Region Archives: Canada

Opinion / EdiTOADial

Another review of forest policy in BC should not be a priority right now: Linda Coady

Linda Coady, President & CEO
BC Council of Forest Industries
December 16, 2024
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, Canada West

Linda Coady

VANCOUVER – Linda Coady, President & Chief Executive Officer of the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI), issued the following statement in response to a commitment to undertake a “review of BC forests” that is part of the cooperation agreement announced by the BC NDP and the BC Green Party. “Another review of forest policy in BC should not be a priority right now”. “Premier Eby has already publicly acknowledged that rising US duties and tariffs on forest products would have a ‘devastating’ impact on thousands of jobs in resource communities across the province. In light of this very real threat, now is the time for urgent action on the commitments the government has already made to maintaining a competitive and sustainable forest products manufacturing sector in BC. In recent years, several major reviews, reports, and new initiatives have already focused on forestry in BC.

Last week, the new BC Forests Minister Ravi Parmar said that “now is the time to be bold…you are not going to see a bunch of frameworks and vision statements and grandiose plans. I think we’ve done all of that work and am very thankful to my colleagues for getting us to this place. For me, it’s now (about) focusing on those clear objectives on what we need to accomplish to have a robust, sustainable industry for the next decades.” Before yet another review is launched, Minister Parmar should be given time to put forward his plan for the completion and implementation of existing initiatives before any more new ones are introduced. …Forestry is at the forefront of advancing Indigenous reconciliation through real, on-the-ground practices and partnerships. Implementation of new land use planning processes and initiatives on conservation financing have been at least two years in the making, and are still not happening at scale. 

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Business & Politics

Sundher Timber Products expands with Great Western Lumber acquisition

Business in Vancouver
December 17, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Sundher Timber Products is a British Columbia specialty wood products manufacturer and marketing company located in Surrey, B.C. They buy B.C. Coastal logs and manufacture them into lumber for sales in North America, Europe, Japan, China and India… They have recently acquired Great Western Lumber in Everson, Washington. This acquisition will enable Sundher Timber Products to expand its U.S. market share for Coastal Douglas Fir, West Coast Hemlock and Western Red Cedar, ranging from the highest clear grades to structural and utility grades. They will be offering custom processing services, including kiln drying and planning, to other companies.

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Forest Products Association of Canada Concerned With Lack of Movement on Investment Tax Credits

Forest Products Association of Canada
December 16, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Derek Nighbor

Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC) President and CEO Derek Nighbor issued this statement following the release of the federal government’s 2024 Fall Economic Statement: Last year, to respond in part to massive manufacturing investment incentives announced in the United States, the Trudeau government’s 2023 Fall Economic Statement pledged to expand the Clean Technology Investment Tax Credits for biomass heat and electricity generation projects – to encourage millions in investments in capital upgrades and manufacturing jobs in Canada. More than a year later, we’re still waiting and it’s putting the ability of our sector to compete globally for strategic investment at risk. The swift implementation of the Clean Technology Investment Tax Credits must be a bigger priority for this government if it is to ensure that Canada can be a destination of choice for clean technology and manufacturing investments. [END]

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Canada government adrift after finance minister resigns, Trump tariffs loom

By David Ljunggren
Reuters
December 17, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Chrystia Freeland

OTTAWA – The abrupt resignation of Canada’s finance minister leaves the government adrift less than a month before the inauguration of a new U.S. administration that could impose crippling sanctions on Canadian exports. Chrystia Freeland quit on Monday after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau offered her a lesser position. She said his wish to increase spending could endanger Canada’s ability to withstand the damage done by the tariffs that U.S. President-elect Donald Trump is threatening to impose. Freeland had headed a special cabinet committee on Canada-U.S. relations and was working closely with the 10 provinces to ensure a united response. …When Trump came to power in 2017 he vowed to tear up the trilateral free trade treaty with Canada and Mexico. Freeland, who was then foreign minister, played a large role in helping renegotiate the pact and saving Canada’s economy, which is heavily reliant on the United States.

