Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

International Pulp Week 2026: Global pulp leaders convene in Vancouver

International Pulp Week
April 15, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Global pulp leaders are set to gather in Vancouver this May for International Pulp Week, hosted by The Pulp and Paper Products Council. Widely recognized as the premier event for the market pulp sector, IPW brings together producers, customers, suppliers, and analysts for a deep dive into the forces shaping global markets. This year’s program tackles everything from economic uncertainty and trade dynamics to fibre optimization, specialty cellulose, and emerging opportunities in carbon capture. With expert insights from leading companies and analysts, the conference offers a comprehensive look at both current challenges and future directions. Beyond the sessions, delegates can explore real-world innovation through optional tours—including carbon capture technology at Svante and forest restoration in Vancouver’s Stanley Park. For anyone connected to the global pulp value chain, International Pulp Week remains a must-attend event.

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Special Feature – COFI Convention

Premier Eby Commits to Working Forest Model, Addresses DRIPA Uncertainty and Softwood Lumber Priorities

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 10, 2026
Category: Special Feature - COFI Convention
Region: Canada

Premier David Eby delivered the closing luncheon keynote at the 2026 COFI Convention on Friday, addressing a packed room of delegates and committing to a range of actions on fibre access, market diversification, value-added manufacturing, and reconciliation. The session, moderated by COFI President and CEO Kim Haakstad, included a substantive question-and-answer period. Eby opened by acknowledging both the challenges facing the sector and the role provincial policy has played in them — including restrictions around old growth and other policies that he said the government needs to do a better job of consolidating to ensure the fibre supply industry requires can actually be delivered. He described the conference theme of “Forestry is a Solution” as accurate across multiple dimensions — economic, environmental, and community — and said the province is committed to ensuring a sustainable forest sector for the long term. On tariffs, Eby said the US cannot produce enough wood to meet its own domestic demand and has been increasing imports from Europe and Russia to fill that gap — at higher cost to American consumers and at the expense of housing affordability.

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Summary Wrap-up of COFI 2026 Convention

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 14, 2026
Category: Special Feature - COFI Convention
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Tree Frog News has been featuring the panels and speakers from the Council of Forest Industries 2026 Conference over the last week. For those who missed the coverage, here are all of our summarized stories.

Day One – April 8, 2026

Day Two – April 9, 2026

Day Three – April 10, 2026

Convention photos can be viewed on the Tree Frog News Smugmug site

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BC Conservative Interim Leader Halford Addresses COFI Delegates

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 10, 2026
Category: Special Feature - COFI Convention
Region: Canada, Canada West

Trevor Halford, Interim Leader of the Official Opposition and MLA for Surrey-White Rock, opened the second day of the 2026 COFI Convention with remarks that acknowledged the sector’s challenges directly and outlined what he said a Conservative government would prioritize. Halford said he is not a forestry expert but has spent considerable time listening to those who are, and singled out Conservative forestry critic Ward Stamer — who he said began his career in the bush 50 years ago — as someone who understands the industry through direct experience. He said the caucus hears clearly what the sector needs: secure access to fibre, streamlined permitting processes, strong Indigenous partnerships, investment in value-added and sustainable innovation, and lower costs.

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Forest Economy Panel Sees Structural Headwinds Persisting

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 10, 2026
Category: Special Feature - COFI Convention
Region: Canada, Canada West

The State of the Forest Economy panel opened Day 2 of the 2026 COFI Convention with a data-driven examination of trade diversification, housing demand, investment attractiveness, and BC’s declining competitive position relative to other Canadian and North American jurisdictions. The session was moderated by Kurt Niquidet, COFI’s Vice President and Chief Economist, who noted that COFI’s latest economic impact study — released earlier in the week and available at cofi.org — underscores that even during a period of contraction, forestry remains an indispensable pillar of the BC economy. Panelists were Hamir Patel, Executive Director and Paper & Forest Products Analyst at CIBC; Claire Huxtable, Senior Analyst at ERA Forest Products Research; and Jason Krips, President and CEO of the Alberta Forest Products Association.

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Value Chain Panel Points to Regional Clusters, Workforce Gaps and Public Narrative as Keys to Forest Sector Resilience

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 10, 2026
Category: Special Feature - COFI Convention
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Value Chain panel at the 2026 COFI Convention brought together perspectives from across the sector’s supply chain, with participants including Nick Arkle, CEO of Gorman Group; Kelly Marciniw, Chief Operating Officer of Zirnhelt Timber Frames and Chair of BC Wood Specialties Group; Todd Chamberlain, General Manager of the Interior Logging Association; and Blair Dickerson, Vice President of Public Affairs Canada at Domtar. The session was moderated by Sonya Zeitler Fletcher, Vice President of Market Development at Forestry Innovation Investment. Asked by Zeitler Fletcher about where Gorman Group is moving as it relates to a regional cluster, Arkle described an approach to bringing together First Nations, communities, manufacturers, and value-added producers within a defined geographic area around a shared and secure fibre supply.

