Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

BC Foresters awarded the University of British Columbia Alumni Builder Awards

University of British Columbia
January 23, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

The UBC Alumni Builder Awards recognize alumni who have significantly contributed to the university and enriched the lives of others, and in doing so, have supported alumni UBC’s vision of a global alumni community for an exceptional UBC and a better world. We are proud to honour this year’s Alumni Builder Awards recipients whose generous contributions have been recognized by their UBC faculty.

Nick Arkle, BSF’84, and Louise Arkle, BA’82, MA’85
Office of the Principal and Deputy Vice – Chancellor

Nick and Louise Arkle are community leaders and philanthropists whose dedication has strengthened UBC Okanagan and the broader region. As CEO of Gorman Group, Nick has advanced BC’s forestry sector while providing influential leadership across the profession, championing initiatives that strengthen industry and trade. He has supported community growth through the Kelowna Chamber of Commerce, United Way, and the Central Okanagan Economic Development Commission, while also serving on the inaugural UBC Okanagan Advisory Council. Louise is a dedicated advocate for education and community development, working to expand equity and opportunity, serving in several leadership roles for the Central Okanagan Bursary and Scholarship Society and as a volunteer for the Loran Scholars Foundation. 

John Mohammed, BSc(ForSci)’91
Faculty of Forestry

John Mohammed is president of A&A Trading, a BC-based family forestry company. With deep industry roots and experience across logging, timber valuation, and trading, he is a respected leader in the sector. John actively hires UBC graduates and co-leads an annual exercise in negotiation that equips students with essential career skills, an initiative now adopted and being used in other areas of the faculty. John’s dedication to mentorship and education has made a lasting impact on the next generation of forestry professionals. As a board member of the BC Council of Forest Industries, he continues to champion leadership and learning.

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Froggy Foibles

Facing layoffs, B.C. workers rally to save feral cats before pulp mill’s closure

By Sheena Goodyear
CBC News
January 22, 2026
Category: Froggy Foibles
Region: Canada, Canada West

CROFTON, BC — When Tawni Marcil found out the pulp mill she works for is closing, she immediately started worrying about the cats who live there. Marcil is one of 350 workers on Vancouver Island who are losing their jobs after Domtar announced in early December 2025 that it’s shutting down its pulp mill in Crofton, B.C. For almost as long as the mill has existed, Marcil says, the worksite has been home to a population of feral cats, who the workers feed and take care of. …So for the last month — even as she faces her own uncertain future — Marcil has been working with local cat rescue organizations to round up the mill cats, remove them from the site, and find them new homes. 

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Business & Politics

Premiers meet in Ottawa ahead of CUSMA negotiations with Trump administration

By Kyle Duggan
The Canadian Press in BNN Bloomberg
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — Canada’s premiers are set for two days of huddling in the nation’s capital with the economy, affordability and trade expected to be high on the agenda. The premiers meet with Prime Minister Mark Carney on Thursday, and will want to show a united “Team Canada” front as trade tensions rise again with Canada’s largest trading partner. The meetings come a year after U.S. President Donald Trump assumed office and hit Canada with blistering tariffs, and just ahead of negotiations to renew the Canada-United States-Mexico agreement, due for its first formal review this summer. Trump threatened Canada in recent days with 100% across-the-board tariffs on exports, which would land on top of the sectors already hit by steep U.S. tariffs, such as steel, softwood lumber and vehicles. Ontario Premier Doug Ford said the premiers will show they stand united as the whole Canadian economy remains under attack.

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Sustainable Forestry Initiative Announces Retirement of President and Chief Executive Officer Kathy Abusow

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
January 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Kathy Abusow

Ottawa, ON and Washington, D.C. – SFI announced that President and CEO Kathy Abusow will retire in 2026, concluding an extraordinary career marked by visionary leadership. Kathy has led SFI through a period of significant expansion across North America, increasing reach, impact, relevance, and global recognition. …Under Kathy’s leadership, SFI increased their Canadian and U.S. footprint to more than 150 million hectares / 370 million acres certified to the SFI Forest Management Standard, including public, private, Indigenous, conservation, university, urban, and community forests, with millions more acres positively influenced by the SFI Fiber Sourcing Standard.

Jason Metnick

Christine Leduc

…Kathy Abusow’s role as President & CEO of SFI, and President & CEO of PLT Canada will be divided into a new SFI CEO, a President of SFI, and a President of PLT Canada. Kathy is thrilled that members of her Senior Leadership Team will immediately be elevated during this transition. Jason Metnick has been named President of SFI. Christine Leduc, RPF, has been named President of PLT Canada.