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Canada’s finance minister resigns as unpopular Trudeau faces biggest test of his political career

By Rob Gillies
Associated Press
December 17, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Chrystia Freeland

TORONTO — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau faced the biggest test of his political career after Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland, long one of his most powerful and loyal ministers, resigned from the Cabinet on Monday. The stunning move raised questions about how much longer the prime minister of nearly 10 years — whose popularity has plummeted… — can stay on as his administration scrambles to deal with incoming U.S. President-elect Donald Trump. “The Great State of Canada is stunned as the Finance Minister resigns, or was fired, from her position by Governor Justin Trudeau,” Trump posted on Truth Social. “Her behavior was totally toxic, and not at all conducive to making deals which are good for the very unhappy citizens of Canada. She will not be missed!!!” Trump previously trolled Trudeau by calling Canada a state. And during his first term in his office — when he renegotiated the free trade deal with Canada and Mexico — Trump said Freeland wasn’t liked.

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Trump’s tariffs are circus-ring politics and lousy economics

Resource Works
December 16, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

A 25 percent tariff on our oil would increase U.S. gasoline prices by 50 cents a gallon — or more. No wonder federal and provincial governments are howling over Donald Trump’s promise to levy a 25 percent tariff on “all” imports from Canada and Mexico on his first day in office. No wonder Alberta Premier Danielle Smith is seeking anti-tariff support from Canada and U.S. governors… Nearly $3.6 billion worth of Canadian goods and services cross the border each day. Canada is the top export destination for 36 U.S. states, and about a third of Canada’s trade with the U.S. is energy. …Whether Trump can or will implement his tariffs on Inauguration Day, January 20 (or later), is being questioned in the U.S. …Trump presumably hopes the oil tariff will encourage more U.S. oil and natural-gas development. But he has yet to explain (if he even knows) how dependent the U.S. is on imports of crude oil used to make gasoline and diesel.

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Vancouver Island First Nation whose chief met Capt. Cook files claim against B.C.

By Dirk Meissner
Canadian Press in Chek News
December 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Jerry Jack

A Vancouver Island First Nation whose people were the first to greet European explorers in the region almost 250 years ago is taking British Columbia to court, seeking title to their traditional territories and financial compensation. Chief Mike Maquinna, a descendent of Chief Maquinna who met British explorer Capt. James Cook in 1776, says the claim in B.C. Supreme Court seeks to return decision-making, resource and ecological stewardship to the Mowachaht/Muchalalaht First Nation. He says the province has been acting as the sole decision-making authority in the Gold River-Tahsis areas of northern Vancouver Island, especially with regards to the forest resource, without the consent of his nation. Hereditary Chief Jerry Jack says the claim filed today seeks title to about 66,000 hectares of land from Friendly Cove to Tahsis in the north and Buttle Lake in the east, and an undisclosed amount of financial compensation.

Additional coverage in Alberni Valley News by Brendan Jure.

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MLA says approval of the BC wind farms does not bode well for Atlantic Power in Williams Lake

By James Peters
CFJC Today Kamloops
December 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

KAMLOOPS — Kamloops-area MLAs… say board members’ concerns over recently-approved wind farm projects in the area are more than just hot air. …In announcing the approvals, the province said it “intends to exempt these wind projects and all future wind projects in B.C. from environmental assessment.” Stamer called that approach “totally irresponsible.” …Approval of the wind farms does not bode well for operations like Atlantic Power in Williams Lake, said Cariboo-Chilcotin MLA Lorne Doerkson. Atlantic Power produces electricity by burning biomass wood waste. In January, the company announced it intends to close the Williams Lake plant because it can’t be profitable under its current contract with BC Hydro. …Doerkson says the wind farm announcement this week puts Atlantic Power’s future in jeopardy. “The Elephant Hill fire is currently being cleaned up and that is what we are using for fibre at plants like Atlantic Power. This is a green project.”

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NDP-Green Party Agreement includes review of BC forestry, protection of Fairy Creek watershed

BC New Democratic Party
December 13, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The NDP—BC Green Party Caucus (BCGC) Agreement includes the following three Environment initiatives:

  • Government will work with the BCGC to undertake a review of BC forests with First Nations, workers, unions, business and community to address concerns around sustainability, jobs, environmental protection and the future of the industry. Government will work with the BCGC to establish the detailed terms of reference for this review, which are subject to the approval of both parties. The BCGC will be fully involved in all elements of the review and the resulting report will be made public within 45 days of completion.
  • Pending the resolution of existing legal proceedings and community negotiations, and in partnership with the Ditidaht and Pacheedaht First Nations, the Government will move forward to ensure permanent protection of the Fairy Creek Watershed.
  • Government will strengthen collaborative local processes around water management at the watershed level and identify clear actions to improve local governance that will be implemented in later years of its mandate.

