Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

Prime Minister Carney announces new measures to protect and transform Canada’s steel and lumber industries

The Office of the Prime Minister
November 26, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

Canada’s government has moved quickly to protect and strengthen the sectors most affected by U.S. tariffs – introducing new measures to help workers gain new skills, support businesses as they modernise and diversify, and boost domestic demand for Canadian goods. Building on previously announced measures to help transform the Canadian steel and softwood lumber industries, the following new initiatives were announced:

  1. Further limit foreign steel imports
     
  2. Make it easier to build with Canadian steel and Canadian lumber
    • Canada will work with railway companies to cut freight rates for transporting Canadian steel and lumber interprovincially by 50%.
    • To maximise the use of Canadian softwood lumber in housing, Build Canada Homes will prioritise shovel-ready, multi-year projects.
    • Canada will implement our Buy Canadian Policy later this year, which requires that all contracts worth over $25 million prioritise Canadian materials – including steel and lumber.
       
  3. Increase protections for Canadian steel and lumber workers and businesses
    • Canada will earmark more than $100 million to provide support in all sectors with an active Work-Sharing agreement.
    • Canada will provide an additional $500 million to the BDC Softwood Lumber Guarantee Program.
    • For softwood lumber firms facing liquidity pressures, Canada will earmark $500 million under the Large Enterprise Tariff Loan facility.
    • Canada will launch a Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force. 

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Business & Politics

U.S. industry groups strongly back renewing CUSMA

By Mike Crawley
CBC News
December 1, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

As Canada’s trade deal with the US and Mexico faces a crucial review, many US industries are urging the Trump administration to preserve the agreement and to stop putting tariffs on imports from its northern and southern neighbours. Ahead of the public hearings scheduled this week, some of the heaviest hitters in the U.S. manufacturing, industrial and retail sectors have submitted briefs extolling the agreement’s benefits to the domestic economy. …CUSMA is “the most pro-US manufacturing trade agreement in history,” said the National Association of Manufacturers, the largest organization in a sector that contributes $2.9 trillion US to the nation’s GDP. …The National Association of Home Builders calls on the Trump administration to scrap all tariffs on building material imported from Canada and Mexico, including Canadian softwood lumber, which it says “fills a unique niche in residential construction that is not easily replaced with domestic sources.”

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Happy birthday, CUSMA. Is seven your lucky number?

By John Stackhouse
Royal Bank of Canada
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The much-pilloried Canada-U.S.-Mexico trade agreement was signed seven years ago this weekend—on November 30, 2018. A year later, it was amended to address rules of origin for autos, digital trade, IP, dairy and, who could forget, a sunset clause. We can all do the math. The December 10, 2019 amendments set in motion a 16-year term for the agreement, with a mandatory review every six years. Which means we’ll see more of a requiem than a birthday bash next week when Mark Carney is in Washington to help kick off the 2026 FIFA World Cup. But don’t bury CUSMA just yet. Despite the U.S. President’s freeze on negotiations, officials from both countries are talking every day and laying the groundwork for what will be an intense 2026. Not many insiders seriously expect CUSMA to go away; they’re working on changes—modifications, enhancements, renovations, depending on your point of view—that will continue to change the fabric of continental commerce.

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Canada’s trade resilience faces uncertainty as CUSMA renegotiation looms

By Tracy Moran
National Post
November 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Canada has fared pretty well amid U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade war so far. As Prime Minister Mark Carney likes to point out, the country has the best trade deal going with the United States, thanks to the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), with over 85 per cent of exports to America being tariff-free. The trouble is, that could change in the year ahead as the 2026 joint review of CUSMA gets underway. All three countries have launched consultation processes ahead of the renegotiation process to get stakeholders’ feedback on the trade agreement’s pros and cons. The next and crucial step in the U.S. involves in-person testimony at the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) hearings in Washington, D.C., from December 3 to 5, where more than 170 witnesses are scheduled to share their views. The proceedings will help the USTR gather information to inform its report to Congress, which could shape Trump’s approach to next year’s renegotiation talks.

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Steelworkers union welcomes federal steel and softwood measures, urge strong enforcement and progress on softwood dispute

United Steelworkers
November 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

The United Steelworkers union (USW) welcomes the federal government’s new measures to support Canada’s steel and softwood lumber sectors, calling them a meaningful step forward in the face of US tariffs and global market instability. The package includes tighter import controls, a 25% surtax on steel derivatives, strengthened border enforcement, expanded liquidity supports for softwood producers, a top-up to the Work-Sharing program, lower interprovincial freight costs, and new domestic-content requirements for federal projects. …Marty Warren, USW National Director… underscored that the Work-Sharing top-up will help workers stay on the job during temporary downturns and also pointed to the importance of strengthening procurement rules. On softwood lumber, the union welcomes the government’s efforts… “But let’s be honest, forestry towns cannot rebuild on temporary fixes. A long-term resolution to the softwood lumber dispute with the United States is essential. Without it, workers and communities remain vulnerable to decisions they cannot control.”