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Carney says Canada not pursuing free trade deal with China as Trump threatens 100% tariffs

By Lim Hui Jie
CNBC News
January 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Canada has “no intention” of pursuing a free trade deal with China, Prime Minister Carney said, after US President Trump threatened to slap punitive tariffs on Ottawa. Carney said that the country respects its obligations under the Canada-US-Mexico trade agreement, known as CUSMA in Canada and the USMCA in the US, and will not pursue a free trade agreement without notifying the other two parties. Carney’s remarks come after Trump threatened to put a 100% tariff on Canadian exports if Ottawa “makes a deal” with Beijing. …Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also echoed Trump’s sentiments on Canada and China, saying that the UScould not “let Canada become an opening that the Chinese pour their cheap goods into the US.” …Carney said: “What we have done with China is to rectify some issues that have developed in the last couple of years,” adding that the deal was “entirely consistent with CUSMA.”

Related coverage:

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B.C. forest sector faces ‘another tough year’ in 2026

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A federal task force announced earlier this month will attempt to save Canada’s stricken forest industry from further decline through product and market diversification. While the support will no doubt be welcomed by the industry, in BC the more immediate need is access to timber. Canada’s forestry sector has been pummeled by a one-two punch of low lumber prices, and US duties on softwood lumber. The situation is particularly dire in BC where an integrated industry of lumber, remanufacturing, pulp and pellet mills has been collapsing like a row of dominos. …The industry is in crisis, a number of speakers said at the Truck Loggers Association convention. …Policies introduced by the NDP government have contributed to driving up the cost of harvesting. …At last week’s BC Resources Forum, Premier David Eby said his government is working to increase markets for B.C. wood products there, as well as China.

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First Nation leader urges B.C. to maintain DRIPA as Eskay Creek mine deal is signed

By Wolfgang Depner
Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
January 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

VICTORIA — The president of the Tahltan Central Government, Kerry Carlick, said British Columbia shouldn’t change its Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, just as the First Nation and the provincial government celebrate a landmark agreement based on the legislation. Carlick said it is not a “good idea to take anything away from DRIPA,” adding that “if anything, it should be strengthened.” Carlick was speaking at an event with deputy premier Niki Sharma where they co-signed an agreement to share mineral tax revenue from the Eskay Creek mine. The ceremony came after the provincial government issued an environmental assessment certificate to Eskay Creek Mining Ltd. to restart gold and silver mining after a first-of-its kind collaborative assessment process with the First Nation under DRIPA. The provincial government has said it plans to revise the act after a series of court rulings around Aboriginal title, responding specifically to those decisions.

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MNP is hiring a Forestry Program Management Consultant

By MNP
LinkedIn
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Make an impact with our Forestry Program Management Consulting Team as a Consultant and program lead. Our diverse team of professionals deliver program administration for a large forestry grant funding organization. As a trusted advisor, you’ll collaborate with the team in the delivery of forestry-related projects within the funding programs. Our team is based in Edmonton and works in our downtown office, this is an in-person, on-site position. The forestry Consultant supports the delivery and administration of forestry funding programs, working with government, industry, Indigenous groups, academics, and other stakeholders. The role involves managing and assessing projects such as silviculture, habitat restoration, wildfire mitigation, and forest health, including tracking activities, reviewing deliverables and expenses, and preparing reports. Responsibilities also include proposal review support, developing Requests for Proposals, limited GIS use, occasional field assessments, and providing advice to senior management and boards, while contributing to the growth of MNP’s forestry consulting practice.

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North Cowichan braces for potential impacts if Chemainus sawmill closes

By Justin Baumgardner
My Cowichan Valley Now
January 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Municipality of North Cowichan says it is preparing for the possibility of another mill closure in Chemainus, while hoping it can be avoided.  Western Forest Products announced Friday it is extending curtailment at the Chemainus sawmill, affecting about 150 workers. Mayor Rob Douglas said the priority is protecting jobs and preparing for potential financial impacts. “We’re going to be looking at impacts on our tax base, especially with the municipality already seeing the effects of the Crofton mill closure this year,” Douglas said. “We’ll prepare for the potential closure of the Chemainus mill in 2027.” Douglas said a permanent closure in Chemainus would affect future finances, but not to the same extent as the Crofton mill shutdown. “Western Forest Products has three sites, and with two of them operating that will continue to provide a significant portion of our industrial tax revenue,” he said.