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BC Greens to support NDP on confidence votes, work together on shared priorities

By Ian Holliday and Ben Miljure
CTV News Vancouver
December 13, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. New Democratic and Green parties have reached an “agreement in principle“… that will see the smaller party support the government on confidence matters. The parties will also work together to achieve specific legislative goals in the coming session. NDP Premier David Eby said the shared priorities are strengthening health care, building affordable housing, creating livable communities and growing a strong sustainable economy. …The agreement lists 11 specific policy initiatives that the parties agree to pursue, under the headings health care, mental health care, housing, renters protection, homelessness, transit, climate, environment, social and economic justice, taxation, and democratic and electoral reform. According to the document, the Green Party agrees to support the government on all confidence votes, as well as agreed-upon motions and government bills. Opposition Leader John Rustad spoke out against the agreement, accusing the NDP and Greens of moving backwards.

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Finance & Economics

Canadian housing starts rise 8% in November

Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation
December 16, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The six-month trend in housing starts was flat (-0.3%) in November at 243,268 units, according to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC). The trend measure is a six-month moving average of the seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of total housing starts for all areas in Canada. The total monthly SAAR of housing starts for all areas in Canada increased 8% in November (262,443 units) compared to October (242,207 units). A historically busy November for new home construction in Canada’s centres with a population of 10,000 or greater saw 22,345 actual starts, pushing the year-to-date (January – November) total up to 210,912. This compares to 204,920 for the same period in 2023, a 3% increase. “Both the monthly SAAR and actual starts figures grew in November, driven primarily by multi-unit starts activity in Québec, Alberta and British Columbia”, said Mathieu Laberge, CMHC’s Chief Economist. 

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Housing initiatives take centre stage in Fall Economic Statement amid political turmoil

By Steve Huebl
Canadian Mortgage Trends
December 16, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Despite the political shakeup, the fiscal update went ahead, revealing a projected deficit of $61.9 billion for the current fiscal year—54% higher than the $40.1 billion deficit previously forecast by the government. 2024 Fall Economic Statement. While many of the announcements were focused on fiscal pressures, housing policies took a prominent role in today’s statement. …There were some notable new measures. Among them was the removal of the stress test for low-ratio insurable mortgages when switching lenders at renewal. The government also plans to review and consult on potential improvements to the stress test for insured mortgages. …The federal government said it will launch consultations to examine the barriers to offering long-term fixed-rate mortgages, an option that is common in countries like the United States but remains rare in Canada. The government is examining the barriers to making long-term mortgages more widely available in Canada.

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Value of building permits issued in Canada decreased $399 million in October

Statistics Canada
December 12, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The total value of building permits issued in Canada decreased by $399.1 million (-3.1%) to $12.6 billion in October. This comes on the heels of a strong September, during which construction intentions rose by $1.3 billion to the second-highest level in the series. Despite the monthly decline in October, the total value of building permits was the fourth-highest level in the series. In October, Ontario’s construction intentions (-$696.4 million) significantly contributed to the national non-residential decline, tempering total residential growth, after fuelling both sectors’ gains in September. ..Declines in Ontario and Manitoba construction intentions push down the non-residential sector. ..British Columbia and Alberta lead residential growth, while Ontario multi-family dwellings temper national gain.

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Ontario housing starts expected to decline

By Paul Barker
The Toronto Sun
December 13, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — Housing starts over the next few years will likely weaken and the already dire supply shortage could get even worse, warns a new report prepared for the Residential Construction Council of Ontario (RESCON). Further, employment in new residential construction has peaked and will likely keep declining for the next several years at least. Entitled Housing Market Outlooks in Ontario, the report from economic research firm Will Dunning Inc. concludes that new housing starts will continue to decline “well into 2025, followed by a slow recovery of the economy and housing activity during 2026 to 2028. By the end of 2028, conditions will not have fully recovered.” Richard Lyall, RESCON president, described the findings as “particularly worrisome for builders as they point to a weakening residential construction market at the very time we need to build more housing.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

TORY, not tiny—a new approach to modular homes

By Forestry Innovation Investment
LinkedIn
December 18, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

Historically, the vast majority of wood-frame buildings in South Korea have been constructed on-site. For several reasons, including labour shortage, quality control, a desire to cut waste, and a need to reduce transportation costs, many developers are now looking to industrialized construction as a solution. This includes modular homes where the building is completed in a factory and then shipped, in whole, to its final location. Prefabrication of building components, such as wall panels, is another approach that is growing in popularity. …Developed with input from Canada Wood Group , the TORY home cuts costs by using a 2×6 framework rather than the heavy timber typically used for modular homes. Cladding is premium B.C. cedar, with high-quality doors, windows and interior finishing rounding out the homes. The result is a product that cuts costs, but not quality.