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Carney pins hopes on domestic market with new steel, lumber tariff supports

By Craig Lord and Nick Murray
The Canadian Press
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Mark Carney

Prime Minister Carney wants the Canadian lumber and steel sectors to look for more opportunities at home as US tariffs and shifting global trade tides limit their opportunities abroad. …Many of the measures Carney unveiled are aimed at boosting the use of Canadian steel and lumber in domestic homebuilding and infrastructure projects. Ottawa’s new Buy Canadian plan means firms must prioritize the use of Canadian materials in federal government defence or construction contracts worth $25 million or more. …Starting next spring, the government will offer subsidies to rail companies to cut freight fees in half on shipments of steel and lumber across provincial borders for a year. Carney said the federal government is adding an extra $500 million in loan guarantees for the softwood lumber industry on top of other measures to encourage homebuilders to use made-in-Canada materials. The federal affordable housing agency Build Canada Homes will also prioritize funding for shovel-ready housing projects.

From the Vancouver Sun’s Derrick Penner: Prime Minister Mark Carney’s new forestry sector aid helps, shy of new softwood lumber deal

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FPAC Responds to the Prime Minister’s Announcement on Measures to Protect and Strengthen Canada’s Forest Sector

By Derek Nighbor, President and CEO
The Forest Products Association of Canada
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Derek Nighbor

The Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC) responded to Prime Minister Carney’s announcement of new federal measures aimed at addressing the needs of the Canadian forest sector and its employees as it deals with ongoing U.S. duties and tariffs. “For nearly a decade, our sector has been carrying the weight of unfair and punitive US duties,” said FPAC CEO, Derek Nighbor. Today’s announcement is a clear response to the urgency of the situation,” Nighbor added. …Nighbor also emphasized that financial measures alone will not resolve the core challenge posed by the long-running softwood lumber dispute. “We can’t lose sight of the bigger picture,” he added. …”Our top priority remains having the federal government achieve a negotiated deal with the United States that works on both sides of the border,” Nighbor said.

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‘More risky’ for Canada to wait for Trump’s call than to restart talks: Hyder

By Marco Vigliotti
iPolitics
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Goldy Hyder

Goldy Hyder, president and CEO of the Canadian Business Council, says if the federal government is comfortable with the status quo on trade with the U.S. it needs to be clear with businesses. If not, then it doesn’t make much sense to sit on the sidelines and wait for a call from U.S. President Donald Trump. Hyder, said U.S. officials familiar with the president’s thinking have told him that Trump is quite content with where things stand with Canada. That includes the significant exemption for goods that would qualify as compliant under the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement or CUSMA, which has effectively dropped Canada’s overall tariff rate to the U.S. to around five per cent. But that also means he’s feeling no pressure to lift the 50 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium and the additional 10 per cent tariff on softwood lumber that comes on top of a 35 per cent tariff on Canadian wood.

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Local MP advocates for softwood lumber industry

By Storrm Lennie
My Nelson Now
December 1, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Columbia-Kootenay-Southern Rockies MP Rob Morrison is accusing the federal government of failing forestry workers by allowing the Canada-U.S. softwood lumber dispute to drag on. Morrison criticized the Liberal government… saying Canadians have been left to absorb “punitive, unfounded and protectionist” U.S. duties while Ottawa offers little assurance in return. …The softwood lumber industry, according to Morrison, is not just another commodity. …He said the federal government has collected nearly $10 billion in duties since the last softwood agreement expired in 2015, money he argued should have stayed in Canadian communities to support reinvestment, innovation and jobs. …He pointed to impacts at mills within his riding, including Kalesnikoff Lumber, saying its CEO told him current tariffs are unsustainable. “Ken said the softwood lumber dispute is beyond our control. Current rates of 45% tariff are unsustainable. And he said businesses are drawing on their line of credit to pay payroll.”