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‘No quick fixes’: David Eby talks economic progress, but not for crippled forestry sector

By Vaughn Palmer
Vancouver Sun
January 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

VICTORIA — Premier David Eby went all in at the Northern Resource Forum in Prince George this week, starting with a progress report on the commitments he made there in 2025. …On mining, LNG and electricity development, the premier could and did cite evidence of progress. Much less so on forestry, which Eby himself acknowledged as “the hardest challenge” facing the NDP government. …He’d mandated Forest Minister Ravi Parmar “to work toward a harvest of 45 million cubic metres per year.” …The most recent update from the government had the harvest going in the opposite direction, from 30 MCU down to 29. …He cited the landscape plan for the Nimpkish Valley near Port McNeill on northern Vancouver Island, the first of 15 such plans to be completed by the government. Eby had barely finished the victory lap when word came of another mill closure in that very region. …Parmar, an optimist if nothing else, says Crofton’s fate can be reversed.

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Curtailment of Chemainus sawmill will continue through 2026

By Robert Barron
Nanaimo Bulletin
January 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The curtailment of the Chemainus sawmill will continue through to at least the end of 2026, Western Forest Products announced on Jan. 23. WFP spokesperson Babita Khunkhun said the Chemainus mill, which has been curtailed since June, continues to face persistently weak market demand and ongoing log supply challenges that do not support the economic operation of the mill. She said these conditions are not expected to change in the near term at the mill, which employs approximately 150 workers when in operation. “We are also implementing short-term curtailments at our Saltair and Ladysmith sawmills,” Khunkhun said. …“Where possible, we will work with employees to facilitate employment opportunities at other locations,” she said. …“Beginning in February, the Ladysmith sawmill plans to take a minimum two-week operating curtailment and the Saltair sawmill plans to take a two-week operating curtailment. The curtailments are in response to persistently weak market conditions.

In related coverage:

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Atli Resources CEO reacts to chip mill closure

By Sage Daniels
My Campbell River Now
January 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Jonathan Lok

The Atli chip plant in Beaver Cove will close in March, significantly affecting its workers and their families. Atli Resources CEO Jonathan Lok, whose company is the majority owner, said the 10 direct employees at the facility, as well as contractors and tertiary suppliers, will feel the impact of the closure. “We’ve been working with the North Island Employment Foundation Society, WorkBC and Service Canada to ensure that many of the conventional employee supports during times of transition are available and shared with employees,” Lok said. “They’ve all been very supportive.” …Lok said the company is focused on determining next steps. “We need to do right by our staff. We want to ensure our place in this community and not drag something out during this uncertain time. It’s bad news, but we don’t think it’s the end of the road by any means,” he said. He added the company continues to explore future options.

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First Nation-owned wood chip facility closing on north Vancouver Island

By Maryse Zeidler
CBC News
January 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A wood chip facility primarily owned by the ʼNa̱mǥis Nation on north Vancouver Island says it is permanently shutting down as a result of the recent mill closure in Crofton, BC. Atli Resources CEO Jonathan Lok says the Atli Chip LP directly employed nine people, but the closure will affect many more in the small community of Beaver Cove, near Port McNeill. …Lok says a contractor the company hired to bring wood fiber into the facility would be affected as well, along with the 10 to 15 positions it hires. …Lok says the company announced the closure on Jan. 20. He expects the facility to operate until the end of February. Atli Resources is majority owned by the ʼNa̱mǥis Business Development Corporation. Its other two partners include Domtar. Lok says all of the materials from the facility were shipped to the Crofton pulp mill, which Domtar announced in December would permanently close by April.

  • Related coverage in BIV: First Nations-owned Vancouver Island wood chip plant set to close
  • Cowichan Valley Citizen:While Atli Chip and its partners are actively assessing future opportunities for the Beaver Cove site, Jonathan Lok, Atli Resources CEO stated, “This is a necessary pause — not an exit.” Lok added. “We remain focused on responsible transition today and on building resilient, future-oriented opportunities for the North Island tomorrow.”

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Union calls for Thunder Bay, Ont., paper mill to diversify amid newsprint operations shutdown

Sarah Law
CBC News
January 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Union leaders say there are opportunities for Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper to pivot to other paper products once it stops producing newsprint — but support from all levels of government is needed. The company announced on Thursday that it will be discontinuing its newsprint mill operations due to a significant decline in demand, a decision that will affect 150 workers. Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper will continue to operate as a single-line Softwood Kraft mill and generate renewable energy for sale to the Ontario grid, it says. Rob St. Jean is president of Unifor Local 257, which represents 31 workers at Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper. …“The opportunity for news print has been lost, but not the need for paper product,” he said. …CEO Norm Bush says the company is exploring whether it makes sense to produce something like liner board. However, he says that would take years of preparation and several hundred million dollars. 