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High insurance costs hinder adoption of mass timber construction

By Harold von Kursk
SustainableBiz
December 12, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

David Messer

The growth of the mass timber construction industry in Canada is being slowed by persistent high insurance rates on wood-frame buildings that are six to 10 times higher than those for conventional steel and concrete structures. That is the conclusion of the Climate Smart Buildings Alliance (CSBA), which is actively working to convince insurers to revise their pricing policies toward mass timber buildings that carry a low carbon footprint. CSBA director David Messer said, “Mass timber buildings are new on the construction landscape and the lack of data complicates the task of insurance companies in assessing actuarial risk and deciding how risky mass timber buildings are to insure.” …In May the CSBA teamed up with the Canadian Wood Council and assembled 40 leading insurance and building industry executives to launch the Mass Timber Insurance Action Plan to provide a comprehensive framework for risk data collection, assessment and evaluation.

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2024 Catherine Lalonde Memorial Scholarships Celebrate Students Driving Innovation in the Wood Industry

Canadian Wood Council
December 13, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Ottawa, ON – The Canadian Wood Council (CWC) announced the recipients of the 2024 Catherine Lalonde Memorial Scholarships: Laura Walters (McMaster University) and Jiawen Shen (University of British Columbia). Both students were recognized for their academic excellence and impactful research projects in the structural wood products industry. Established nineteen years ago, the memorial scholarships are awarded each year to graduate students whose wood research exemplifies the same level of passion for wood and the wood products industry that Catherine Lalonde tirelessly demonstrated as a professional engineer and president of the CWC. …“This year marks a historic milestone for the Catherine Lalonde Memorial Scholarship program as, for the first time, it is awarded to two exceptional women,” said Martin Richard, VP of Market Development and Communications at the CWC. “We are inspired by their contributions and the growing diversity shaping the future of wood-based solutions.”

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Canada Wood inks three mass timber agreements with Chinese firms

By Rich Christianson
Woodworking Network
December 12, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

VANCOUVER, British Columbia Canada Wood signed three MOUs with key Chinese stakeholders to promote mass timber and hybrid construction. These agreements with Treezo Group, East China Architectural Design & Research Institute (ECADI), and the National Center for Technology Innovation – Green Building (NCTI-GB) underline Canada Wood’s strategic pivot to advancing mass timber and hybrid construction in China. They also highlight the growing potential for Canadian wood products to play a significant role in China’s evolving construction market. Treezo Group is one of China’s leading manufacturers of OSB, plywood, cabinetry, flooring, and prefab buildings, is at the forefront of integrating mass timber into its operations. …ECADI is part of Arcplus Group PLC., is one of China’s most prestigious architectural firms known for the Shanghai Pudong Airport Terminal 3. …NCTI-GB  is a national platform focused on decarbonizing construction and promoting green building technologies. 

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An in-depth look at University of British Columbia’s $560 million student residence complex

By Grant Cameron
Journal of Commerce
December 18, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Some early prep work has started at the site of a new, $560-million student residence complex that is slated to be built in the Lower Mall Precinct of the University of British Columbia (UBC) campus in Vancouver. The venture represents the largest provincial contribution to any single post-secondary institution capital project in B.C.’s history. There will be five buildings ranging in height from eight to 22 storeys tall. …One of the structures will be a mass timber hybrid building. …The mass timber building will be eight storeys tall. …For the complex, the design team will be focused on carbon resilience, biodiversity and hydrology and use materials to create sustainable spaces and enhance the well-being of inhabitants. The team is aiming for LEED Gold certification.

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naturally:wood announces projects, partnerships, and our new look!

naturally:wood
December 13, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

From blueprint to built: Celebrating the summer’s completed projects

  • Located in Vancouver’s Cambie Corridor, the new Alliance Française de Vancouver (AVF) building serves to promote French language, art, and culture. This new facility is a sleek four-storey mass timber and steel hybrid structure.
  • The Confluence is a multi-purpose civic space that supports Castlegar’s tourism and economic development. This building benefitted from CNC-prefabricated mass timber panels to achieve its complex geometric design.
  • The Exchange is a mixed-use, mass timber-hybrid office and commercial project designed to attract tenants with its industrial vibe. The project features nail-laminated timber (NLT) panels that were fabricated on-site. 