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Fire Ecology Research and Indigenous Knowledge Lead to Common Ground on Wildfire Resilience

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 10, 2026
Category: Special Feature - COFI Convention
Region: Canada, Canada West

The fireside chat on wildfire prevention and resilience at the 2026 COFI Convention brought together Dr. Jill Harvey, Canada Research Chair in Fire Ecology at Thompson Rivers University, and Leonard Joe, CEO of the BC First Nations Forestry Council. Harvey presented research findings from several active projects before the session moved into a Q&A format moderated by Joe. Harvey opened by placing the current wildfire crisis in historical context, drawing on fire scar records from interior Douglas fir trees that carry evidence of fire events stretching back 400 years. She described tree ring data from the Churn Creek protected area showing fire occurring on a 15-to-25-year cycle from 1620 through 1896 — evidence, she said, of deliberate, knowledge-informed land stewardship by Indigenous peoples over centuries. After 1896, fire activity in those records essentially ceases, reflecting the onset of industrial-era fire suppression. The result, she said, is a landscape now laden with fuel accumulated over more than a century with little natural or managed release.

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COFI Forester Panel on Predictable and Economic Access to Wood

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 10, 2026
Category: Special Feature - COFI Convention
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Forester Panel at the 2026 COFI Convention — titled Predictable and Economic Access to Wood — brought together five practitioners and researchers for a discussion moderated by Michael Armstrong, COFI Senior Vice President and Chief Forester. The panel covered the triad or three-zone forest management model, the gap between BC’s harvest targets, inter-jurisdictional comparisons, coastal forestry challenges, First Nations forest operations, and biomass. Panelists were Cheryl Hodder, Chief Forester of Wood Products Canada at Canfor; David Elstone, Managing Director of SparTree Group; Shannon Janzen, Principal of Hypha Consulting; Percy Guichon, CEO of Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation; and Christian Messier, Professor at the University of Quebec and co-founder of Habitat. Armstrong opened by displaying a chart showing BC’s interior and coastal sawmill production declining by approximately 50% since 2017 while other Canadian provinces have remained relatively flat.

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Opinion / EdiTOADial

A Turning Point for BC Forestry – Changing Times Require a New Path Forward

By Peter Lister, Executive Director
Truck LoggerBC Magazine
April 13, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, Canada West

Peter Lister

We need a new approach to forestry in BC. Our current legislation was developed for a different time, dominated by BC Interior mills that produced large volumes of dimension lumber for US markets. Today, under the perfect storm of low US lumber prices, punishing duties/tariffs, and high delivered wood costs, our traditional US dimension lumber market has been eroded and is unlikely to fully return. Efforts to use more with wood domestically and to diversify into international markets are important but will take time to develop and are unlikely to replace US volumes. Our forests have changed. …Our society has changed, too. …Reconciliation with First Nations peoples has also become an important social priority. …With all this change, BC’s forestry sector has struggled. Uncertainty around fibre supply and tough markets have eroded confidence and stalled capital investment. Lack of economic fibre has led to mill closures.

Change was needed, and, in May 2025, the Provincial Forestry Advisory Council (PFAC) was created and asked to “establish the foundation for generational change, recommend and implement key goals and outcomes for BC forests, and define how these will be advanced…in a new, more transparent and inclusive way.” …Implementing a new system will require government and First Nations to work in partnership with industry, communities, and environmental groups. Government will need to provide strong leadership and firm guidelines to ensure processes don’t become stalled and reasonable timber harvest levels are maintained to support industry and jobs. Compromises will be required, and no single group will get everything they want. But if we work together, we can create a new forest management approach that better matches our times and ultimately benefits everyone.

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Creating Certainty for BC’s Future Through a Working Forest

By Mackenzie Leine, Deputy Minister
Truck LoggerBC Magazine
April 13, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, Canada West

Mackenzie Leine

The forestry sector is currently navigating significant change. …These pressures underscore the need for greater stability and predictability in managing the land base to support the sector. Recognizing these challenges, the Minister of Forests has given our ministry direction to explore a working forest model designed to bring greater clarity and stability to the land base. This means more predictability in access to fibre supply, clearer definitions of what areas are harvestable, and clarity on how we steward the areas of the provincial land base intended to support sustainable forest management. For many years, a growing number of pressures have been placed on BC’s forests. Conservation priorities, habitat protections, land-use decisions, climate impacts, and other policy changes all influence how the land base is managed. Each of these priorities is important; yet when considered individually, they can create uncertainty about the future of the forests.

