year is over. According to Alberta Wildfire, 67 wildfires are still burning across the province and 19 new human-caused wildfires have started since October 31st. Wildfire Information Officer for the Grande Prairie Forest Area Kelly Burke says it is vital that Albertans stay informed on wildfire prevention measures, even in winter. According to Burke, 10 wildfires have sprung up in the Grande Prairie region since October 18th, with two in November alone. …Burke adds that 19 forest fires in less than a month in November is alarming for the region as seasonal workers for Alberta wildfire are largely off duty during the winter, and the number of firefighters required simply isn’t enough to reach demand over winter.

Read More