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100 Mile House Mayor travelled to Victoria to meet with provincial government

By Misha Mustaqeem
100 Mile House Free Press
December 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The District of 100 Mile House’s mayor and one of its councillors went to Victoria for meetings with provincial government officials over the impending West Fraser Mill closures on Monday, Nov. 24. During the Mayor’s Report at the Nov. 25 District of 100 Mile House Council meeting, Mayor Maureen Pinkney and Coun. Donna Barnett both revealed details about a visit to Victoria regarding issues surrounding 100 Mile, including the impending permanent closure of the 100 Mile West Fraser mill, as well as frequent closures of the emergency department at the 100 Mile Hospital. On Nov. 6, West Fraser Lumber announced in a release that it would be closing its 100 Mile House lumber mill following a two-month wind-down.

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Escalating lumber tariffs push B.C. to look to the Far East

By Eric Plummer
Ha-Shilth-Sa | Canada’s Oldest First Nation’s Newspaper
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

©BCGovFlickr

British Columbia is looking to the Far East to find more of a future for the forestry industry, as the sector continues to be hammered by escalating tariffs from its biggest trading partner. …“We’re looking at a difficult situation because so much of our timber…was ultimately bound for United States markets,” said John Jack, chief councillor of the Huu-ay-aht First Nations. “Because of the tariffs that’s dried up demand.” North of Huu-ay-aht territory sits Port Alberni, a hub of the region’s logging activity. But over the last generation the town has seen a succession of mill closures. “I’m a huge proponent of diversifying our markets because then we’re not so reliant on a country whose decision makers are not necessarily predictable and stable. I think of all the countries in the world, in places like Japan and South Korea stability are virtues,” he said. “I find that compatible with Maa-nulth culture.”   

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Prime Minister Mark Carney’s new forestry sector aid helps, shy of new softwood lumber deal

By Derrick Penner
Vancouver Sun
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Mark Carney

B.C.’s forest sector counted Prime Minister Mark Carney’s latest round of support for their industry that was unveiled Wednesday, including $500 million in new funding for loans, as helpful. …Kim Haakstad, CEO of B.C.’s Council of Forest Industries said the measures Carney unveiled Wednesday in Ottawa “reflect an important recognition of the role forestry and forest products play in the economic strength of Canada.” …In Victoria, B.C. Forest Minister Ravi Parmar welcomed Carney’s commitment to create a forest sector transformation task force, among the measures. …How effective the programs are, though, will depend on how quickly the support can reach companies on the ground. …“The best way out of this is some sort of trade agreement between Canada and the United States,” Independent Wood Producers Association’s Brian Menzies said. “Because our industry doesn’t want to be bailed out. We don’t want support. We actually just want to do our business.”

In related coverage:

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Conifex Timber to temporarily curtail Mackenzie sawmill operations

Conifex Timber Inc.
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

MACKENZIE, BC — Forestry company Conifex Timber announced that it will temporarily curtail operations at its Mackenzie, BC sawmill for a planned four-week period commencing December 15, 2025. The curtailment is being implemented in response to, among other things, continued weakness in North American lumber markets. The curtailments will begin on December 15, for a planned four-week duration, Conifex said, adding that it is expected to reduce production by roughly 13 million board feet. The North American timber industry has gone through several curtailments in response to US President Trump’s decision to implement tariffs. …The company said it does not anticipate any challenges in securing sawlogs to maintain capacity operations in the future, once market conditions permit a return to full operations. It also expects to see gradual recovery in demand in the second half of 2026.

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Williams Lake mayor says city ‘blindsided’ by pellet plant closure

By Ruth Lloyd
The Williams Lake Tribune
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

©Drax

The closure of a Williams Lake wood pellet plant “blindsided” the city, according to Mayor Surinderpal Rathor. The shut down is being attributed to a combination of external market and supply chain pressures, making operations at the location “no longer commercially viable” according to comments from Caroline Bleay, communications manager for Drax in Canada. The Drax-owned wood pellet plant…announced the planned closure of the Williams Lake facility to staff and the public on Nov. 26, impacting 30 direct employees and a number of contractors. Rathor said the city had reached out to the company after hearing rumours of a potential closure, but hadn’t gotten a response. The city supported Atlantic Power’s Williams Lake Biomass Plant to secure viable contracts after they announce a possible closure…. Rathor said the city would have worked to try and help Drax as well had they been in the know.

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B.C. forests minister calls new federal lumber industry supports ‘a good start’

By Mark Page
Nanaimo Bulletin
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar @BCgov

B.C. ministers expressed conflicting feelings about a range of tariff response measures announced by the federal government on Wednesday, Nov. 26. On the one hand, an additional $1 billion is being offered to support the forest industry, which faces 45 per cent combined tariffs and duties on softwood lumber. The money for lumber is split into two $500 million funds, one for a loan program for companies through the Business Development Bank of Canada, and the other through a tariff loan program. This money comes in addition to $1.2 billion in previously announced support. It is not known how much of this money will wind up in B.C. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar reckons that if it is fairly distributed, B.C. would get about 50 per cent. Parmar applauded this extra support being announced so soon after federal tariff envoy Dominic LeBlanc came to B.C. for a forestry summit.