BuildEx and WoodWorks BC: Buildex 2025 offers an exciting collaboration with the Canadian Wood Council, combining the technical expertise of WoodWorks with the wood products industry. …What do you think of our new website? To enhance your experience, we recently refreshed our website, making it more accessible and easier to navigate.

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Forestry

Canadians Back Stronger Forest Protections as Wealthy Nations Face Scrutiny

By Jody MacPherson
The Energy Mix
December 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

A call for international alignment on nature protection Canada and other wealthy countries for “double standards” in managing their forests, just as a new poll reveals most Canadians support stronger safeguards for nature at home. But that support may not be enough to sway their voting decisions… New polling data suggests most Canadians agree that stronger safeguards are needed at home—but opinions diverge when it comes to how platform and policy influence voting choices… 84% of respondents across the political spectrum agreed the government should take stronger action to protect forests and wildlife. About two-thirds, or 68%, said they would be reluctant to vote for a party that made no commitments to safeguard nature.

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Aspen is a natural fire guard. Why has B.C. spent decades killing it off with glyphosate?

By Ainslie Cruickshank
The Narwhal
December 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

For decades, forestry companies in B.C. have used chemical herbicides like glyphosate to kill off plants that might compete with trees destined for timber. Trembling aspen, named for its almost heart-shaped leaves that seem to quiver in the wind, is often on the hit list. But after years of destructive wildfires that have wiped out whole neighbourhoods and sometimes whole towns, more and more people are questioning the wisdom of killing off this tree. Because when wildfires sweep across the landscape, aspen can help calm the flames… “Anytime we apply herbicides, we are changing potential fire behaviour,” wildland fire ecologist Robert Gray explains… in areas where aspen and other deciduous trees are killed, a natural fire break is lost too.

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BC Commits to Reverse Declining Reforestation Program

By John Betts, dedicated to resisting writing robots and other assaults on the written word
Western Forestry Contractors’ Association
December 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia’s planting program will drop abruptly next year to approximately 237-million seedlings… Recognizing the risks this poses to the province’s forests and the ecosystem resilience contracting sector that grows and plants trees, BC has committed to rebuild the annual program to at least 300-million seedlings. Given the decline is driven primarily by B.C.’s shrinking annual harvest, making up for the downfall could represent doubling the Ministry of Forest’s Forest Investment Program. …it will require significant talent and funds for our government to not just sow, grow and plant these additional seedlings, but to survey, find, and prescribe the appropriate sites. Meeting this restoration objective will require concerted public and private collaboration …and involvement of the whole reforestation service supply chain. …In its upcoming meeting with Forests Minister Ravi Parmar the WFCA will urge him to make meeting our government’s goal of planting 300-million seedlings annually an operational priority.

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Statement on the Stanley Park Forest Management Project

By Bruce Blackwell, Principal, Blackwell and Associates Ltd.
LinkedIn
December 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Bruce Blackwell

I grew up in Vancouver and … feel a deep connection … Stanley Park, and have advocated professionally for sound management and stewardship of urban forests within communities throughout the province. Since 2019, Stanley Park’s forested area has been increasingly affected by a western hemlock looper outbreak, which has impacted up to 160,000 trees. In 2022, the Vancouver Park Board commissioned an assessment to understand the risk to public safety, and long-term wildfire risk, posed by the looper-impacted trees. My company, B.A. Blackwell & Associates Ltd., was selected through a competitive process to conduct this impact assessment. …Our team includes some of the most experienced professionals in forestry, arboriculture, ecology, and biology. Together, we’ve developed a plan grounded in the best available science, informed by years of experience working in Stanley Park and throughout the province. Based on our experience and expertise, we believe the path we’re on is the best one for the long-term health and resilience of this beloved green space.