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Worker equity touted as part of solution to mill shutdowns

By Mike Stimpson
North West Ontario News Watch
January 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

KENORA — Ontario New Democrats and union leaders say government should find ways to keep mills in Ear Falls, Ignace and elsewhere open, but with more worker involvement. “The bottom line is that when things are run on the corporate bottom lines only, communities get left behind, workers lose jobs, profits go out and the problems stay in the community,” said Luke Hildebrand, president of the NDP’s Kenora–Rainy River constituency association. “So the only long-term solution is workers having a stake in the future and not just a paycheque.” Hildebrand noted a petition calling on governments to “take immediate action to reopen the Ear Falls sawmill and stop the shutdown of Ignace sawmill” has gathered about 300 signatures. It also calls for establishment of a “forestry job protection task force,” development of “a unified provincial–federal strategy to ensure that Canadian lumber is used in Canadian homes” and support for worker equity in mills.

Related coverage:

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Finance & Economics

Canada could gain nearly 7% in real GDP by removing internal trade barriers, says IMF

By Jenna Benchetrit
CBC News
January 27, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Canada’s economy could gain nearly 7%, or $210 billion, in real GDP over a gradual period by fully removing internal trade barriers between the country’s 13 provinces and territories, according to a report published Tuesday by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). On average, regulation-related barriers are the equivalent of a 9% tariff nationally, estimates the report, which was co-authored by IMF researchers Federico J. Diez and Yuanchen Yang with contributions from University of Calgary economist Trevor Tombe. …Because of the trade barriers between provinces, “Canada isn’t really one economy. It’s really 10 economies,” said Alicia Planincic, director of policy and economics at the Business Council of Alberta in Calgary. …The report points to finance, telecom, transportation and professional services as far-reaching sectors that “ripple through the economy” and raise costs for all of the businesses they touch. 

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Bank of Canada maintains key interest rate at 2.25%, as CUSMA negotiations loom

By John MacFarlane , Jeff Lagerquist and Leah Golob
Yahoo! Finance
January 28, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The Bank of Canada held its overnight interest rate steady at 2.25 per cent on Wednesday in a move widely expected by economists. The announcement comes amid ongoing trade uncertainty, with increased focus on the negotiation of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement and a murky outlook for the Canadian economy later in the year. Ahead of the announcement, economists polled by Reuters were unanimous in their expectations for a hold today, and nearly 75% forecast the central bank will stay on hold through 2026. In its December decision the Bank also held its policy rate stable. …“While this rate hold provides some stability, other factors such as economic uncertainty, potential job loss and affordability are continuing to put downward pressure on the housing market,” Rates.ca mortgage and real estate expert Victor Tran said in a statement following today’s decision.”

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Bank of Canada expected to keep key rate steady this week — and maybe all year long

By Craig Lord
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
January 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — Many economists expect no change in the Bank of Canada’s benchmark interest rate later this week — and, possibly, for the rest of the year. The central bank will make its first interest rate decision of 2026 on Wednesday. Financial market odds for a rate hold this week stood at nearly 90 per cent as of Monday morning, according to LSEG Data & Analytics. The Bank of Canada held its policy rate steady at 2.25 per cent in December, coming off two consecutive quarter-point cuts in the second half of 2025. At that decision, governor Tiff Macklem said the central bank believes monetary policy is at “about the right level” to balance a turbulent economy and lingering inflationary pressures. TD Bank economist Rishi Sondhi said in a note Friday that forecasters ought to take the Bank of Canada at its word when it comes to rate expectations.

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Canadian railway carloading ticked up in November, lumber loading fell 22%

Statistics Canada
January 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

In November, the volume of cargo carried by Canadian railways was up slightly (+0.5%) from November 2024 to 31.4 million tonnes. Higher volumes of intermodal shipments (mainly containers) as well as higher carloadings of wheat largely contributed to the increase in November 2025. The overall freight volume in November was on par with the five-year average of 31.5 million tonnes for the month. …Growth in non-intermodal freight loadings in November was moderated by declines in several commodities. Loadings of other oil seeds and nuts, and other agricultural products were down sharply by 35.4% (-312 000 tonnes) year over year—the largest drop in tonnage since December 2018. In November 2025, loadings of iron ores and concentrates decreased 6.4% (-287 000 tonnes) compared with November 2024, while loadings of lumber were down 22.1% (-143 000 tonnes), a fourth consecutive month of year-over-year decline.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Home Depot Launches Material List Builder AI

Building Products Digest
January 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, United States

The Home Depot introduced Material List Builder AI, a new capability that helps professional renovators, remodelers, builders and specialty tradespeople create actionable project material lists within minutes. Material List Builder AI leverages AI technology to interpret the project intent and generate an accurate, grouped list of materials needed for the entire job – helping Pros stay on time and on budget. Before Material List Builder AI, creating a product list could take Pros hours of searching for the right SKUs, comparing prices and manually rebuilding lists across spreadsheets or multiple project management platforms. This tedious, error‑prone process often pulled Pros away from other critical work on the job. With Material List Builder AI, that same workflow happens in minutes. There are multiple ways for Pros to quickly and easily input project details for material list generation.

