Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

Strategic’s Proven Use of Drones on the Wildfire Front Lines

Strategic Natural Resource Group
May 8, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

As wildfires in Canada grow larger, faster and more unpredictable, the challenge facing emergency responders is no longer just putting water on flames, it is understanding what the fire is doing, where it is heading, and how quickly conditions are changing —drones are a critical tool in meeting that challenge.

Strategic began using drone technology years ago as part of its forestry, environmental monitoring and natural-resource management work. As wildfire seasons intensify, those same unmanned aircraft systems were quickly adapted for emergency response. Today, drones are embedded in Strategic’s wildfire operations, providing real-time intelligence to support firefighters and incident commanders. …Safety is a central benefit. Drone reconnaissance allows Strategic teams to assess hazards, scout access routes, and monitor fire behaviour without putting personnel directly in harm’s way. …In addition to drone-based fire suppression and monitoring systems, Strategic trains and supports resource professionals who are passionate about fire suppression.

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Wildfire Risk and Readiness in BC Forestry Operations: Protecting Workers, Operations and Communities

By Michele Fry
BC Forest Safety Council
May 8, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Wildfire activity is not simply a disruption to forestry work in British Columbia–it has the potential to be a significant occupational hazard. Wildfire smoke and ash can cause respiratory problems, trees impacted by fire can fall unexpectedly and crews could become entrapped by fast moving flame fronts. In recent years, BC has experienced some of the most severe wildfire seasons in Canada. One season alone saw approximately 2.8 million hectares burned, which was more than double previous records and caused widespread evacuations, area closures, and heavy smoke. BC’s forestry sector was significantly impacted, particularly in remote locations that were dangerously exposed to rapidly changing fire conditions.

Wildfires can escalate quickly into uncontrollable situations, putting workers at risk, halting operations, damaging equipment and threatening nearby communities. Wildfire preparedness is essential and it is a shared responsibility. Forestry operators, workers and industry partners all play a role in reducing risk and responding effectively. …

Wildfires will continue to challenge BC’s forestry sector. By learning from past wildfire seasons, staying informed and working together, the industry can better protect workers, operations and the communities that depend on them.

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Canada’s first university wildfire diploma marks milestone at Thompson Rivers University

Thompson Rivers University
May 8, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Students at Thompson Rivers University (TRU) have completed the first year of Canada’s first university-level diploma in wildfire studies, marking a key milestone in a program designed to meet the growing and evolving demands of the wildfire sector.

Developed in partnership with the BC Wildfire Service (BCWS), the diploma is part of a broader effort to build a first-of-its-kind wildfire hub at TRU. The initiative, known as TRU Wildfire, brings together research, education, training and innovation to respond to the growing challenges of a changing climate. TRU is leading the way with climate-adapted wildfire studies, bringing expertise from across disciplines to prepare students for a wide range of roles connected to wildfire. …Students can take a single course, complete one of four specialized certificates  —  the Sociocultural Dynamics of Wildfire Certificate, Wildfire Communications and Media Certificate, Wildfire Leadership Certificate and Wildfire Science Certificate  — or work toward the full diploma, which combines all four certificates with additional coursework.

While some students aim to advance into leadership or specialist roles with agencies such as BCWS, others are focused on related fields, including emergency management, ecology, community resilience and mental health.

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B.C.’s Wildfire Challenge Is Also a Question of How We Invest

By Bruce Blackwell
Blackwell Consulting Ltd.
May 7, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

After more than three decades working in forestry and wildfire risk in British Columbia, I have come to see our wildfire challenge less as a failure of knowledge and more as a question of how we choose to invest wildfire mitigation funding. …much of the risk we face is well understood and well documented. We know where our most vulnerable forests are in relation to values at risk. We know which communities are exposed and we have a growing body of evidence showing what kinds of interventions can change fire behaviour on the ground. What is less clear is whether our investment patterns reflect that understanding in a meaningful way. …Over the past two decades, spending on fire suppression has consistently outpaced investment in prevention and mitigation.

Mitigation funding has increased in recent years, particularly for fuel management and community protection. Even so, it generally remains in the range of $100 million to $200 million annually. The result is a system that is highly effective at responding to fire but still evolving in how it invests in reducing risk before ignition. In effect, the majority of public spending continues to flow after fires start, rather than toward reducing conditions that drive their severity. …The question is whether those investments can be sustained and scaled over time in a way that matches the level of risk. …meaningful change will not happen in a single funding cycle. It will take consistent investment over decades.