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Alberta Forest Products Association Community Newsletter

Alberta Forest Products Association
December 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In the December newsletter, the AFPA highlights include:

  • New team members: Alyxandra Chorney joins as full time Policy Analyst Nicole Galambos is new Director of Forest Policy
  • The Love Alberta Forests campaign – visit the 2024 year in review 
  • Alberta joins forestry trade mission to Japan to expand market opportunities 
  • Recent article: It’s Time to Fix Canada’s Species at Risk Act
  • Forestry Talks Podcast – watch the latest episodes
  • WorkWild educational events deliver forestry education to students in Alberta

 

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Wildlife concerns lead to new B.C. conservation area near Kootenay National Park

Canadian Press in North Island Gazette
December 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Another piece of the puzzle for conservation efforts along the Rocky Mountain Trench in B.C. is in place. Nature Conservancy Canada says wildlife including grizzly bear numbers have been declining in the region, which is why it added a new conservation area next to Kootenay National Park that links to a “network of already protected” lands.
It says the new Geddes Creek Conservation Area includes an almost two-square kilometre region of Douglas fir and montane spruce forest, open grassy habitat and a seasonal creek north of Radium Hot Springs on the western slopes of the Rocky Mountains. The organization says grizzly bears are known to travel through the area in search of food, mates and denning sites. …Nature Conservancy Canada says the land purchase was made through partnership funding with Parks Canada, the Fish & Wildlife Compensation Program and the Regional District of East Kootenay’s Columbia Valley Local Conservation Fund.

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FireSwarm Solutions secures $500K for advanced wildfire-fighting drone technology

By Jennifer Thuncher
The Squamish Chief
December 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Squamish-based FireSwarm Solutions Inc., a startup that develops autonomous drone technology for wildfire management, announced it has $500,000 in funding from the BC Centre for Innovation & Clean Energy (CICE). CICE is an independent not-for-profit corporation that funds “clean energy innovators.” Other past projects it has invested in include the electrification of snow plows and funding for a company that aims to make lithium battery manufacturing cleaner, among others. In the spring, CICE put out a call to companies developing “ground-breaking solutions to better manage and mitigate the growing threat of wildfire.” They awarded $3 million to six of the 74 companies that applied for the 2024 Wildfire Tech Call for Innovation, including FireSwarm Solutions. CICE claims this is Canada’s first-ever funding opportunity for wildfire technologies. The $500,000 will speed FireSwarm’s deployment of long-endurance, heavy-lift autonomous drone swarms to detect, map, and suppress wildfires.

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Nelson forestry advocate rallies to protect Selkirk’s old growth forests

By Samantha Holomay
Castanet
December 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Nelson forestry advocate, Joe Karthein is pushing for greater protection of ancient forests in the Selkirk Mountains, calling for more designated protected areas. Founder of the Save What’s Left Conservation Society, he is leading a campaign and petition to implement legislation to improve the province’s forest management model. One initiative focuses on transferring land known as Duncan Lake Ancient Cedars, north of Kaslo, into a provincial park system. “We are lobbying to have a grove of ancient trees located north of Kaslo permanently protected by moving 531 hectares from the Forest Service and into the parks system,” he said. Adding that conserving land from resource extraction is essential for preserving biodiversity. “An ecosystem won’t thrive completely surrounded by incessant industrial activity,” said Karthein. His petition notes that while the oldest forests in the area are not currently threatened by logging, nearby areas are at risk and need protection. 

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New forestry minister vows to restore prosperity to industry, dependent communities

By Grant Warkentin
My Campbell River Now
December 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar

BC’s new forests minister, Ravi Parmar, says he wants to bring industry, workers, First Nations and communities together to fix the ailing sector. “Over my time as minister I want to restore confidence in BC’s forests sector; stand up for workers and families in forestry communities like Campbell River; and honor the commitments that my government has been leading around biodiversity and the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People.” Parmer says 2025 is going to be a challenging year, and revitalizing forestry in BC will be critical. He says he has no experience in forestry but asked for the file because he wants to learn, and because he understands how it’s been the pillar of the provincial economy for the past century. …He says one of his first tasks will be to work with Ottawa to try and find a resolution to the long-running softwood lumber dispute. 

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B.C. government aims to permanently protect Fairy Creek

By Shannon Waters
The Narwhal
December 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia NDP and Green parties have reached an agreement in principle to work together on shared priorities — including a pledge to protect the Fairy Creek watershed, a largely intact old-growth valley on southwest Vancouver Island. The agreement says the B.C government will “move forward to ensure permanent protection of the Fairy Creek watershed” in partnership with the Pacheedaht and Ditidaht First Nations and “pending the resolution of existing legal proceedings and community negotiations.” …Discussions about the future of Fairy Creek are ongoing, deputy premier Niki Sharma told reporters, saying the commitment to work toward permanent protection of the watershed does not mean the valley’s fate will be decided any time soon. …The agreement also commits the B.C. government to work with the BC Greens to undertake a review of B.C.’s forests with First Nations, workers, unions, business and community “to address concerns around sustainability, jobs, environmental protection and the future of the industry.”