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COFI Statement on New Federal Supports for the Lumber Industry

By Kim Haakstad, President and CEO
The BC Council of Forest Industries
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kim Haakstad

VANCOUVER, BC – Kim Haakstad, President & CEO of the BC Council of Forest Industries welcomed the announcement of new federal measures to support Canada’s lumber sector as companies continue to navigate escalating U.S. duties, trade uncertainty and competitiveness challenges in international markets. The commitments announced by Prime Minister Carney reflect an important recognition of the role forestry and forest products play in the economic strength of Canada.” …While application processes are open, companies are still waiting too long for decisions. Timely rollout and clear timelines will be essential to helping workers, communities, and manufacturers manage near-term challenges.” …“As Ottawa advances these programs… it is also important for the Province of BC to continue taking action at home to improve competitiveness through predictable and economic access to logs for mills.”

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Ken Kalesnikoff to step down as president of Kalesnikoff lumber company

Kalesnikoff
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ken Kalesnikoff

Chris Kalesnikoff

Krystle Kalesnikoff

Kalesnikoff is pleased to announce that, effective January 1, 2026, Chris Kalesnikoff will become President and Chief Executive Officer and Krystle Seed Chief Financial and Strategic Services Officer of Kalesnikoff Lumber Company and Kalesnikoff Mass Timber Inc., formally evolving to the fourth generation of family leadership. Ken Kalesnikoff, current President and CEO will turn his full-time attention to industry advocacy and will remain a Principal and a Director of Kalesnikoff’s external Advisory Board. “I am incredibly proud of Chris and Krystle’s accomplishments, as well as the entire Kalesnikoff team’s, in transitioning the company from a sawmill and lumber focus to one of North America’s leading mass timber companies and now North America’s first fully integrated mass timber modular offering,” said Ken Kalesnikoff. ” …Kalesnikoff has 375 employees in the Castlegar region, Vancouver and throughout the province and has completed over 400 mass timber projects in Canada and the US since 2020.

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Softwood lumber industry underwhelmed by announced supports

By Rob Buffam
CTV News
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ottawa threw the beleaguered softwood lumber industry a bone. …The new measures include $500 million in new loan guarantees for softwood lumber companies. “Loans are only good if i can sell my prioduct and pay for those loans,” said Brian Menzies, at the Independent Wood Processors Association of BC. “At 45%, I can t sell my product into the United States.” Other steps announced include cutting freight rates. …The measures are window dressing – say some – when compared to the impact of the steel industry supports. “I’m afraid we’ve come to the point that ‘Sophies choice’ is happening and softwood lumber is the child who’s going to be left behind,” said Menzies. It’s a concern shared at Leslie Forest Products, in Delta where James Sanghera said the measures won’t make a difference. “Most of the wood we’re sending down to the States is going on truck.”

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No injuries in morning fire at BiOrigin Specialty Products paper factory in St. Catharines

CHCH-TV
November 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ST. CATHARINES, Ontario — Fire crews in St. Catharines battled an early morning blaze Thursday at a tissue and paper company in St. Catharines. Emergency services arrived shortly before 1 a.m. to close roads at BiOrigin Specialty Products on Merritt Street near Maplecrest Avenue. Aerial trucks were used to fight the fire, including on the rooftop area, that police say started in a paper machine when particles overheated and ignited. Crews worked against high winds for several hours to put it out. Niagara police say that the fire is not considered suspicious and no injuries were reported. Roads in the area have reopened and a few fire trucks remain at the scene. The estimated cost of damages to the building and its interior is not yet known. [END]

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Unifor Submission to Bill 46 Protect Ontario by Cutting Red Tape Act

By Samia Hashi, Ontario Regional Director, Unifor
Unifor Canada
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

I am writing regarding Bill 46, Protect Ontario by Cutting Red Tape Act, 2025, specifically regarding proposed amendments to the Crown Forest Sustainability Act, 1994. Unifor’s 24,000 forestry sector members – including more than 4,000 in Ontario – work in a variety of forestry, logging, and firefighting occupations as well as wood product, bioenergy and pulp and paper manufacturing facilities. Ontario’s forestry sector continues to experience a perfect storm of repeated and intersecting crises… and global challenges continues to destabilize the broader sector. The ongoing softwood lumber dispute and … intensified trade war are causing disastrous repercussions across the forestry sector. …Defending and rebuilding Canada’s forestry sector requires a comprehensive industrial strategy, spearheaded by the federal and provincial governments and informed by all relevant stakeholders, especially workers. It is in this context that I wish to provide some comments on Bill 46, Protect Ontario by Cutting Red Tape Act, 2025, especially regarding related amendments to the Crown Forest Sustainability Act, 1994 (CFSA).