In this process, we’re continuing our commitment to advancing reconciliation by working with First Nations communities for a more sustainable future. And we’re working collaboratively with industry, local governments, and other interested parties as we collectively explore a clearer approach to the working forest land base. This work is closely connected to the challenge of fibre supply. A functioning forestry sector depends both on what fibre exists on the land base and in how we sustainably access it. Strengthening fibre supply planning and improving alignment across government are important steps in creating that predictability. Looking ahead, the objective is to ensure that BC’s working forests continue to provide environmental, social, and economic benefits for the next century. By exploring a clearer model for how the working forest land base is managed, we can help create the predictability needed to support a resilient, competitive, and sustainable forest sector.

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Froggy Foibles

Knock on wood! | Why Do We Say That?

By CTV News
You Tube
April 13, 2026
Category: Froggy Foibles
Region: Canada

Why do we say “knock on wood?” Kent, Kim and Cory share their guesses for Why Do We Say That.

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Business & Politics

Forsite launches unified brand, expands forestry capabilities across North America

By Sara Braun, VP, Marketing & Sales Operations
Forsite
April 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, International

SALMON ARM, British Columbia — Forsite Consultants Ltd. today announced the launch of the unified Forsite brand and the integration of six specialized companies into one cohesive, fullservice organization. The milestone brings together decades of expertise in forestry, wildfire science and geospatial intelligence under a single, customer-focused platform serving clients across Canada and the United States. The new Forsite unites Barr Air Patrol, Barr Geospatial Solutions, Airborne Imaging Inc., Northwest Management Inc., Forcorp and Forsite Consultants Ltd., combining aerial LiDAR acquisition, advanced analytics and on-the-ground forestry expertise. The result is a single partner that supports clients from initial data capture through analysis, planning and field implementation. Expanded forestry capabilities under one brand Forsite’s forestry services now integrate field-based expertise with high-resolution remote sensing and advanced modeling, enabling more complete and actionable insights across complex landscapes.

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Resolving softwood dispute mutually beneficial for Canada, U.S., B.C. premier says

By Brenna Owen
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
April 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER — Ottawa must make a case of “mutual benefit” with the United States as it advocates for Canada’s softwood lumber industry during trade negotiations, BC Premier David Eby said Friday… “the US cannot produce enough wood to meet its domestic demand.” …The premier’s remarks came after the U.S. Department of Commerce posted its preliminary tariff determination for the sector, with total duties estimated at just short of 25%, lower than the current rate of more than 35%. …COFI’s Kim Haakstad, agreed with the premier, saying it’s important for B.C. to ensure softwood lumber doesn’t “get lost” among other industries based in Eastern Canada. …The Independent Wood Processors Association said the US ruling was “further evidence” the softwood lumber dispute mechanism has become a “broken process”. The BC Lumber Trade Council said Canadian lumber producers continue to face “unjustified and punitive trade measures.” BC Forests Minister Ravi Parmar said the province was disappointed.

Related coverage:

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B.C. government easing carbon tax for pulp mills as industry grapples with future

By Mark Page
Victoria News
April 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

David Eby

Premier David Eby told the annual gathering of the B.C. Council of Forest Industries (COFI) on Friday said that the government plans to ease industrial carbon prices for pulp mills as the province’s forestry sector continues to struggle to remain competitive. “We have been working with COFI to address costs faced by the sector,” he said. “Whether it is in relation to water permits or carbon pricing.” B.C. axed its consumer carbon tax last year, but kept industrial carbon pricing, a mechanism by which companies must pay for the pollution they release into the atmosphere. This pricing system ideally encourages producers to clean up. But Eby says the government wants to make it fair for pulp mills, which cannot easily reduce emissions coming from lime kilns. “Putting costs on for no reason, for no end goal, is something that we do not want to do,” Eby said.