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New conservation area announced for Rocky Mountain Trench in B.C.

Canadian Press in the Times Colonist
December 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

INVERMERE, B.C. — Another piece of the puzzle for conservation efforts along the Rocky Mountain Trench in B.C. is in place. Nature Conservancy of Canada says wildlife and grizzly bear habitat have been declining in the region, which is why it added a new conservation area next to Kootenay National Park that links to a “network of already protected” lands. It says the new Geddes Creek Conservation Area includes an almost two-square kilometre region of Douglas fir and montane spruce forest, open grassy habitat and a seasonal creek north of Radium Hot Springs on the western slopes of the Rocky Mountains. The organization says grizzly bears are known to travel through the area in search of food, mates and denning sites.

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It’s a shame to see huge 300-year-old logs being treated like this

By James Steidle
Prince George Citizen
December 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

I’m sure the denials will be numerous but it’s an open secret there are top quality sawlogs at the PG Saw chip plant for chipping. One source sent me a photo of one log, 50 inches in diameter, solid, and pushing 300 years old, being hauled out of the McGregors to the chip plant. …Whenever there is a shortage of low quality “pulp logs”, we simply use top-grade sawlogs, much of it irreplaceable old growth, to make paper products. …There’s a better option. We start thinning the plantations. Instead of feeding the pulp mills old-growth gold, we feed them plantation pine. …Thinning out the plantations can save our old-growth from the chipper, can save our pulp mills from the dustbin, and a big one for me is it can open up dense, lifeless plantations, many of them previously sprayed with glyphosate, …and much-needed habitat and biodiversity for our wildlife and moose.

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Revolutionizing Forest Management with AI

University of Waterloo
December 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Lanying Wang

…To determine a forest’s capacity for carbon sequestration, it is important to inventory and monitor forested areas regularly. Tree species classification is a vital component of forest management and can assist with calculating carbon sequestration potential.  In-person monitoring of forests can be difficult, especially in remote locations or large areas. Remote sensing techniques have been proven effective at assisting with forest management, notably LiDAR. …When LiDAR data is collected over a large area with an aircraft operating at a high elevation, the density of the point cloud can be sparse. These datasets can be difficult to conduct accurate individual tree-level species classification. Lanying Wang, a PhD candidate in the Department of Geography and Environmental Management, is combining remotely sensed data and deep learning (DL) models to improve data accuracy and applicability.   

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Prince Edward Island residents meet with officials to discuss lingering wildfire concerns

By Sheehan Desjardins
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/prince-edward-island/pei-wildfire-risk-debris-fiona-1.7409296
December 13, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Two years after post-tropical storm Fiona demolished thousands of trees on Prince Edward Island, residents on the North Shore worry that the tattered debris still sitting in the forests could be a massive fire hazard. On Thursday afternoon, about 35 people gathered to discuss wildfire prevention, preparedness and mitigation. Mike Montigny, the manager of field services for the provincial Department of Environment, Energy and Climate Action and officials with other groups including Parks Canada, the Emergency Measures Organization and local fire departments were at the meeting to give residents a chance to voice their concerns and ask about the Island’s wildfire plan. People wanted to know how long it would take a crew to respond to a fire. They wondered if fire departments on the Island have the proper training to fight a wildfire. What will crews use as a water source? Will more forest debris be cleaned up?

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Canada says it wants to slash its emissions in half by 2035

By Jordan Omstead
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
December 12, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Steve Guilbeault

TORONTO — Canada is aiming to cut its emissions in half by 2035 compared to 2005 levels, the federal government announced Thursday, a target more modest than what a federal advisory body had previously recommended. The target of reducing emissions by 45% to 50% balances both ambition and what is achievable, Environment and Climate Change Minister Steven Guilbeault said. …He added that the target’s lower end accounts for potential headwinds, including how United States president-elect Donald Trump approaches key climate policies. …”As a responsible government, we have to account for the possibilities that it may be more difficult in the coming years to continue moving forward because our major trading partner may decide to take a different course when it comes to tackling climate change,” Guilbeault said. Canada’s Net-Zero Advisory Body recommended an emissions reduction target of 50% to 55%. …Catherine Abreu, a climate policy analyst, called the target “pathetic”.