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New Brunswick woodlot owner says current tariff situation not sustainable for forestry industry

By Laura Brown
CTV News
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Private woodlot owner Andrew Clark says this year is one of the toughest he’s seen in the six decades he’s worked in the woods. For him, sales are ‘maybe 50 per cent’ of what they were last year. “It is the lack of markets which are the result of the tremendous uncertainty that the industry is in now because of the actions of the American government,” he said. He feels some of the federal government’s new supports – announced this week – could help. Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Wednesday a $500-million increase to the previously announced Softwood Lumber Development Program, which gives companies access to government-backed loans, totaling $1.2 billion. He also said Ottawa is working with railway companies to cut freight rates when transporting Canadian lumber across the country by 50 per cent. But Clark says the current situation – with the U.S. duties and tariffs amounting to 45 per cent – isn’t sustainable.

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Minister says bid on Northern Pulp lands about supporting forestry sector

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
November 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kim Masland

Nova Scotia government officials will know if they’re the successful bidder for the Northern Pulp timberlands following an auction Friday, but it will be a few weeks before the result is publicly known. “This is a very confidential process,” Natural Resources Minister Kim Masland said. …The auction is part of the creditor protection process Northern Pulp has been moving through. Nova Scotia is bidding on the company’s 162,000 hectares of timberlands and a nursery and seed orchard in Debert. “This has economic benefit and certainly we want to add that to our Crown land,” said Masland. …Premier Tim Houston said he has no issue with Macer but it “wasn’t the assessment of the province” that Macer’s initial bid “should win the day.” …Masland said her government is committed to supporting the forestry industry, and trying to buy the Northern Pulp timberlands is one way to do that.

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Lumber supports won’t ‘make any difference,’ New Brunswick industry insider says

By Anna Mandin & Rebecca Lau
Global News
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Susan Holt

New Brunswick’s forestry industry is feeling the pain of US tariffs and the difficult economic environment, leading stakeholders to say Ottawa’s $500 million in support isn’t enough. …The loan guarantee will “ensure that companies have the financing and the credit support that they need to maintain and restructure their operations during this period of transformation,” Carney said. …Kimberly Jensen, Carleton-Victoria Forest Products Marketing Board manager, says the federal government’s latest move won’t be enough to help New Brunswick’s struggling industries. “When you spread that (financial support) across the 10 provinces and the territories, it’s not going to go very far.” …The president of the New Brunswick Federation of Woodlot Owners says the current economic climate is “total chaos.” …New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt said, “These are companies that are losing business, that are losing clients, and we need to get them the competitive dollars,” she said.

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Shockwaves felt in N.B. forestry sector as Maine mill halts Canadian imports

By Aidan Cox
CBC News
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

A 10 per cent tariff that U.S. President Donald Trump slapped on timber imports this fall has prompted at least one mill in Maine to suspend shipments from New Brunswick, sending shockwaves through parts of the province’s forestry industry. Woodland Pulp LLC halted its purchases of New Brunswick timber starting Oct. 14, in light of the new tariff on softwood and certain hardwood timber, said company spokesperson Scott Beal. “It certainly adds cost to the business and, you know, like other wood users, I mean we’re always looking and hoping and trying to source fibre at the least cost,” Beal said. Beal said the company’s purchase of wood had already been reduced in recent months due to a downturn in the global pulp market. That downturn more recently prompted the company to pause receiving wood for 60 days, in addition to a planned 26-day long suspension of operations at its Baileyville, Me., which started over the weekend.