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Mirax Group Acquires Former Errington Cedar Sawmill

By Parm Binning, VP Business Development
Mirax Group
April 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Abbotsford, BC — Mirax Group, a privately held, family-owned British Columbia company with deep roots in forestry, lumber manufacturing, value-added wood products, and diversified industrial operations, has acquired the former Errington Cedar Sawmill in Errington, BC. This strategic acquisition reinforces Mirax Group’s commitment to investing in the sustainable growth of British Columbia’s forestry sector, preserving local jobs, and enhancing supply chain resilience for cedar and softwood products destined for global markets. The Errington Cedar Sawmill, long recognized for its legacy in processing premium cedar products for domestic and international customers — faced closure in recent years following industry challenges. With the transaction now complete, Mirax Group will operate the facility as the Vancoast Sawmill division, and position the site as a cornerstone in its expanding coastal operations. …The company also plans to evaluate investments in modernized milling technology and value-added processing to enhance product diversity and competitiveness.

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Truck Operators Welcome Federal Fuel Tax Suspension and Encourages Continued Support for Small Carriers

By Canada Truck Operators Association
PR Newswire
April 14, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Tejpreet Dulat

MISSISSAUGA — The Canadian Truck Operators Association (CTOA) welcomes the federal government’s announcement to temporarily suspend the federal fuel excise tax on diesel and gasoline, calling the measure a constructive and timely step that will provide short-term relief to trucking operators facing renewed fuel cost pressures. The federal government has indicated that the temporary measure will take effect on April 20 and remain in place until September 7, 2026. The suspension is expected to reduce diesel prices by approximately 4 cents per litre and is intended to help lower operating costs for truckers and businesses across key sectors of the economy. CTOA raised concerns on March 30 regarding rising diesel prices, exceeding $2.39 per litre in parts of the Greater Toronto Area, and the impact on small carriers and independent operators still recovering from a prolonged freight slowdown between 2022 and 2025.

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Ontario Continues to Call for the Full Removal of Duties and Tariffs on Softwood Lumber

By Kevin Holland, Mike Harris and Vic Fedeli
The Government of Ontario
April 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — Kevin Holland, Associate Minister of Forestry and Forest Products; Mike Harris, Minister of Natural Resources; and Vic Fedeli, Minister of Economic Development, Job Creation and Trade, issued a statement in response to a preliminary indication from the US which suggests that softwood lumber duties may decrease from the current rate of approximately 35% later this year: “Ontario’s forest sector has a global reputation as a leader in the G7 in the production of high-quality wood and wood products. …While this preliminary indication suggests some relief for softwood lumber producers later this year, Ontario remains firm that duties are unwarranted and not supported by the evidence. We continue to call for the full removal of all duties that raise costs for both American and Canadian families. These ongoing duties and tariffs reduce productivity, disrupt supply chains, drive up the cost of construction and make housing less affordable.”

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As the Newfoundland and Labrador newsprint industry sputters, these sawmill owners are framing up a bright future

By Terry Roberts
CBC News
April 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

When it comes to the future of the forest industry in Newfoundland and Labrador, the struggling newsprint mill in Corner Brook usually steals all the headlines. But some key players in the lumber manufacturing business say they’re framing up a solid future. And they have very different opinions when it comes to Kruger-owned Corner Brook Pulp and Paper, and that company’s $700-million strategy to modernize its paper making operations, and become a long-term electricity provider to the provincial power grid. “We’re confident in [Kruger’s] plans … for the future, and we’re confident in the direction the forest industry is going to take in Newfoundland,” says Kyle Osmond, operations manager at the family-owned Burton’s Cove Lumber and Logging mill in Hampden, White Bay. …So as the forest industry navigates yet another crucial period in its long history, the often-overshadowed sawmill sector is keen to emerge from the shadows, but their business approach is markedly different.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau offers online Grader Training Program

Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau
April 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, United States

PLIB has launched the Fundamentals of Lumber Grading, a comprehensive introductory online training course providing detailed foundational knowledge of lumber grading. This is the first of several training programs PLIB plans to offer on the agency’s new Education and Training website. Our on-demand courses prepare graders to identify lumber characteristics, accurately apply grading rules, and transition confidently to hands-on training. With real grading footage, 3D scanner models, and expert guidance, PLIB’s Grader Training Program will help your team build precision and efficiency where it matters most.

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Alberta homebuilders stand out at Maverick Awards

By Laura Severs
The Edmonton Journal
April 10, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The awards, by Built Green Canada, are showcase sustainability efforts across the country in the residential construction sector. Alberta, Canada’s oil and gas province, is becoming a green building hub. Two of the four winners in the 2026 Maverick Awards are Alberta based, and Alberta home builders were prominent in all three award categories. Excel Homes, which builds in both Calgary and Edmonton, and Edmonton’s Effect Home Builders shared the Maverick’s Ambassador award, finishing in a first-place tie. In the Maverick’s other two categories, Vancouver’s Carbon Wise was the Innovation Award winner and Best Builders of Abbotsford, B.C., received the Transformation Maverick award — in both, Edmonton’s Landmark Homes placed as a finalist. The awards, introduced by Built Green Canada in 2024, are designed to showcase sustainability efforts being employed across the country in the residential construction sector.

