Region Archives: Canada

Business & Politics

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

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

Goldy Hyder

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

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Liberals to announce protections for steel, softwood lumber industries as trade war deepens

By Mike Le Couteur
CTV News
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Help is on the way for Canadian steel producers and those in softwood lumber affected by the ongoing trade dispute with the United States. Multiple senior government sources confirmed that Prime Minister Mark Carney will announce measures on Wednesday to protect the steel industry, which has been hit with 50 per cent tariffs by the Trump administration. The measures include cutting limits to the amount of steel that can be imported into the country from nations that do not have a free trade agreement with Canada. …The Carney government will also increase the total money available to struggling softwood lumber companies to $1.2 billion. It’s a $500-million increase from the previously announced Softwood Lumber Development Program, which gives companies access to government-backed loans. …Trade talks between the two countries have been put on pause for the last month.

Additional coverage from Brent Jang at the Globe and Mail (subscription only): Banks tell Natural Resources Minister loans for softwood industry are imminent, sources say

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RONA Becomes the First Home Improvement and Construction Retailer on DoorDash in Canada

DoorDash
November 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

RONA, one of Canada’s leading home improvement retailers, with 425 corporate and affiliated stores, is now partnering with DoorDash, to offer on-demand delivery in as fast as an hour. This partnership spans nearly 200 RONA+ and RONA corporate stores located in seven provinces and over 150 cities across the country. RONA is now the first home improvement and construction retailer on DoorDash in Canada. …”By teaming up with DoorDash, RONA is offering a solution that reflects consumers’ new shopping habits and is further positioning itself as a leader in the industry,” said Catherine Laporte at RONA. “We’re proud to welcome RONA to DoorDash as the first home improvement and construction retailer on our platform in Canada,” said Kyra Huntington, of DoorDash Canada. “We’re looking forward to saving a panicked trip to the store when time is of the essence for home improvement projects.”

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Dairy, whiskey, wine and steel: American industries weigh in on trade pact review

By Kelly Geraldine Malone
The Canadian Press in National Newswatch
November 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON — American industries ranging from whiskey makers and Wisconsin dairy producers to steel and automobile associations are weighing in on the future of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade. The continental trade pact, known as CUSMA, is up for mandatory review next year and the Office of the United States Trade Representative has been collecting input on the changes it should consider. CUSMA has been rattled by U.S. President Trump’s massive tariff agenda and many of the submissions urged the administration to restore duty-free trade. The Can Manufacturers Institute wrote to the Trump administration saying steel and aluminum tariffs on Canada are making their products more expensive and causing prices in grocery stores to increase. …The United States Steel Corporation said tariffs on that metal should remain indefinitely. The submissions provide insight into areas that could become irritants in looming negotiations on the critical trilateral trade pact.

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Trump quietly holds off on Canada tariff increase

By Ari Hawkins
Politico
November 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

President Donald Trump has yet to follow through on his threat to impose an additional 10 percent tariff on Canadian imports, four weeks after he halted “all trade negotiations” over an anti-tariff ad the province of Ontario ran. Trump’s announcement had Canadian exporters preparing for a worst-case scenario: a sweeping levy layered on top of existing double-digit duties. …The White House did not say whether it still plans to impose the tariff when asked for comment. But a separate US official suggested the Trump administration had opted to hold off on additional duties — which would have sent tariffs on Canadian goods to 45% — and instead continue to dangle the threat as the two sides gear up for future talks. “The Canadians know what’s on the table,” said the official. Volpe said a personal intervention by Carney in Asia last month may have helped matters, too.