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Preparing for the Inevitable: How North Cowichan Is Strengthening Its Wildfire Resilience

By Chris Jancowski, Deputy Fire Chief, Operations
North Cowichan Fire Services
May 7, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Wildfire is no longer a distant or hypothetical concern for communities in British Columbia. Over the past several years, North Cowichan has taken meaningful steps to better understand and reduce its wildfire risk—investing in planning, expertise, and long‑term resilience. …Ours is a classic wildland–urban interface (WUI) community. …North Cowichan has recognized that wildfire must be addressed as an ongoing operational and planning consideration rather than a seasonal concern. A key step in advancing this work was the creation of a dedicated wildfire specialist role. This position reflects an understanding that effective wildfire preparedness and response require focused expertise, long‑range planning, and coordination across multiple municipal functions.

Rather than developing a standalone wildfire document, North Cowichan is enhancing its existing municipal and emergency planning framework to expand into a more comprehensive wildfire response plan. This approach recognizes that wildfire response is interconnected with emergency management, infrastructure planning, land use, and inter‑agency coordination. Our approach demonstrates how preparation, coordination, and local leadership can significantly improve response capability and resilience. As wildfire continues to shape the future of communities across the province, North Cowichan’s work offers a practical, real‑world example of how municipalities can adapt and prepare for the inevitability of fire.

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Business & Politics

Controlling What We Can Control

Forest Products Association of Canada
May 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Building Canada Strong with Canadian Forestry. If Canada is going to capitalize on this moment to build a stronger, more resilient economy, we need to ACT NOW, controlling what we can control and empowering the Canadian sectors that will allow us to shape our own economic destiny. …And as a globally-recognized leader in how we manage our forests, we have a lot to offer the world. But we’re currently weathering a perfect storm — a 45% wall of U.S. tariffs on top of duplicative regulatory inefficiencies here at home. While we have no control over the former, we can control the latter. And government can help. They’ve already identified the known friction points in their “Comprehensive Red Tape Review”. Now we need them to act. By fixing these Made-In Canada Barriers, they can empower sectors like forestry to fortify and diversify our country’s economy while maintaining the high environmental standards that help keep our forests as forests forever. You can EMAIL YOUR MP and call on them to ensure the findings of their Red Tape Review are actioned. 

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Federal court strikes down Trump’s 10% global tariff — what it means for brokers

By Max Sexton
The Mortgage Professional America
May 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Russ Taylor

A federal court dealt another blow to the Trump administration’s tariff agenda, ruling that the 10% global tariffs the president imposed earlier this year are illegal. …Kenneth Katkin, law professor at Northern Kentucky University, said the statutes that authorize tariffs simply do not authorize global tariffs. An appeal is expected. …This development is just one thread in a much larger story that continues to weigh on the housing market. Russ Taylor said the lumber market is getting hit from multiple directions at once, and no single factor is solely to blame. …”With the Iranian war, constricted trade flows, high oil prices, inflation, everyone’s being more conservative,” he said. “That keeps prices at bay.” …A lumber inclusion in the USMCA would ease some of the cost pressure but Taylor pointed out that the US domestic industry has done very well under the current tariff structure and has every reason to resist a deal that changes it.

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Forest Sector responds to Federal Government’s Consultation on Strengthening One Canadian Economy

Forest Products Association of Canada
May 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC) welcomes the Government of Canada’s announcement today on addressing long‑standing, structural challenges across the country’s transportation supply chains. Reliable, efficient, and cost‑effective transportation networks are essential to the forest sector’s ability to support domestic manufacturing, reach global markets, and sustain jobs in hundreds of rural and Indigenous communities across Canada. “Canada’s transportation system continues to face three fundamental challenges—cost pressures driven by limited competition, infrastructure bottlenecks across key trade corridors, and ongoing labour instability,” said Derek Nighbor, FPAC President and CEO. “Addressing these issues together is essential to reducing costs for shippers, improving system reliability, and supporting long‑term economic growth and jobs across hundreds of forest-dependent communities.” Currently, the forest sector must absorb billions of dollars in freight costs annually, the vast majority of these accruing from rail transportation – representing more than 15% of the sector’s annual GDP contribution and up to 25% of a shipper’s delivered product costs.