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Finance & Economics

Construction materials prices rise despite lumber price drop

By Michael Rudy
Yield Pro
December 1, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

The producer price index (PPI) report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) stated that construction materials prices rose 0.1 percent month-over-month in September on a seasonally adjusted basis. The intermediate demand index of components and materials for construction was up 2.8 percent from its year-earlier level. Overall prices for processed goods for intermediate demand were up 0.4 percent this month. The overall processed goods for intermediate demand index was 3.8 percent higher than its year-earlier level. …The softwood lumber price index resumed its recent downward movement this month after a break in the trend last month. It was reported to fall 4.2 percent, aided by a 0.33 percent upward revision to last month’s index. The index is now down 12.2 percent since reaching a recent high in March.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Mass timber adds visual warmth to Burnaby, BC ice arena

By Jenna McKnight
Dezeen Magazine
November 29, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

BURNABY, BC — The Rosemary Brown Recreation Centre was designed by HCMA Architecture + Design to depart from the “dated model” of typical ice arenas, which tend to be cold, windowless and framed with steel. The recreational centre is located in the emerging Southgate community in Burnaby, a city near Vancouver. The 8,547-square-metre building was designed by local firm HCMA Architecture + Design to contain a pair of National Hockey League-sized ice rinks, along with community facilities. …”Wood plays an integral role in the character of the centre, symbolising warmth and durability, and also ensuring quick, efficient assembly on the challenging, compact site,” HCMA Architecture + Design said. The lobby features glue-laminated beams and columns, which are visible to passers-by through large windows. Nail-laminated timber was used for the lobby’s decking. A hybrid steel-and-timber system was used for the roof. 

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$60M mass timber office in the works for Penticton’s Innovation District

By Grant Cameron
Journal of Commerce
November 28, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

©naturally.wood

Plans are in the works for a six-storey mass timber office building in Penticton, B.C., which the developer says could serve as a blueprint for more climate-conscious designs across the province. The $60-million structure is proposed for the Innovation District, a new master-planned community between Okanagan and Skaha lakes, and located across from Penticton Regional Hospital. The building, dubbed Nexus, will feature retail, medical and office space as well as day care space and offices tailored to medical and professional tenants. “The Innovation District master plan for Penticton envisions a 10-acre mixed-use community with more than 1,500 homes, offices, medical services, retail and more,” explains Rocky Sethi, managing director with Stryke Group, developer of the venture. “Nexus is a key piece of that.” He says Nexus was born from a vision of sustainable, modern development, backed by provincial support. The project received a $500,000 grant through B.C.’s Forestry Innovation Investment.

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Mass timber keeps performance high and costs low

naturally:wood
November 27, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

This month’s update from naturally:wood spotlights some of the most impressive recent advances in mass-timber construction in B.C. — including the striking example of The Confluence in Castlegar. As one of Canada’s first public-spaces to combine mass timber with Passive House certification, it shows how high-performance design, local wood and smart planning can deliver efficient, beautiful civic buildings. You’ll also find cutting-edge guidance from Canadian Wood Council and WoodWorks BC on light-frame mid-rise construction for high-seismic zones — including high-capacity shearwall systems and lightweight floor assemblies that keep costs down without compromising safety. Plus, don’t miss a look at the rapid-construction prowess of a six-storey timber hotel at Penticton Lakeside Resort and Conference Centre — completed in under a year using CLT panels and tall-timber framing. This issue proves how timber, innovation and local expertise are shaping the future of sustainable construction in B.C.

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Forestry

Christmas tree farmers forced to adapt to climate change and affordability crisis

By Tyler Cheese
CBC News
November 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Modern-day circumstances are slowly transforming the Christmas tree farming industry. …weather is a challenge Michael Cormack faces on the Christmas tree farm he owns and operates in Ontario. … “Mother nature is a big, big factor in the business,” Cormack said. “This year in July, we were averaging over 29 C. So we had trees from two to three years ago that just died. … Four years ago, we had a tornado here that wiped out a bunch of our stuff.” …Another major factor is the cost of living crisis. …“Right now many of the farms are owned by elderly growers, and they’re aging out. So we’re losing a lot of farms year after year, which is unfortunate,” said Kelsey Leonard, founder and director of the Christmas Tree Lab at the University of Waterloo. …U.S. tariffs are also likely to have an impact on the costs associated with growing Christmas trees this year, Leonard said.

Related coverage from UBC Faculty of Forestry: How Warming Winters Could Reshape B.C.’s Christmas Tree Choices

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It’s time to pare back the Office of the Chief Forester

By James Steidle, Stop the Spray BC
The Prince George Citizen
November 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Prince George residents had better pay attention to last week’s report showing that unelected bureaucrats in Victoria are playing politics when they decide how much can be logged up here. I’ve been informed that our unelected Office of the Chief Forester, currently led by Shane Berg, is figuring out the Annual Allowable Cut (AAC) in the Prince George Timber Supply Area for the next 10 years. The process, known as a Timber Supply Review (TSR), masquerades as scientific and expert-driven, but in reality it’s politics. The amount we log is largely pre-determined and the game is how to manipulate the models and forests to achieve it. That’s why we get glyphosate with our blueberries and fertilizer-poisoned cattle. It’s why we don’t thin the plantations or do more selective logging. …The Office of Chief Forester prioritizes the “timber supply” over diverse, fire-resistant forests, as if the two are mutually exclusive.