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Wood Connections

The BC Wood Specialties Group
January 28, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The January 27 Wood Connections newsletter highlights key developments and opportunities for British Columbia’s value-added wood products sector. BC Wood has announced the 23rd Annual Global Buyers Mission, scheduled for September 10–12, 2026 in Whistler, an event that brings international buyers and Canadian exporters together, with registration opening in May 2026. The newsletter also introduces Forestry Works for BC, a grassroots initiative aimed at sharing trusted, research-based information on the role of sustainable forest management in climate resilience, housing and communities. BC Wood reported on its successful participation at the Canada Building & Hardware Showcase in Edmonton, showcasing member companies and strong interest in strengthening domestic wood supply chains. Upcoming trade and consumer shows include Interzum Guangzhou 2026 and the Spring Cottage Life Show in Toronto, providing export and market exposure opportunities. Additional industry news covers collaborations, seminars tied to Korea Build Week, and broader sector developments.

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Forestry

Indigenous Partnerships and Forestry: A Q&A with JP Gladu

By Brenda Martin
Domtar Corporation
January 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Domtar’s Brenda Martin speaks with JP Gladu, an Indigenous economic development leader and member of Domtar’s External Sustainability Advisory Committee. Their conversation focuses on the importance of strong, respectful partnerships between forestry companies and Indigenous communities. Gladu shares how his upbringing and decades of experience shaped his commitment to collaboration and mutual opportunity. He highlights a landmark example at Lake Nipigon, where First Nations gained full forest management control and built a productive relationship with Domtar, evolving into shared problem-solving and market access. Gladu emphasizes that the future of Indigenous partnerships in forestry requires investing in Indigenous-owned business infrastructure—not just jobs—to build local capacity and strengthen the industry. He advises companies to truly understand community needs by spending time listening and learning, rather than making assumptions. His insights extend beyond forestry, applying to broader economic reconciliation and sustainable partnerships.

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Ducks Unlimited Canada presents the North American film premiere of Mission to Marsh in honour of World Wetlands Day

By Ducks Unlimited Canada
Cision Newswire
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

STONEWALL, Manitoba — German filmmakers Anni and Alex Kornelsen set out on a road trip from Canada all the way to Patagonia to showcase how the Americas were conserving and restoring wetlands. The result is the award-winning documentary Mission to Marsh, which is being brought to North America on World Wetlands Day, February 2, 2026. Ducks Unlimited Canada invites Canadians to get a candid view of some of the world’s most treasured wetlands, including sites where DUC has supported conservation and restoration like the Oromocto River in New Brunswick; la Grande plée Bleue in Quebec; and Oak Hammock Marsh in Manitoba. …The film focuses on peatlands, an ecological powerhouse. It is estimated that one square metre of peatland in Canada’s boreal region stores about five times more carbon than one square metre of tropical Amazon rainforest. When intact and healthy, peatlands play a vital role in mitigating floods, drought and wildfire.

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University of British Columbia lecturer plays a pivotal role Mozambique’s ability to tackle deforestation

By Meadhbh Monahan & Aditi Ghosh
University of British Columbia
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

Peter Wood

When Dr. Peter Wood, a lecturer in UBC’s faculty of forestry and environmental stewardship, joined the university, he never imagined that the curriculum of the Master of International Forestry (MIF) program could create a lasting impact thousands of miles away from home. When Global Affairs Canada partnered with the faculty to help build Mozambique’s capacity to address deforestation and achieve sustainable forest management objectives, he saw an opportunity to put his curriculum into practice—on the world stage. Dr. Wood and a delegation from UBC were appointed to deliver workshops to civil servants in the government of Mozambique’s National Directorate of Forestry to help them understand the nuances of proposal writing to convince donors to provide climate funding. This was part of Global Affairs Canada’s Technical Assistance Partnership program, implemented by Alinea International.