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BNN Interview with Derek Nighbor: The importance of Canada’s forestry sector

BNN Bloomberg
May 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Derek Nighbor, president & CEO at the Forest Products Association of Canada, joins BNN Bloomberg to share the outlook for Canada’s forestry sector. [If the embedded 6 min. video below doesn’t play – click the read more below to view it on the BNN site]

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Energy And Resources Minister Visits Carrot River Lumber Mill

Government of Saskatchewan
May 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

On Friday, Energy and Resources Minister Chris Beaudry visited Dunkley Lumber’s Carrot River sawmill, a key facility in Saskatchewan’s forestry industry. Minister Beaudry held discussions with senior officials from the company. “Saskatchewan’s forestry industry is a cornerstone of economic activity in the north, generating thousands of jobs and contributing to strong, vibrant communities,” Energy and Resources Minister Chris Beaudry said. “The Government of Saskatchewan is committed to working with industry partners to strengthen the forestry industry and grow the responsible development of our natural resources.” Dunkley’s Carrot River facility is the largest sawmill in the province, with the company employing more than 400 people combined… In 2024, Dunkley completed a $220 million expansion to the Carrot River sawmill, which increased the facility’s capacity by 75 per cent. “Saskatchewan continues to distinguish itself as one of the most attractive jurisdictions in North America for lumber manufacturing,” Dunkley Lumber Fibre and Sustainability Vice President Dyon Armstrong said. 

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B.C. has lost 40,000 jobs so far this year, says StatsCan

By Emma Crawford
Canadian Press in CityNews Vancouver
May 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Statistics Canada says B.C. lost more than 40,000 jobs over the first four months of the year, and more than 11,000 full-time positions last month alone. Premier David Eby says this comes as little surprise, and the explanation is obvious, with a major pillar of the province’s economy continuing to take a beating from a major trade war with the U.S. “Our softwood lumber sector is under huge pressure,” he said. “The tariffs we face are higher than those faced by Russia and Europe when they import wood to the United States. And as a result, Russia and Europe are exporting more wood to the United States than they ever have.” As well, exports from B.C. to the U.S. are down, which is affecting all provinces, Eby says.

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Union warns of need to ‘stabilize’ forestry sector as trade war drags on

By Palak Mangat
Barrie Today
May 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

A union representing lumber workers in Canada warned that the federal government needs to help “stabilize” the forestry sector as the trade war with the United States drags on and impacts productivity, leading to sawmill closures. The sentiment emerged at a Tuesday meeting of the House natural resources committee as it continued its study into Canadian energy exports, where Unifor national president Lana Payne told MPs that the industry continues to struggle. Industry Minister Mélanie Joly had unveiled a $1.5-billion aid package for the steel, aluminum and copper sectors on Monday, with the bulk of this amount offered through three-year loans under a program that will be created by the Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC). At the time, Joly stressed that Ottawa is still working to offer “similar terms” through BDC to the softwood lumber and forestry industries.

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Finance & Economics

Expect ‘big drops’ in housing starts this year, says builders association

Financial Post
May 11, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Kevin Lee chief executive officer Canadian Home Builders Association talks with Financial Posts Larysa Harapyn about the big drops expected in housing starts this year.

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Mercer International reports Q1, 2026 net loss of $52 million

Mercer International Inc.
May 7, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

NEW YORK — Mercer reported first quarter 2026 Operating EBITDA of $7.8 million, a decrease from $47.1 million in the same quarter of 2025 and an increase from negative $20.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. In the first quarter of 2026, net loss was $52.0 million compared to $22.3 million in the same quarter of 2025 and $308.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. Mr. Juan Carlos Bueno, CEO, stated: “Our pulp sales realizations showed resilience this quarter as softwood pulp markets held steady, while hardwood pulp performance trended upward on favorable demand-supply dynamics. However, elevated fiber costs across our supply chain and a slower-than-anticipated recovery in prices continued to weigh on our results. …Mass timber momentum continues to build, backed by an order book and commitments of $171 million that support a multi-year production plan. …European softwood pulp prices increased compared to the fourth quarter of 2025 due to supply constraints, although these gains were offset by higher discounts.

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Taiga Building Products reports Q1, 2026 net earning of $9.0 million

By Taiga Building Products Ltd.
PR Newswire
May 8, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

BURNABY, BC — Taiga Building Products reported its financial results for the three months ended March 31, 2026. The Company’s consolidated net sales for the quarter ended March 31, 2026 were $349 million compared to $400 million over the same period last year. The decrease in sales of $51 million or 13% was due to an overall reduction in sales volume amongst all product groups. …Net earnings for the quarter ended March 31, 2026 decreased to $9.0 million from $9.8 million over the same period last year, primarily due to higher finance expenses and a slight increase in income tax expense. EBITDA for the quarter ended March 31, 2026 was $17.1 million compared to $16.7 million for the same period last year.