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Forestry

Indigenous Knowledge Network launches to strengthen community-led forest stewardship across Canada

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) Canada, together with the FSC Canada Indigenous Chamber, the FSC Indigenous Foundation, and Indigenous communities across the country, is proud to announce the launch of the Indigenous Knowledge Networks, a new Indigenous led initiative designed to strengthen community-driven forest stewardship, knowledge sharing, and rights-based governance. The Indigenous Knowledge Networks will serve as a collaborative platform where Indigenous communities can connect, share wise practices, and advance their own stewardship priorities in ways that reflect local governance systems, cultural protocols, and community-defined goals. As part of the launch, Wahkohtowin Development GP has been named the first regional Network, supporting sister Nations across the Northeast Superior Region. Wahkohtowin will lead in-person gatherings, virtual learning opportunities, and community-driven activities that strengthen relationships and build capacity across the region. …The first phase of the Indigenous Knowledge Network will include a visioning process…

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Save the date: Forest Week 2026

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The Forest Stewardship Council Canada is excited to announce FSC Forest Week, taking place September 21-27 this year. Building on our momentum from last year, we hope to continue the success of Forest Week as a movement, in partnership with our Certificate Holders and Promotional Licence Holders across Canada. This year’s campaign will again centre around the core theme do one thing for forests. Throughout Forest Week, we encourage people and businesses alike to choose one simple action to help protect the world’s forests and to post about it on social media – recognizing that together, our individual efforts have a powerful collective impact. All FSC Certificate and Licence Holders will have access to the campaign toolkit, containing social media posts and visual assets for each day of Forest Week. The 2026 toolkit will inform audiences of the importance of forests and the benefits they provide, and to inspire everyone – no matter where they live – to do their one thing for forests.

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FPAC Policy Webinar: Shared Risk, Shared Solutions: The Future of Wildfire

By Forest Products Association of Canada
Zoom
April 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Join us on Thursday, April 23 for a Wildfire Policy Webinar: Shared Risk, Shared Solutions: the Future of Wildfire. As wildfire risks intensify across Canada, there is growing recognition that reactive response alone is no longer sufficient. This webinar brings together leading experts to examine how Canada can enable proactive, prevention first approaches to wildfire management through federal policymaking. The discussion will move from the fundamentals of wildfire prevention, mitigation, and response to the federal policy and regulatory reforms needed to scale mitigation efforts, strengthen resilience, and protect communities, ecosystems, and economic stability. Speakers will explore practical solutions including predictive fire modelling and risk forecasting, Indigenous-led fire management, and place based knowledge mobilization—highlighting how active forest management can be positioned as a long-term public investment. This session is designed for policymakers, regulators, and stakeholders engaged in forest management, climate resilience, and public safety policy.

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Forest Stewardship Council Canada News and Views for April

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
April 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) Canada’s April update highlights a mix of national engagement, new initiatives, and evolving guidance shaping responsible forest management. FSC Canada will take part in Toronto Climate Week 2026, bringing forest stewardship into broader climate conversations, while a newly launched Indigenous Knowledge Network aims to strengthen community-led stewardship across the country. Ongoing consultation on Motion 45 reflects continued work to refine approaches to Intact Forest Landscapes in the Canadian context. Looking ahead, FSC is also promoting Forest Week 2026 as an opportunity to connect Canadians with forests and sustainable practices. On the technical side, new guidance on the market use and communication of ecosystem services impacts has been released, alongside a French translation of the Risk Assessment Framework to improve accessibility. The update also explores how investors are increasingly supporting healthy, resilient forests, underscoring the growing alignment between finance and sustainable forest management.

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Mosaic wants ‘informed discussion’ with North Cowichan on raw-log exports

By Robert Barron
The Cowichan Valley Citizen
April 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Mosaic Forest Management wants a more informed discussion on wood-fibre security and log exports with North Cowichan’s council before the municipality decides if it wants to move forward with a motion on the issue. Coun. Christopher Justice had made a notice-of-motion that, if adopted, would encourage senior levels of government to review and strengthen their policies, including those governing raw log exports from private managed forest lands on Vancouver Island. … Karen Brandt, at Mosaic, said the motion does not accurately reflect how the coastal-fibre system operates, and risks unintended consequences for the local mills, workers and communities that council is seeking to support. Brandt said… “The motion suggests international log sales from private-managed forest lands reduce fibre available for domestic manufacturing when, in fact, the opposite is true.” …Brandt said that if the objective is to improve fibre availability, the primary issue is the decline in Crown harvest levels.