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Open letter to Premier Eby: concern for the fate of B.C.’s remaining old growth

Letter by Carol Latter, Kimberly, BC
East Kootenay News Weekly e-KNOW
November 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

I am writing to express my concern for the fate of B.C.’s remaining old growth forests, including the globally rare and at-risk Inland Temperate Rainforest.  Most of this endangered forest is still not protected, and thus all creatures who dwell therein are equally unprotected. The Valhalla Wilderness Society … is putting forth a plan to protect the remaining intact Inland Temperate Rainforests through its three park proposals: the Rainbow-Jordan Wilderness proposal; the Selkirk Mountains Ancient Forest Park proposal; and the Quesnel Lake Wilderness proposal. This protection is crucial for the survival of these rare temperate rainforests. David Eby, you are undoubtedly well informed as to the many scientific reasons for protecting more forest, especially old growth forests…Importantly, only the BC Park Act and the BC Protected Areas Act can provide secure protection to preserve forest for future generations. Please adopt and implement the VWS park proposals as quickly as possible. 

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Cheakamus Community Forest embraces climate-driven shift toward ‘more complex and resilient’ ecosystems

By Luke Faulks
Pique News Magazine
December 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Cheakamus Community Forest (CCF) is moving toward a more climate-driven forest management strategy, following a climate-risk assessment that forecasts significantly higher wildfire activity, worsening drought and increasing tree stress across much of the tenure through mid-century. The findings, prepared by Frontera Forest Solutions, Inc., mark the beginning of an operational shift for the 33,000-hectare tenure jointly managed by the Resort Municipality of Whistler, Lil’wat Nation and Squamish Nation. “[The assessment] identified going out to 2060 where the community forest is going to become more at risk due to climate change and from our key risks, which are wildfire and drought. And on the heels of those things, when the forest is stressed, pest infestation comes,” said CCF executive director Heather Beresford. …CCF plans to release its 2026 harvest plan by year-end, with draft 2027 plans to follow. The climate resiliency plan will play into the CCF’s harvest plans moving forward.

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Charity celebrates milestone as Vancouver Island marmots rebound to 427 in wild

By Nono Shen
The Canadian Press in CHEK TV
November 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A foundation trying to save a critically endangered species is celebrating a marmot milestone. The Marmot Recovery Foundation announced on its social media page that the population of the Vancouver Island species has reached a new high of 427 marmots. When its team first began releasing marmots to the wild in 2003, there were just 22 remaining, and its statement says there was a lot of doubt that the species could be saved. …The Vancouver Island marmot is considered one of Canada’s most endangered species, and the rodent has five distinct whistles or trills they use, more than any other species. …The Marmot Recovery Foundation was founded in 1998 with the goal of saving the animals from extinction through captive breeding, reintroduction and habitat restoration.

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Forest History Association of BC – Annual General Meeting Tonight

Forest History Association of BC
December 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Forest History Association of BC is hosting its 43rd Annual General Meeting tonight, December 1, 2025 at 7:00 pm PST. All members are warmly invited to attend this virtual gathering and take part in shaping the direction of the organization for the coming year. The AGM will include key updates on current projects, board activities and election, and ongoing efforts to preserve and share BC’s forest and community history. For those interested in learning more about the FHABC’s mission—promoting research, storytelling, and education about the province’s rich forest heritage—visit their objectives page here. Members are encouraged to join the meeting via the link in the >>Read More and support the continued work of this unique and important BC organization.

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Three more arrested in Carmanah Valley at old-growth logging site

By Liz Brown
Chek News
November 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Three people were arrested in the Carmanah Valley on Vancouver Island on Wednesday, where RCMP officers have been enforcing an injunction for the past two days, to allow old-growth logging operations to continue. Lake Cowichan RCMP say police arrested two women and one man by the end of Wednesday. “Upon police arrival on Walbran Forest Service Road, several individuals were discovered to have reoccupied the encampment in the enforcement area and either attached themselves to a structure or obstacle on the road or had perched atop a tree sit,” states RCMP. In total seven people have been arrested since Mounties started enforcing the BC Supreme Court-ordered injunction that allows old-growth logging operations to continue by Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership and Tsawak-qin Forestry. Following the arrests, RCMP closed off the area, allowing the road to clear and operations to resume for Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership and Tsawak-qin Forestry.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

By Jason Fisher
Forest Enhancement Society of BC
November 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jason Fisher

British Columbia’s forests play a key role in mitigating the impacts of climate change and contributing to a more sustainable future. At FESBC, we are proud to invest in projects that contribute to the health and resiliency of B.C.’s forests for generations, which in turn generate lasting economic and social benefits for our local communities while helping take action on this global issue. 