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Western Forest Products reports Q1, 2026 net loss of $19.9 million

Western Forest Products Inc.
May 6, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC — Western Forest Products reported a net loss was $19.9 million in the first quarter of 2026, compared to net income of $13.8 million in the first quarter of 2025 and net loss of $17.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. …The company reported Adjusted EBITDA of negative $13.6 million in the first quarter of 2026. In comparison, the Company reported Adjusted EBITDA of $3.5 million in the first quarter of 2025 and Adjusted EBITDA of negative $6.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. Other highlights include: Lumber production of 118 million board feet (versus 154 million board feet in Q1 2025), Lumber shipments of 113 million board feet (versus 156 million board feet in Q1 2025), Cedar lumber shipments of 25 million board feet (versus 31 million board feet in Q1 2025), Average lumber selling price of $1,422 per mfbm (versus $1,348 per mfbm in Q1 2025), and Average BC log sales price of $193 per m3 (versus $134 per m3 in Q1 2025).

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Businesses pulling investment from B.C. over DRIPA uncertainty, poll finds

By Rob Shaw
Business in Vancouver
May 6, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada West

Premier David Eby’s plummeting approval numbers aren’t the only figures the NDP government needs to worry about when it comes to the backlash over Indigenous reconciliation and private property rights. Many B.C. businesses are reporting they plan to scale back operations due to the conflict as well. Almost 74 per cent of B.C. businesses plan to decrease investment due to uncertainty over the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, according to a new survey of senior executives Wednesday by the Business Council of B.C. The majority cite increased time, cost, complexity or uncertainty in permitting caused by the court rulings, policy flips and changing landscape around the NDP’s DRIPA. As many as one-third said they plan to reduce hiring. “The desire to work with Indigenous communities to create prosperity for all remains strong but the message from business leaders is clear: DRIPA isn’t working,” said BCBC president Laura Jones.

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Cascades reports Q1, 2026 net earnings of $39 million

Cascades Inc.
May 7, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades reported its unaudited financial results for the three-month period ended March 31, 2026. Q1 2026 Highlights include: Sales of $1,125 million (compared with $1,197 million in Q4 2025 and $1,154 million in Q1 2025); Net earnings of $39 million or per common share of $0.38 (compared with $0.37 in Q4 2025 and $0.07 in Q1 2025); Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) of $118 million (compared with $155 million in Q4 2025 and $125 million in Q1 2025). …Hugues Simon, CEO, commented: “As disclosed in our revised outlook on April 10, weather‑related disruptions across the U.S., combined with heightened volatility in transportation and fuel costs, drove operating costs above plan. Additionally, recent geopolitical developments weighed on consumer confidence and spending, resulting in packaging volumes below our original assumptions.

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Acadian Timber reports Q1, 2026 net income of $3.5 million

Acadian Timber Corp.
May 6, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

EDMUNDSTON, New Brunswick – May 6, 2026 – Acadian Timber  reported financial and operating results for the three months ended March 28, 2026. During the first quarter, Acadian generated sales of $23.4 million compared to $24.8 million in the first quarter of 2025. Acadian generated $4.8 million of Adjusted EBITDA and $2.5 million of Free Cash Flow during the first quarter and declared dividends of $5.3 million or $0.29 per share to our shareholders. “Acadian delivered steady performance during the first quarter, despite challenging conditions across forest products markets,” said Malcolm Cockwell, Interim President and Chief Executive Officer. “Our team remains focused on improving our operations in Maine and unlocking the long-term, multi-use potential of our assets.”

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

How Modern Methods of Construction can help solve Canada’s housing crisis

By Stephanie Shewchuk
RBC Thought Leadership
May 6, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Modern Methods of Construction (MMC) refers to innovative homebuilding approaches to improve the efficiency, sustainability and quality of construction. It includes of off-site construction, including 3D volumetric modules, 2D panels and pre-fabricated components, as well as innovative on-site approaches, such as robotics and digital tools. It can help build homes up to 50% faster and 40% cheaper than traditional methods. Yet current conditions actively prevent adoption at scale—leaving Canada’s housing crisis unresolved. MMC currently makes up 7.5% of the Canadian construction market. Forecasts show it’s set to grow at a compounded annual growth rate of 5% by 2029. Deploying these new methods could meaningfully contribute towards Canada’s housing needs. Raising MMC ‘s contribution to 15% of annual supply needs (about 72,000 units a year), would require developing dozens of new factories at current production capacities. 