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Ken Kalesnikoff to step down as president of Kalesnikoff lumber company

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

Ken Kalesnikoff

Chris Kalesnikoff

Krystle Kalesnikoff

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

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Softwood lumber industry underwhelmed by announced supports

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

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

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Ottawa’s coastal double-cross risks more than one pipeline fight

By Rob Shaw
Business in Vancouver
November 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

@Wikipedia

In Ottawa, on the desk of one of the prime minister’s many strategists, it wouldn’t be surprising to find a document titled: Operation Butter Up B.C. The plan would go something like this: Repeatedly visit British Columbia … to dispense federal cash on feel-good announcements… Add a disproportionately high number of projects from the province onto the new federal major projects list… And then, when British Columbia is all nice and fattened up like a Christmas goose, guillotine it with an oil pipeline that you know it cannot and will not support. …It’s all building to an apex this week with a final one-two combination. Ottawa is expected to unveil a new softwood lumber aid package, addressing concerns by Premier David Eby that B.C. forestry gets less attention than Ontario’s aluminum and steel. Then, it will drop a memorandum of agreement with Alberta on energy policy, and support a pipeline to B.C.’s north coast.

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BC Distinguished Professional Forester Bruce Devitt dies at 92

Victoria Times Colonist
November 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Bruce Devitt

Shy of his 93rd birthday, Bruce Devitt passed away peacefully on Nov 8, 2025 surrounded by family. Born in Burnaby BC, Bruce grew up in Bridge River near Lillooet. Bruce graduated from the University of BC with a Bachelor of Science degree in Forestry in 1957. He was Forester in charge of Seed & Nurseries for the Province; he joined Pacific Logging in 1972; he was Chief Forester for Canadian Pacific Forest Products and executive VP of the BC Professional Foresters Association. …Bruce served as a director of Pacific Regeneration Technologies Management, and worked for the Provincial Forest Appeals Board and the Environmental Appeals Board. …Bruce received recognition from his fellow foresters in 1983 when he received the Distinguished Foresters Award. Bruce holds the Western Forestry Lifetime Achievement Award (1991) and the Canadian Forestry Achievement Award (1995). …In lieu of flowers donations to: Vancouver Island Prostate Cancer.

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Why a lack of access to timber is leading to B.C. mill closures, job losses

By Akshay Kulkarni
CBC News
November 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The looming closure of a lumber mill in central BC is highlighting the forestry industry’s challenges in accessing an economically viable timber supply — with one academic urging an “emergency response” to deal with it. West Fraser Timber  announced it would shut its mill in 100 Mile House by the end of the year. BC’s forestry industry has taken major hits over the last few years, as escalating US duties on softwood lumber imports have piled atop challenges like a major beetle infestation and wildfires, leading to thousands of jobs lost. …UBC professor Gary Bull explained that to have an “economically viable fibre supply,” it needs to make sense financially for a company to transport logs from a forest to its mill. And the viability is complicated by the fluctuating price of lumber. …Bull estimated that insect outbreaks and wildfires have contributed to a 50 to 60 per cent reduction in available fibre near 100 Mile House.

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Dr. Lori Daniels wins Faculty Community Service Award

By Faculty of Forestry
University of British Columbia
November 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Lori Daniels

We are proud to congratulate Dr. Lori Daniels, MSc’94, on receiving this year’s Faculty Community Service Award at the Alumni Achievement Awards. A leading expert in wildfire resilience, Dr. Daniels has made an extraordinary impact through her commitment to community engagement and knowledge sharing. As a co-founder and the inaugural Koerner Chair of the Centre for Wildfire Coexistence, she works closely with Indigenous and rural communities to co-develop science-based, culturally grounded solutions that support wildfire preparedness and long-term forest health. Her dedication to public education, spanning hundreds of media interviews, speaking events, and national forums, has helped shape policy, strengthen stewardship, and deepen understanding of how we can coexist with wildfire.