In this newsletter:
  • A Safety Tip from our friends at the BC Forest Safety Council. 
  • An opportunity to submit an Expression of Interest for projects due November 30, 2025.
  • A Special Feature on Indigenous youth at the heart of wildfire resilience.
  • A news release on the work done by East Fraser Fiber to maximize the recovery and utilization of uneconomical fibre.
  • Meet our Faces of Forestry featured person, Jake Power.

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North Cowichan’s council vote on public forests was 7-0

By Robert Barron
The Cowichan Valley Citizen
November 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

North Cowichan, BC — The vote for North Cowichan to reaffirm its commitment to the development of a co-management plan for the municipal forest reserve with the Quw’utsun Nation at the meeting on Nov. 19 was unanimous. Coun. Bruce Findlay did advocate for the municipality to develop a five-year forestry plan for the 5,000 hectare MFR without committing to forestry activities, and including other options for revenue generation, while in discussions with the Quw’utsun Nation on the co-management plan at the same time. “It’s just a little more prescriptive in how we move forward in parallel tracks along the way,” he said. …But the motion didn’t preclude the option of resuming harvesting in some form in the MFR at a later date in conjunction with the Quw’utsun Nation, which includes Cowichan Tribes, Halalt First Nation, Lyackson First Nation, Penelakut Tribe, and Stz’uminus First Nation.

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New Brunswick researchers find lichen species in most eastern place on record

By Oliver Pearson
CBC News
November 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Researchers with the Nature Trust of New Brunswick are on the hunt for four different types of lichens and they’ve found one – in an unusual spot. The scaly fringe lichen, known scientifically as heterodermia squamulosa, was found between Alma and Riverside-Albert, east of Fundy National Park. “As far as I know, it’s the most eastern recorded occurrence of the species to date,” said Ilana Urquhart, a conservation coordinator with the Nature Trust. …Urquhart said lichens can be a good indicator of a healthy environment that can support a variety of species. “We might not directly see what the importance of them is, but they’re often found in areas that are really rich, that are biodiverse.” The biggest threat to lichens is habitat loss, according to Urquhart, which can be caused by logging and harvesting.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Arctic Bioenergy Summit and Tour: Advancing Renewable Energy in Canada’s North

By Gordon Murray and Mark Heyck
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
November 27, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, will host a premier in-person event for Canada’s bioenergy sector from January 26 to 28, 2026—the Arctic Bioenergy Summit and Tour. Organized by the Arctic Energy Alliance (AEA) and the Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC), and sponsored by the Government of Northwest Territories (GNWT), with media sponsor Canadian Biomass. This event is in lieu of the 2026 edition of the online Northwest Territories Biomass Week, traditionally held the last week of January, which attracts upwards of 300 participants each year. The event, which profiles Sustainable Bioenergy for Northern Communities: Reliable. Affordable. Local., kicks off with a full-day tour of civic buildings, schools, and community centres across Yellowknife, to look at how bioenergy is reducing reliance on fossil fuels in northern climates. Following the tour is a two-day Summit filled with informative presentations by speakers from the Northwest Territories, across the rest of Canada, and as far away as Alaska and Finland. 

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Health & Safety

Forest Safety from the BC Forest Safety Council

BC Forest Safety Council
November 27, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

The December issue of Forest Safety News is here, bringing timely insights and practical tools for safer forestry work this winter. One standout feature explores how RPAS drones are transforming field safety, reducing worker exposure during steep-slope layout, post-fire assessments, and difficult terrain navigation. It’s a look at technology that’s not just impressive — it’s making real crews safer in real time. This issue also recaps the 18th Annual Vancouver Island Safety Conference, where powerful keynote speakers shared stories of perseverance, leadership, and the importance of mental and physical well-being. The message was clear: safety culture is built person by person, conversation by conversation. You’ll also find a useful update on winter driving and hauling preparedness, including tips for planning routes, managing changing conditions, and supporting drivers during the toughest season of the year. Packed with practical advice, inspiring stories, and forward-looking innovations, this issue offers a strong finish to 2025 for BC’s forest sector.

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