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Canada’s wildfire paradox: fewer fires, greater destruction highlighted in new analysis

By Colin Butler
CBC News
January 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Canada’s wildfire seasons are growing longer, larger and more destructive, according to a six-decade analysis of fire records by the federal government’s Canadian Forest Service. The study shows the trend isn’t being driven by more frequent fires but by a smaller number of increasingly large wildfires that are burning more land than in the past, reinforcing a trend federal scientists first identified years ago. In 2019, fire scientists with Natural Resources Canada published a study that suggested wildfire activity across the country had increased steadily since the mid-20th century, driven by rising temperatures and longer fire seasons. …The research found that the area burned from wildfires continues to rise across nearly all Canadian eco-zones, even in the Pacific Northwest and Atlantic Canada regions. Both were once considered lower risk because of wetter conditions but are now showing flat or increasing fire trends.

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Complaint Investigation: Range Practices on the Coutlee Range Unit

BC Forest Practices Board
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

MERRITT, BC – A Forest Practices Board investigation has found that grassland and open forest areas within the Mine pasture of the Coutlee Range Unit near Merritt are not functioning, with long-term overgrazing contributing to accelerated soil loss and reduced area stability. The investigation was initiated after the board received a complaint from two of six range agreement holders who share grazing rights in the Coutlee Range Unit under a single range-use plan. The complaint related to livestock grazing practices, fence maintenance and compliance with the grazing schedule. The board found that actions in the range-use plan were written in ways that were not measurable or verifiable. As a result, the board could not determine whether required actions were being followed, making compliance with the plan unenforceable. The board also found that an amended 2023 grazing schedule was not legally valid because it was not signed by all agreement holders, as required.

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The Silviculture Innovation Program and the Forest Enhancement Society of BC Launch New Extension Specialist Role

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

British Columbia: The Silviculture Innovation Program (SIP) and the Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC) are pleased to announce a newly formalized partnership focused on funding projects that develop new practices and information to help benefit future practitioners of forestry in B.C. Through this collaboration, SIP and FESBC will be hiring an Extension Specialist who will focus on translating technical, research-based, and field-tested knowledge gathered from around the province into practical, accessible resources that support learning, innovation, and on-the-ground application. …Through this partnership, SIP and FESBC are committing shared resources to evaluate project outcomes and communicate key learnings, ensuring that the benefits of this work are broadly understood and usable by practitioners. …Both SIP and FESBC will be attending the Forest Professionals of BC Conference in Vancouver from February 4-6, 2026. Conference attendees are encouraged to stop by and learn more about the position and the partnership.

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Forest Professionals BC Conference & AGM kick off next week in Vancouver

Forest Professionals BC
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

We are pleased to announce the upcoming Forest Professionals BC Forestry Conference & AGM, taking place February 4–6, 2026 at the Sheraton Vancouver Wall Centre. Offered in both in-person and online formats, the conference invites forest professionals and their teams to engage in three days of learning, discussion, and connection. The program features professional development sessions exploring the latest trends and challenges in forest management, including climate-ready reforestation, forest health, wildfire recovery, Indigenous stewardship, and emerging technologies such as LiDAR. Highlights also include plenary sessions on forestry policy and ethics, the FPBC Annual General Meeting, technical breakouts, and multiple networking and trade show events. Set in the heart of one of Canada’s most dynamic cities, the Sheraton Vancouver Wall Centre offers an ideal backdrop for collaboration. The iconic One Wall Centre North Tower is a landmark of downtown Vancouver’s skyline, placing attendees steps away from the city’s culture, dining, and waterfront—an inspiring setting for learning and professional exchange.

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B.C.’s commitment to biodiversity put on hold

By Cori Lausen, Wildlife Conservation Society Canada
The Vancouver Sun
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government’s Look West strategy is to get four new mines, three new natural gas projects and eight new renewable energy projects built in the next six years. The same sense of urgency hasn’t been applied to protecting BC’s ever-increasing number of species at risk. Hundreds of species have been identified as threatened or endangered since 2006, yet it has been two full decades since the provincial government last updated BC’s Species at Risk list, often referred to as the Identified Wildlife list. Few protections exist for wildlife in BC that aren’t on this “Noah’s Ark” list. …While such short-sightedness may be baked into our political system, we can’t let it dictate the fate of our ecosystems and the biodiversity upon which they (and we) depend. If we throw species and their habitats overboard, we will impoverish not just our province, but our world.