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Squamish unveils first wildfire plan update since 2017

By Owen Spillios-Hunter
The Squamish Reporter
April 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

District of Squamish staff are asking Council to endorse a new wildfire strategy with 53 specific actions to protect residents, homes and critical infrastructure. According to staff, the 2026 Community Wildfire Resiliency Plan, prepared by Blackwell Consulting Ltd., must be adopted by April 30 for the District to remain eligible for up to $400,000 in provincial FireSmart grant funding over the next two years. The plan is Squamish’s first major wildfire strategy update since 2017. In the years since, rapid population growth, increased tourism pressure, and new development pushing into forested terrain have changed the risk picture considerably. It was developed in collaboration with Squamish Nation, Squamish Community Forest, BC Wildfire Service, BC Parks, the Ministry of Forests, and the Squamish-Lillooet Regional District. …The plan identifies hiring a full-time FireSmart Coordinator as a high-priority step with a three-month timeline. …The plan also calls on the District to review Squamish Fire Rescue staffing levels…

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Inviting Cariboo-Chilcotin residents to help guide forest management

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
April 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Local residents are invited to share their input on the development of the Cariboo-Chilcotin forest landscape plan (FLP) to guide long-term forest management decisions in the area. People can share their thoughts through a survey, which will run from Monday, April 13 to May 30, 2026. The Ministry of Forests will also hold two open houses (April 29 and May 2) so the community can learn more about forest landscape planning and ask questions. …FLPs are developed in partnership with First Nations to ensure meaningful participation in forestry planning and long-term decision-making. …Engagement with forest licensees, subject-matter experts and the public is a key part of every FLP. …Through early collaboration with First Nations partners and initial engagement with forest licence holders, key themes have emerged that will be integrated into the survey for public feedback to reflect community priorities. Developing FLPs is a new approach to forest stewardship that establishes clear direction for the management of forest-related values…

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TLA Convention Wrap-up

By Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News
Truck LoggerBC Magazine
April 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The TLA’s 81st Annual Convention +Trade Show, held in Vancouver January 14 to 16, brought together a broad cross-section of the forest sector. In welcoming delegates, TLA President Dorian Uzzell emphasized the association’s belief in a strong and sustainable working forest that delivers long-term prosperity for British Columbia and ensures that those who work in the forests share in that prosperity. Framed by the convention theme, Fostering Collaboration and Partnerships, his remarks underscored the importance of working together across the sector while highlighting the often-overlooked role of small, independent operators in supporting rural communities and a healthy forest economy. Over three days, the convention program linked market outlooks with the operational realities facing the sector. Sessions on markets and the broader economic context were paired with frank discussions on fibre supply, reinforcing that access and planning constraints-rather than demand-are increasingly shaping how the sector operates.

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Alberta rejects federal nature strategy, redefines protected land

By Maggie Kirk
CBC News
April 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Alberta’s environment minister has expanded the province’s definition of “protected lands” in a bid to reject Ottawa’s nature strategy. This comes after Canada, along with 195 other countries, announced plans to protect 30 per cent of its land by 2030, an objective known as 30×30. But Grant Hunter, Alberta’s minister of environment and protected areas, said that the province already protects 60 per cent of its land based on its own definition. “Federal reporting measures do not capture the full picture, focusing on narrow definitions of protected land,” he said. “Alberta takes a different approach. Our province includes all publicly owned and regulated lands, including those protected from development.” …Alberta rejects Ottawa’s one-size-fits-all approach to conservation and expects recognition and provincial jurisdiction of all national conservation targets, Hunter said. Alberta’s claim to have already achieved the 30×30 commitment is “concerning” and “disingenuous,” said Kecia Kerr, of Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (CPAWS) Northern Alberta.

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Peachlanders opposing cutblocks near old growth forest in community watershed

By Ty Lim
The Kelowna Capital News
April 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Peachland residents are once again fighting against logging in their watershed. Following the proposal of three new BC Timber Services (BCTS) cutblocks overlapping with Old Growth Deferral zones in the Peachland Community Watershed, the Peachland Watershed Protection Alliance (PWPA) have started a petition to halt old growth logging entirely. The petition, created in late March, calls to stop commercial and partial clear-cut logging in the Peachland watershed’s old growth and primary growth forests. …Taryn Skalbania, one of the founders of the PWPA, has ran the organization for over a decade to fight against logging in her community. She said this isn’t the first time the PWPA has opposed logging in their community, but that this is the “line in the sand.” …ecologist and former member of the old growth TAP Rachel Holt said there is only two per cent of old forest the IDFdk2 forestry zone – which covers the Okanagan area – remaining.