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Diamond Schmitt designs mass timber Marpole Community Centre as a “civic living room” in Vancouver Park

Diamond Schmitt
May 6, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Vancouver, BC – The new Marpole Community Centre, designed by Diamond Schmitt for the City of Vancouver and the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation, sets a new benchmark for low-carbon civic infrastructure in Canada. Realized with an exposed mass timber structure and targeting Passive House and LEED Gold certification, the project reimagines the role of the community centre as both environmental infrastructure and social anchor within the rapidly intensifying Marpole neighbourhood. …As part of B.C.’s Mass Timber Demonstration Program, a defining feature of the building is the exposed mass timber structure which shapes the interior character of the facility while significantly reducing embodied carbon. Enabled through an alternate building code approach, the extensive use of mass timber contributes to the building’s overall 41% embodied carbon reduction while creating a warm, tactile, and human-scale environment that reflects the natural context of Oak Park.

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YouTube video series captures Archimarathon’s roadtrip of B.C.

naturally:wood
May 11, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

In a new four‑part video series, the design‑obsessed duo behind Archimarathon, Kevin Hüi and Andrew Maynard, travelled across British Columbia to find out what it takes to turn a tree into a world class building. The adventure involves, winding through old‑growth forests, seed labs, Indigenous‑led forestry operations, fabrication shops and some of the most striking mass timber buildings in Canada. Along the way, they uncover the science, craft and carbon‑smart thinking that make B.C. a global leader in wood construction. Kevin and Andrew connect with the people shaping the future of building with timber and step inside projects that prove wood can be bold, beautiful and technically breathtaking. If you care about architecture, sustainability, or where the built environment is headed next, this is a journey worth taking.

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Atlantic Canada’s first tall mass timber tower? Dartmouth study compares mass timber vs. concrete

By Don Procter
The Daily Commercial News
May 7, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

A recent feasibility study comparing concrete to mass timber designs for a 12-storey residential rental building in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, showed some surprising results for the development team. Mass timber came in 8.39% more expensive than concrete, but the study revealed the gap can be narrowed through several factors, including a much shorter construction schedule. While a two-month savings on completion was found for mass timber, says Joe Nickerson of Sidewalk Real Estate, the project’s developer, says “there is a clear pathway” to delivering a mass timber structure even four to six months ahead of concrete. Mass timber savings are also gained through a lighter foundation, the study revealed. …While Sidewalk may favour mass timber for the purpose-built rental, the developer faces a number of hurdles before it can make a final decision. …The Dartmouth mass timber tower would be the first of its kind above six storeys in Atlantic Canada.

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Forestry

Researchers recognized for innovation in the Canadian forest value chain

By Rebecca Rogers, Director, Communications
Forest Products Association of Canada
May 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Christopher Gagnon

Armel Zambou Kenfack

Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC) is proud to announce the recipients of the 2026 Chisholm Awards for Innovation in Forestry, recognizing emerging leaders whose research is advancing innovation across Canada’s forest sector. The award theme—promoting the use and adoption of Canadian forest products through value chain innovation—highlights the importance of strengthening performance, efficiency, and competitiveness across the sector. “The work of these young innovators reflects the practical innovation the sector needs right now,” said Derek Nighbor, FPAC President and CEO. …Christopher Gagnon is pursuing his Masters in Wood Engineering and Bio-based Materials at Université Laval. Gagnon is working on the reinforcement of dowel-type connections in solid wood structures using self-tapping screws. His research addresses one of the key technical barriers limiting the broader adoption of wood in construction: the performance and reliability of structural connections. …Armel Zambou Kenfack is a PhD candidate in Wood Engineering and Bio-based Materials at Université Laval. Kenfack is working on a project that reduces energy consumption associated with fiber refining in Medium-Density Fibreboard (MDF) panel production.

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A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
PR Newswire
May 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

BROMONT, QC – Today, the Honourable Nathalie Provost, Secretary of State (Nature), highlighted the Government of Canada’s recent launch of A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature. …On March 31, 2026, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced the federal government’s new strategy for nature, with an investment of $3.8 billion. A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature is based on three pillars for action to harmonize nature protection and economic growth: Protecting Nature in Canada, Building Canada Well, and Valuing Nature and Mobilizing Capital. …Indigenous leadership is at the heart of protecting nature, anchored in traditional knowledge and stewardship, and is critical to achieving our national and international commitments on nature. This new strategy will accelerate Canada’s progress toward protecting 30% of our lands and waters by 2030, restore critical habitats, strengthen ocean resilience, and mobilize new investments in nature while ensuring that conservation and economic development go hand in hand.