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Frank Varga to depart Burns Lake Community Forest after nearly a decade of leadership

By Quinn Bender
Burns Lake Lakes District News
January 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Frank Varga

After serving nine years and six months as general manager of Burns Lake Community Forest and COMFOR Management Services Ltd., Frank Varga will step down from the role next month. …Since taking the helm, Varga has led a wide range of initiatives focused on expanding sustainable forestry, boosting wildfire resilience, and strengthening community engagement. Under his leadership, the organization secured more than $4 million in funding for wildfire mitigation, habitat restoration, and public access projects. …He credited the achievements to those around him. “The team that I have built accomplished so much together,” he wrote, highlighting projects such as the firewood program, youth education efforts, and the annual Burns Lake Forest Open House and BBQ. …He described the forest as “not just a managed resource, but a true community treasure,” made possible by the passion of staff, the guidance of board members, the generosity of volunteers, and broad community support.

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Thompson-Nicola Regional District renews five-year contract for invasive plant management

By Michael Potestio
Castanet
January 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

KAMLOOPS, BC — The Thompson-Nicola Regional District board of directors handed out a new, five-year contract for invasive plant management throughout the TNRD. At its regular meeting last Thursday, the board voted unanimously in favour of handing the contract to Spectrum Resource Group at an estimated contract value of $1,750,000 over the term. The previous five-year pact expired at the end of 2025 and a request for quote was issued last fall, yielding a number of proposals for the five invasive plants management regions the TNRD is responsible for — Cache Creek, Clearwater, Clinton, Kamloops and Merritt. …The regional district’s invasive plant program has been receiving annual grants and funding from the Ministry of Forests, Ministry of Transportation and Transit, Ministry of Environment and BC Parks, FortisBC, and BC Hydro to carry out management of invasive plants on their respective jurisdictions.

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Conservation groups fundraising in hopes of purchasing Vancouver Island marsh

By Claire Palmer
CBC News
January 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©HamiltonMarshFB

The deadline for the Regional District of Nanaimo to complete a major land acquisition to create a conservation site just north of the city is quickly approaching, with a massive fundraising effort underway to facilitate the purchase. The Hamilton Marsh is a 360-acre parcel of land, located along Highway 4, just north of Nanaimo, B.C., near the Town of Qualicum Beach. The wetlands are a major part of the French Creek watershed and is home to over 120 species of birds. Owned by Island Timberlands and managed by Mosaic Forest Management, the regional district struck a conditional agreement to purchase the full marsh site for $30 million in September 2025, with a requirement to secure $7.5 million of external funding by the end of January this year.

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BC’s forestry industry and the myth of momentum

By James Steidle
Prince George Citizen
January 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

It’s pretty bold to make the theme of this year’s BC Natural Resources Forum “momentum for continued growth.” What growth are we continuing? We’ve lost a bunch more mills here in the north and the industry is on the ropes with Donald Trump’s tariffs. If anything the momentum has been in the opposite direction. The momentum is heading towards catastrophic decline. At least with forestry. And we can’t let that happen. We need the pulp mills in Prince George and we need our forest industry. …We need to rethink what we are doing and find a way to do things better — and cheaper. …One direction we can move in is we start thinning the plantations close to town. …Unfortunately, BC Timber Sales is not committed to this idea. …As far as anyone can tell, they believe thinning will reduce the Annual Allowable Cut.

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A walk in the woods with Revelstoke Community Forest Corporation

By Evert Lindquist
The Revelstoke Review
January 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Kevin Bollefer

Kevin Bollefer [has worked] for the Revelstoke Community Forest Corporation (RCFC) since 2007, and general manager since 2023. He and his staff oversee 120,000 hectares of land, including 69,000 ha of forest. This tenure, known as Tree Farm Licence (TFL) 56, was bought by the City of Revelstoke in 1993, when RCFC was formed. The aim was for the Revelstoke community to regain control of local timber resources, not just for its economy, but also for the improvement of forest management and environmental protection. In October, Black Press Media joined Bollefer for a walk in the woods to learn about the range of forest management practices RCFC uses to keep these ecosystems, resource extraction and the future of Revelstoke’s sawmills all sustainable. …Bollefer’s goal is to help keep Downie Timber’s mills operating, while balancing the environmental needs and values of forestry, old-growth and threatened species such as caribou.