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New growth takes root in Rose Valley Park after 2023 wildfire

By Madison Reeve
Castanet
April 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

New life is sprouting in Rose Valley Regional Park, where crews and volunteers have begun restoring areas damaged by the devastating McDougall Creek wildfire back in 2023. At a community tree planting event held Saturday, hundreds of new trees were planted to help the park recover. The effort is part of a larger plan led by the Regional District of Central Okanagan to bring the forest back to life. Wayne Darlington, RDCO’s manager of parks capital planning, said the work marks an important turning point. “After 2023 McDougall Creek wildfires, we’re now at a point now where we’re actually putting some more trees back and plants back in the ground,” Darlington said. Volunteers spent the day planting hundreds of trees in some of the hardest-hit areas.

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Film shines light on Logan Lake forests

By Jake Courtepatte
The Merritt Herald
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Environmental stewards in the Logan Lake area are looking to put their forest lands on the proverbial map. Logan Lake Community Forest (LLCF), which provides local management of public forest lands for the benefit of Logan Lake and its surrounding communities, is the subject of a new film among its re-branding efforts. …LLCF involves Indigenous collaboration, sustainable forest management, wildfire risk reduction and responsible resource development to support recreation and wildlife in a unique manner. …The film, in collaboration with the BC Community Forest Association (BCCFA), provides a look at the planning and treatment activities of the LLCF specific to wildfire risk reduction, and the enhancement of trails and wildlife habitat, and is part of a broader provincial-wide storytelling initiative showcasing community forests across British Columbia.

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A Walk in the Woods: An educational opportunity

By Don Cameron
PNI Atlantic News
April 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Nova Scotia looks forward to the annual woodland conference to learn about the latest information and issues related to privately owned forest land. Each year for more than 30 years, the three regions have hosted a conference in various locations to provide reasonable accessibility for most. …The organizing group for the conference consists of woodland owners, woodland owner organizations, silviculture funding organizations, Department of Natural Resources (DNR), Indigenous interests, forest industry, and wildlife interests. The conference agenda is created by analysing the recommendations of the previous woodland conference participants, along with current issues and opportunities. Created originally for woodland owners, the conference has evolved into an event for anyone who has a general interest in the forest and forest organisms. …Representatives from the Association of Sustainable Forestry will provide a presentation that explains the many funding assistance programs they offer landowners for various silviculture and biodiversity treatments and objectives.

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Sault Ste. Marie library to screen Earth Day documentary

Sault Ste. Marie Today
April 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — The Sault Ste. Marie Public Library is hosting a free screening of the documentary film ‘Capturing Carbon’ on Earth Day, April 22nd. The 28-minute film, produced by the Forest Products Association of Canada, explores how sustainable forest management can help combat climate change. After the movie, the Sault Ste. Marie Climate Hub will give a presentation. The screening provides an opportunity for the local community to learn more about the role of forestry in addressing climate change, a pressing issue that affects everyone. By highlighting sustainable practices, the documentary aims to educate and inspire people to support environmental initiatives. The screening of ‘Capturing Carbon’ will take place at 6:30 pm on Wednesday, April 22nd in the Program Room at the James L. McIntyre Centennial Library in Sault Ste. Marie. …The film is 28 minutes long.

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Fifth Water Bomber Soars Back to Gander to Return to the Provincial Fleet

By Transportation and Infrastructure Forestry, Agriculture and Lands
Government of Newfoundland and Labrador
April 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The province’s fifth water bomber returned to Gander on Friday, marking its official return to the firefighting fleet following the completion of repairs. This action underscores the Provincial Government’s commitment to keeping communities safe. The water bomber will be with the fleet in Gander and relocated to Labrador at the start of Labrador’s forest fire season. It will be available for Labrador in advance of the fire season if the fire risk requires it. The Honourable Pleaman Forsey, Minister of Forestry, Agriculture and Lands, was on the ground in Gander to welcome the CL-415 back to the fleet. Flying in wildfire conditions carries significant risk and operational complexity, creating an exceptionally demanding work environment. During one such wildfire-fighting effort on the Burin Peninsula, the aircraft sustained substantial structural damage while collecting water for fire suppression. In April 2025, a contract valued at $14.8 million was awarded to De Havilland Aircraft of Canada for the repairs. 