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SFI Tribute to Kathy Abusow: A Forestry Community Says Thank You

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

The opening event of day two of the SFI Annual Conference was a tribute to outgoing President and CEO Kathy Abusow, who has led the organization since 2007. Colleagues and board members gathered to mark the end of a tenure that has shaped sustainable forestry certification in North America — and the ceremony clearly caught Kathy off guard, with the surprise guest turning out to be her own daughter, Nina Andrascik, a forester and biologist early in her career. Speakers included SFI Board Chair Dan Lamb, who presented Kathy with a gift on behalf of the board; Lennard Joe, CEO of the BC First Nations Forestry Council; SFI President Jason Metnick; and Christine Leduc, SFI VP Canadian Operations and President of PLT Canada.

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SFI Panel Puts Disclosure Pressure in Focus: Certification Necessary but Not Sufficient

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

A panel at the 2026 SFI Annual Conference — Leveraging SFI Certification for Global Reporting Frameworks and Market Assurances — took on one of the more pressing questions facing the forest sector: as global disclosure frameworks multiply and investors demand quantifiable outcomes, does forest certification still do the job? Shenandoah Johns, Chief Environment and Sustainability Officer at West Fraser, walked through five major disclosure frameworks that have arrived in the last five years and identified the gap between what certification was designed to demonstrate and what regulators are now asking for. Paige Goff, VP Sustainability at Domtar, made the case for not overcomplicating what is already working. Kirsten Vice, Senior VP Sustainability and Canadian Operations at NCASI, framed 2026 as a year of influence — with key nature-related frameworks being finalized — and called on the sector to shape its own targets before others do it for them. Jason Metnick, President of SFI, moderated.

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Quebec SFI Implementation Committee recognized for advancing sustainable forestry practices and awareness across the province

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Montréal, QCThe Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) is pleased to announce the Quebec SFI Implementation Committee (SIC) as the winner of the 2026 SFI Implementation Committee Achievement Award at the 2026 SFI Annual Conference. The committee is being recognized for its wide-ranging engagement across the SFI Conservation, Standards, Community, and Education pillars, demonstrating a longstanding commitment to advancing sustainable forestry in Quebec. “This recognition from SFI reflects the collaborative leadership of the Quebec Implementation Committee across key SFI initiatives,” said Samuel Bourque, Domtar Certification Manager. “Together, we are advancing solutions for sustainable forestry while strengthening our ties with the public through outreach and education initiatives that make forests accessible to everyone.”

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Chiefs and Councillors of Miisun Board awarded inaugural SFI Indigenous Forest Leadership Award

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Montréal, QC — The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) is proud to announce the first-ever recipients of the SFI Indigenous Forest Leadership Award, in honour of Chief Lorraine Cobiness who passed in 2025. This inaugural award recognizes the Chiefs and Councilors of the Miisun Integrated Resource Management Company for leadership in land stewardship. “Chief Cobiness was an inspiring leader, an advocate for positive change, and a friend I learned so much from. She enriched our work at SFI through her passion, vision, and thoughtfulness, and she demonstrated how forestry can be done in a way that respects the land while strengthening communities,” said Kathy Abusow, CEO of SFI. “She will remain an inspiration to many in the forest sector, and this award was created to recognize her incredible legacy and the leaders who continue the work.”

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Public input wanted on Nicola and Similkameen ‘OCP for forests’

Penticton Western News
May 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Similkameen residents are being asked to weigh in on the government’s plan that sets how local forests are managed for the next decade. …The FLP is developed based on consultation with land tenure holders, the public, and First Nations, and is used to guide forest management in an area as well as to provide the legal requirements for activities such as timber harvesting. …The area that is covered by the tmixʷ naqscn FLP includes the Nicola and Similkameen watersheds. This will be the first FLP for the area, and will replace any forest stewardship plans that had previously been in place, with the goal of bring all different tenures and plans under a single, unified umbrella. …The plan will be in place for 10 years, with reporting every five years on to what extent it is meeting its objectives.