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Newfoundland’s 5th water bomber is ‘destined for Labrador’ — as soon as it’s fixed

By Elizabeth Whitten
CBC News
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Newfoundland and Labrador’s fifth water bomber will soon be back in service, says the forestry minister Pleaman Forsey — but where it will be stationed has yet to be determined. The water bomber was previously stationed in Wabush. Forsey said it is again “destined for Labrador,” but he could not confirm an exact location. The CL-415 water bomber was damaged in 2018. It hit a rock in a lake on the Burin Peninsula, causing significant structural damage. It’s been out of service ever since. Last April, the previous Liberal administration committed to repairing the water bomber, announcing a $17-million contract with aircraft manufacturer De Havilland Aircraft of Canada. On Monday, Progressive Conservative Forestry Minister Pleaman Forsey told CBC Radio’s Labrador Morning the aircraft is on target to be ready for the upcoming wildfire season.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

How to make sure the nature credits you buy are real – new research

By Sophus zu Ermgassen, University of Oxford
The Conversation Canada
January 26, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

Nature markets are systems for measuring an ecological improvement on some land, then creating a representation of that improvement as a credit, which can then be bought and sold. In theory, they allow governments to attract more private investment and diversify funds that help restore nature. The reality is much more complicated. I recently co-published a paper that outlines a checklist that can be used to sense-check whether a nature or nature-based carbon credit is likely to be real – and to make sure you really do get what you’re paying for. …Examples include the EU’s nature credits roadmap, England’s biodiversity net gain policy and the international voluntary carbon market. …So if you want to capture more carbon, it often makes sense to have a credit that measures changes in tree cover or biomass, because there’s plenty of evidence that forests store atmospheric carbon.

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Biomass could play a key role in Canada’s transition to a carbon-neutral economy

By Normand Mousseau & Roberta Dagher
The Conversation Canada
January 27, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Record forest fires, under-utilized agricultural residues like straw and husks and struggling sawmills have left Canada with an abundance of undervalued biomass. If carefully and strategically managed, this resource could become a powerful ally in the fight against climate change. Canada’s biomass sectors are facing significant uncertainty because of political and natural disruptions. The forestry sector was hit last year by new American tariffs announced by the Donald Trump administration on Canadian forest products, bringing the total duties imposed on Canadian lumber to 45 per cent. The agricultural and agri-food sector is also particularly vulnerable, since it exports more than 70 per cent of its main crops. In addition to facing these political uncertainties, biomass sectors are increasingly experiencing the effects of climate disasters. 

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B.C. defines framework for measuring climate outcomes in forestry

By BC Ministry of Forests
BC Government
January 27, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

To address a recommendation from the Office of the Auditor General of British Columbia, the Province has established a new method that measures how silviculture investments contribute to climate-change mitigation. In response to Recommendation 1 from the auditor general’s report Ministry of Forests: Calculating Forest Carbon Projections, the chief forester has approved a new method to support consistent and transparent carbon projections for forest investment activities. …The chief forester has approved a new method to support consistent and transparent carbon projections for forest investment activities. This marks the completion of the two recommendations made by the auditor general. …Silviculture investments lead to a complex sequence of greenhouse-gas emissions and removals. Measuring and communicating the net outcome can be challenging, demanding a comprehensive and standardized approach to performance measurement. The method is a big step toward consistently and transparently measuring how silviculture programs contribute to overall climate-change mitigation from B.C.’s forestry sector.

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Arctic Bioenergy Summit and Tour in Yellowknife

Government of the Northwest Territories
January 26, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada West

The Arctic Bioenergy Summit and Tour: Sustainable Bioenergy for Northern Communities: Reliable. Affordable. Local. starts today in Yellowknife and runs until January 28. Hosted by the Arctic Energy Alliance and the Wood Pellet Association of Canada, this in-person event replaces the 2026 edition of the Northwest Territories Biomass Week and brings together energy leaders, policymakers, and practitioners from across Canada to explore sustainable bioenergy solutions for northern and remote communities. The Summit begins with a full-day tour of local biomass installations, including bioheat and district heat systems, followed by a two-day conference at Chateau Nova. …For those involved in biomass boiler operations, the Arctic Energy Alliance will also host a two-day NWT Biomass Boiler and Heating Plant Training Session, January 29 and 30, 2026.

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Health & Safety

New combustible dust rules to go into effect at B.C. workplaces, 14 years after deadly explosions

By Akshay Kulkarni
CBC News
January 23, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

More robust rules are coming to regulate combustible dust in B.C. workplaces, more than 14 years after two separate deadly explosions in northern B.C. sawmills were fueled by wood dust. In 2012, the explosions in Burns Lake and Prince George led to four deaths and over 40 injuries at the Babine Forest Products and Lakeland Mills. The explosions were fueled by wood dust dispersed in the air, according to WorkSafeBC reports. …WorkSafeBC, the province’s workplace regulator, passed amendments to its regulations in November 2025 that it says will require employers to “implement more robust measures to control and manage the accumulation of all types of combustible dusts.” …”The fact that it took 14 years to get to this point, from our point of view … it is an excessive amount of time to get here, we believe,” Ed Kent, the health safety environment co-ordinator for USW District 3 added.

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