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Snow to help buffer against threat of spring wildfires in N.L. but summer still risky, say scientists

By Elizabeth Whitten
CBC News
April 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Lucas Brehaut

Snow lingering across Newfoundland and Labrador is a good sign for those worried about the possibility of spring fires but scientists say it’s too early to say if there will be another historic wildfire season this summer. Lucas Brehaut, a wildfire resilience research scientist with the federal government’s Atlantic Forestry Centre, said there are three “main ingredients” for fires: an ignition event, warm and dry weather, and vegetation that fuels fire. “Historically we’re seeing a trend in more severe fire years. Over the last 20 to 30 years, fires are happening more frequently and they’re becoming more severe across the landscape,” Brehaut told CBC News. …University of New Brunswick forest ecologist Anthony Taylor said based on weather forecasts, there is an elevated risk of another bad wildfire season in the coming months.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Does Burning Wood Actually Fight Climate Change?

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
April 13, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada West

A company building two of Canada’s largest wood pellet mills says it will rely on a steady diet of trees logged in forests recently burned by wildfires. Roughly five million trees will have to come down each year to feed the two northern Alberta mills, which Powerwood Canada Corp. plans to build near the communities of La Crête and High Level. The company claims that wildfires create nightmarish landscapes and that logging such forests as fast as possible is key to restoring their health. But scientists counter that burned forests are important for biodiversity and that aggressively logging them spells disaster for plants and animals that rely on burned landscapes to flourish. Powerwood CEO David Peters said that in addition to northern Alberta the company is eyeing other “brownfield” logging opportunities in British Columbia and in Eastern Canada due to the significant number of wildfires in recent years.

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Health & Safety

WorkSafeBC investigating after worker injured at Port Alberni mill

By Jeff Bell
The Times Colonist
April 13, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Domtar says WorkSafeBC is investigating after a worker was injured at its Port Alberni mill last week and taken to hospital in serious condition. CHEK News reported that the man had a burn injury. “A full investigation is underway with WorkSafeBC, and we intend to share more information as it becomes available,” Domtar said in a message to employees. It also recognized coworkers who responded quickly to help the man “and ensured that he received immediate care.” B.C. Emergency Health Services said it was called at 5:44 a.m. April 9 for the incident. [END]

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University study to be conducted on protecting firefighters from wildfire smoke – a particular challenge in rural Canada

International Association of Fire and Rescue Services
April 13, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

WINNIPEG – Manitoba’s provincial government is facing renewed pressure to address the respiratory health risks posed to wildland firefighters who operate in heavily smoke-filled environments. While the province has introduced voluntary measures … officials and experts acknowledge that mitigating the hazards of noxious gases and particulate matter remains a complex, ongoing challenge. …Manitoba’s struggle reflects a wider issue across Canada. In 2023, the BC Wildfire Service began testing and offering specialized respiratory devices and masks to crews, while ongoing research—such as projects at the University of British Columbia—seeks to better understand the long-term respiratory impacts on those who battle wildfires. Advocacy groups, including the Manitoba Government and General Employees Union (MGEU), have previously campaigned for better workplace protections. In 2024, the province proclaimed amendments to The Workers Compensation Amendment Act, expanding presumptive coverage for heart injuries and cancer to include forest firefighters, a move MGEU President Kyle Ross called “a long time coming.”

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Forest History & Archives

Peninsula-made WildFire Whisky pairs nicely with iconic Mars water bomber

By Christine van Reeuwyk
Victoria News
April 13, 2026
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada West

[Tree Frog Editors debated what section to place this story under! It’s Business, Forestry, History and a bit of fun, which could be a Foible. In the end, we picked the history section!] A North Saanich distillery is digging deep into nostalgia, partnering with an iconic neighbour for a fun collectible of its best-selling product. Best Coast Distillers honours the iconic Hawaii Mars water bomber and its place in West Coast history with a limited release and partial proceeds going toward the BC Aviation Museum for the icon. …Hawaii Mars is one of two remaining Martin JRM-3 Mars water bombers. It flew cargo between Hawaii and the Pacific Islands during the Second World War and supported the Korean War with medical transport between Hawaii and California before transitioning to cargo operations. They were sold to a consortium of B.C. timber companies in 1958 and converted into the world’s largest water bombers to fight forest fires, carrying 27,000 litres per drop. Coulson Aviation bought them in 2007, marking the start of its fixed-wing air tanker operations for aerial wildfire support. Coulson retired its Mars water bombers in 2015.

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