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Alberta Forest Week: Forests are about more than trees

By Aspen Dudzic and Tina Kennedy
Alberta Daily Herald Tribune
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Alberta Forest Week is just behind us – one of those natural moments throughout the year where I take time to pause and reflect on the challenges behind us, the opportunities that lie ahead, and all of the people who make that work possible. This year, I find myself thinking about what it truly means to be part of a forest community. Because at its core, this sector isn’t just about trees — it’s about people. The ones who show up early, stay late, and take pride in work that often goes unseen. The ones who build their lives around the forests, who care deeply about the land, and who understand that what they do today matters for generations to come. …So however you choose to celebrate Alberta Forest Week — whether it’s a walk in the woods, taking a closer look at the products we rely on every day, or simply learning something new — please take a moment to recognize the people behind it all.

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Supporting B.C. tech to help reduce lightning-ignited wildfires

By Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth
The Province of BC
May 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

With support from the B.C. government, a Vancouver business is conducting a field trial of its technology to assess whether it can reduce the frequency of wildfires ignited by lightning. Through the Province’s Integrated Marketplace program, delivered by Innovate BC, Vancouver-based Skyward Wildfire Technologies is receiving as much as $1 million to assess the effectiveness of its lightning-caused wildfire prediction and reduction technology in reducing wildfires ignited by lightning. Lightning is the leading cause of wildfires in B.C. In 2024, lightning was responsible for 70% of wildfire ignitions and 97% of all area burned in BC. …Skyward’s technology uses proprietary AI-enabled forecasting to identify areas of elevated lightning-caused wildfire risk and a targeted intervention designed to reduce cloud-to-ground lightning strikes. This technology has the potential to support wildfire-prevention efforts in fire-prone regions in BC.

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High-octane logger sports returns to 135th Cloverdale Country Fair

My Malin Jordan
The North Delta Reporter
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The West Coast Lumberjack Show returns to the 2026 Cloverdale Rodeo and Fair May 14 – 18. …As every year, fair-goers can expect high energy, fast action, and hilarious antics at the lumberjack shows over the course of the weekend. This year, the show is being presented by S&R Sawmills. …The event features some of the best professional lumberjacks in Canada. The competitors will showcase their strength, speed, and skill. Cloverdale is usually the first stop on the calendar for the logger-sports season. As such, the lumberjacks are always excited to come to Cloverdale, ensuring some high-octane enthusiasm is added to the weekend events. The West Coast Lumberjack Show performs 50 to 60 “show days” per year at between 12 to 15 different events spread across, mostly Western Canada, some back east, and a few south of the 49th….The lumberjack show has been entertaining fair-goers for more than 40 years. The event was first showcased at the 1982 Cloverdale Rodeo and Country Fair.

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It’s time to learn to live alongside grizzlies on Vancouver Island, expert says

By Claire Palmer
CBC News
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

In a public alert, the Village of Sayward — located just over 300 kilometres north of Victoria, B.C. — issued a warning to its residents after the grizzly was spotted within the village on May 4. Residents had been seeing the bear in the area around the village in the days leading up to it officially entering the village’s boundary. …While it’s the first sighting of a grizzly on the Island for the year, sightings are becoming more common. …Historically, the Island has not been considered a year-round habitat for grizzlies, says Nick Scapillati, executive director with the Grizzly Bear Foundation. But sightings of the mom and her cubs goes back to 2024 and Scapillati says that due to the small size of the cubs, they wouldn’t have been able to swim over. He believes it could be evidence of the first ever grizzly cubs to be born on Vancouver Island — a sign that grizzlies could be wintering on the Island. 

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Jasper wildfire fallout sparks Parks Canada reforms after deadwood buildup blamed

The Western Standard
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Parks Canada is scrambling to overhaul its wildfire prevention strategy after internal and federal records tied massive fuel loads of dead timber to the devastation that tore through Jasper in 2024. Appearing before the Senate national finance committee, interim CEO Andrew Campbell said the agency is now shifting toward more aggressive fire mitigation, including controlled burns and clearing dead trees near vulnerable communities. Blacklock’s Reporter said the move comes after widespread criticism that previous management allowed dangerous conditions to persist inside Jasper National Park. …The Canadian Forest Service report, titled Jasper Wildfire Complex 2024 Fire Behaviour Documentation, Reconstruction And Analysis, linked the conditions to a severe mountain pine beetle infestation that peaked years before the blaze. Researchers found the widespread deadwood significantly altered forest conditions, increasing sunlight and wind exposure at ground level, which accelerated drying and made fuels more combustible.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Ontario Investing More Than $5 Million to Unlock New Markets for Biofuel

By Ministry of Natural Resources
Government of Ontario
May 8, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada East

THUNDER BAY — The Ontario government is investing $5.5 million to help Greenwater Technology produce renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel using mill by-products and underused wood. This investment will support new opportunities for made-in-Ontario forest products, create new revenue streams to drive growth in forestry and empower the aviation and transportation industries to adopt sustainable fuels. As part of the government’s plan to protect Ontario, the government is making strategic investments to help forest sector businesses adapt, compete and grow to stay resilient in the face of U.S. tariffs. …After bringing the technology to market, Greenwater plans to integrate biofuel plants at anchor mills, providing an on-site use for forest biomass that would increase productivity, strengthen forestry supply chains and generate new revenue streams.