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Williams Lake energy plant in limbo despite record need for power

By Ruth Lloyd
The Williams Lake Tribune
December 13, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

Atlantic Power’s Williams Lake biomass energy plant is still in limbo, while B.C. imported record amounts of electricity last year. The plant’s future remains uncertain, after having given a one year termination of contract notice to BC Hydro at the beginning of 2024. The wood biomass plant is the city’s largest single taxpayer. Atlantic Power said the Williams Lake plant would cease operations due to the lack of affordable fibre to maintain financial viability, but the original October deadline to revoke this notice has been relaxed due to the impact of the provincial election. …But fibre for the plant has become harder to get, as its supply is further away and there is competition from users like Drax. …Ministers of Energy and Climate Solutions, Environment and Parks, Forests and Jobs, Economic Development and Innovation are now the focus of efforts by the city.

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Northwest Territories uses 20,000 tonnes of wood pellets per year. Here’s why they aren’t made locally

By Liny Lamberink
CBC News
December 13, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Northwest Territories (N.W.T.) has a lot of trees – so why are wood pellets used for heating all hauled up from northern Alberta? That question was central to a discussion that unfolded Thursday at the territory’s Legislative Assembly. Robert Sexton, the territory’s energy director, told the standing committee on economic development and environment that roughly 14,500 cords of wood used to heat homes in the territory every year all come from within the N.W.T. But the 20,000 tonnes of wood pellets used annually are coming from the south. …That means there’s a risk the supply chain could be interrupted and it’s already becoming “somewhat more difficult” because pellets are being exported to Europe. The territory often boasts of being a leader in biomass heating… Several MLAs who make up the standing committee asked about developing a local supply of wood pellets or chips. 

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Ten Treaty 3 First Nations Launch Clean Energy Corporation to Convert Wood Waste into Sustainable Fuels

The Fort Frances Times
December 11, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

Scrap wood fibre in the Rainy River district could get a new life, thanks to a partnership working towards a green fuel production facility. Ten First Nations in the Rainy River District near Fort Frances have joined forces to create ground-breaking Wanagekong-Biiwega’iganan Clean Energy Corporation (WBCEC). In partnership with Highbury Energy Inc., a Vancouver-based clean energy innovator, the initiative aims to transform wood waste—including bark, sawdust, and logging debris—into low-carbon transportation fuels. …The corporation is currently engaging with industry stakeholders such as Boundary Waters Forest Management Corporation, West Fraser OSB, Manitou Forest Products, Nickel Lake Lumber, and Resolute Forest Products (Sapawe Sawmill) to secure local wood waste as feedstock for a proposed biorefinery in Fort Frances. …This initiative aligns with similar projects Highbury Energy is involved in, including one in British Columbia to replace natural gas with a clean renewable fuel gas in a pulp mill lime-kiln.

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Health & Safety

Amendments to Part 5 of the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation

WorkSafeBC
December 17, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

At its May 2024 meeting, WorkSafeBC’s Board of Directors approved amendments pertaining to Emergency Planning in Part 5 of the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation. These amendments will come into effect on February 3, 2025. Part 5 of the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation sets out the requirements for emergency planning relating to hazardous substances. On February 3, 2025, amendments to these requirements will come into effect, to provide additional clarity and to further reduce risk to workers and other people posed by emergencies involving hazardous substances. This resource provides an overview of the changes to help affected employers prepare for the new requirements. OHS Guidelines are also being developed to provide additional support for employers; these guidelines will be available on February 3.

For the full text of the Regulation amendments, see the Board of Directors decision document

Backgrounder: Emergency procedures for hazardous substances

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Forest History & Archives

American magnate brought lumber boom to Bell Ewart

By Andrew Hind
Innisfil Today
December 14, 2024
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada, Canada East

Henry Sage

Bell Ewart, Ontario — The community of Bell Ewart owes its existence in large part to American lumber magnate Henry Williams Sage. Born in 1814, Sage started his career operating a line of barges on the Erie Canal in New York state. He then established a wholesale lumber yard in Albany. The product he sold was imported Canadian lumber; shipments came from Toronto across Lake Ontario and down to Albany via the Oswego Canal. To maximize profits, Sage decided to cut out the middleman. He’d mill his own lumber. In 1854, the 40-year-old built a large sawmill in Bell Ewart. Initially, the logs were purchased from landowners all around Lake Simcoe and towed in vast booms to the mill. [When wood ran short] Sage had the idea of driving logs down the Black River then onto Lake Simcoe. …The Rama Log Canal opened the following year. Once again the mill at Bell Ewart was saved.

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