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Health & Safety

2026 Wood Pellet & Biomass Safety Summit

Wood Pellet Association of Canada
May 12, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Safety Starts Here: June 9-10, 2026, Prince George, BC | The Wood Pellet Association of Canada’s (WPAC’s) 2026 Wood Pellet and Bioenergy Safety Summit is rapidly approaching. The Summit offers valuable opportunities to learn, share and strengthen safety practices across the industry. Join industry leaders, safety professionals and regulators to discuss rotary drum dryer safety, process safety management (PSM) and emerging safety initiatives. Participate in a hands-on musculoskeletal injury (MSI) workshop and a full-day mental health workshop, giving you tools to support the physical and psychological well-being of yourself and your colleagues. Hosted by WPAC’s Safety Committee, in collaboration with the BC Forest Safety Council, WorkSafe BC and media partner Canadian Biomass, the Summit focuses on practical, real-world safety challenges facing the sector today. Whether your role is in safety leadership, operations, maintenance, or workforce health, the WPAC Safety Summit provides valuable opportunities to learn, connect, and contribute to safer workplaces across the sector.

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New Program to Support the Mental Health of BC Forestry Workers

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
May 12, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

British Columbia – People working in British Columbia’s forestry sector have faced a period of disruption in recent years, including mill curtailments and closures, workforce reductions, and ongoing economic uncertainty. These pressures, combined with a continuing barrage of bad news about politics, finances and the environment, can contribute to increased stress and feelings of uncertainty among forestry workers across the province that can manifest as mental health concerns, such as depression or anxiety. In response to this growing need, the BC Forest Safety Council in partnership with the BC Association of Clinical Counsellors and the BC Municipal Safety Association have introduced ‘Connection to Care’, a free, anonymous and confidential mental health call-in program available to all forestry workers in British Columbia. …“As someone who has experienced recurring depression, I understand the importance of creating space for open and honest conversations,” shared Jason Fisher, Executive Director, Forest Enhancement Society of BC.

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Forest Fires

Whitecourt Forest Area wildfires: Woodlands County gives evacuation order for some

By Brad Quarin
The Whitecourt Star
May 11, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

Residents of Woodlands County impacted by a wildfire south of Highway 43, east of Range Road 114 are being ordered to evacuate. The area includes the West Ridge subdivision. The order was given on the evening of May 11 after the wildfire was spotted earlier in the afternoon, approximately 3.5 kilometres south of Whitecourt, according to Woodlands County. According to Alberta Wildfire, the fire is approximately 75 hectares in size and the county noted that firefighters and helicopters are responding. “All residents in the affected area must evacuate immediately,” the county stated on the evening of May 11.  “Gather pets, important documentation, and medication.” Meanwhile, another wildfire in the Whitecourt Forest Area first spotted on May 10 grew to be 11.67 ha in size and is currently being held, according to Alberta Wildfire. The fire started burning 22 km northeast of the Town of Whitecourt and east of Blue Ridge Haul Road, according to Alberta Wildfire.

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10 Manitoba firefighters land in Minnesota to help state’s wildfire fight

CBC News
May 11, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West, US West

Manitoba is returning the favour to a southern neighbour that sent firefighters to the province during last year’s devastating wildfire season that killed two people and displaced 33,000 others. Ten Manitoba firefighters landed in Bemidji, Minn., on Saturday to help with that state’s wildfire-fighting efforts. “You were there for us, we will be there for you,” said Ian Bushie, Manitoba’s natural resources minister. …Manitoba and Minnesota are part of the Great Lakes Forest Fire Compact and share resources during major fires. …There was a blaze near Lake Bemidji State Park over the weekend that burned around eight acres. “While their fires are not out of control, this is assistance and relief for the crews that they have on the ground there,” Bushie said in an interview. He added the firefighters are on a 14-day deployment but could be called back early if conditions change.

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