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

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

Susan Holt

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

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

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

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

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The Boreal Springboard initiative aims to help Northwestern Ontario’s forestry industry diversify products — and markets

By Graham Strong
Northern Ontario Business
November 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

A new initiative called The Boreal Springboard launched in Thunder Bay in October 2025 to help Northwestern Ontario’s forestry sector weather current economic challenges and spark new economic growth. Graham Bracken, The Boreal Springboard project co-ordinator, said that several partners had already been developing the framework. The recent economic difficulties resulting from the Canada – U.S. trade war made launching the initiative more urgent. “Everyone’s minds were focused by the recent tariff threats,” Bracken said. “It’s a good time to increase investment into the sector and also build out some innovation of new value-added products, and try to diversify our markets.” Partners include the Northwestern Ontario Innovation Centre (NOIC), the Thunder Bay Community Economic Development Commission (CEDC), the Centre for Research and Innovation in the Bio-Economy (CRIBE), Lakehead University, and Confederation College along with industry players.

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‘Cultural break’: U.S. senators say relations with Canadian neighbours are suffering

By Michael MacDonald
CBC News
November 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East, United States

Angus King

The tariffs imposed on Canada by US President Trump have clearly caused economic pain for Canada, but a US senator from Maine says he’s more worried about how Canadians are reacting on a personal level. “Like any neighbours, there’s always going to be issues back and forth, and we’ve been fighting about softwood lumber for as long as I could remember,” Angus King told an international security conference in Halifax on Saturday. “But the deeper problem is the cultural break; the idea that Canadians don’t think of Americans as their friends and neighbours, but as adversaries.” The annual Halifax International Security Forum that opened Friday has attracted more than 300 delegates from around the world, including politicians, academics, government officials, military leaders and non-government organizations. …King said the lingering rift between Canadians and Americans is particularly troubling in a state that borders on New Brunswick and Quebec.

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If I was PM, we’d have a tariff-free softwood lumber deal

By Andrew Waugh
The Telegraph-Journal
November 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Pierre Poilievre says he’d succeed where Prime Minister Mark Carney has failed, and that New Brunswick’s softwood lumber sector would quickly get a “tariff-free” deal with the US if he was in charge. …Ottawa responded by releasing a financial aid package for the industry that includes up to $700 million in federal loans, “$500 million to supercharge product and market diversification. …Poilievre said that “one of my top priorities as prime minister will be to go down to Washington, get a deal on lumber, make the pitch that they will get more affordable homes if we can get tariff-free access to their market.” …MP Dominic LeBlanc sent a statement…. “In the coming weeks, we will take further urgent action, building on the significant support for the sector announced on August 5, 2025. In addition, Build Canada Homes, a new federal agency that will build affordable housing at scale, will prioritize the use of Canadian-made materials. [Access may require a Telegraph-Journal subscription]

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Nova Scotia government to bid on Northern Pulp assets

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
November 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Nova Scotia government will bid on the assets of Northern Pulp, which include extensive timberlands. Potential bidders had a deadline of Nov. 20 to declare their intentions. Government officials confirmed the plan. The Northern Pulp mill at Abercrombie Point in Pictou County ceased operations in January 2020 after the company failed to get environmental approval for a new effluent treatment facility. …In August, a BC Supreme Court Justice approved an initial bid of $104 million for the company assets, which include about 162,000 hectares of timberland, and a nursery and seed orchard in Debert. That initial bid from an Ontario-based company called Macer Forest Holdings Inc., would have stood up in the absence of any other parties declaring an interest by Thursday’s deadline. With the provincial government making it at least two parties in the process, Macer’s bid will be the starting point for an auction to be held Nov. 27.

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Nova Scotia Forestry Innovation Transition Trust commits $1.8M for forestry innovation projects

By Jennifer Heudes
CTV News
November 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Nova Scotia Forestry Innovation Transition Trust is investing $1.8 million to assist private landowners and forest contractors in finding new markets for underutilized wood fibre and to support sustainable forestry management. According to a news release, the Association for Sustainable Forestry will use $800,000 over the next year to help private landowners and forest contractors find new and more efficient ways of harvesting, transporting and selling low-grade fibre. It will also help reduce the risk of wildfires through the removal of material that would normally be left on the forest floor. …“With this funding, we will be able to help them actively manage their woodlots,” said Todd Burgess, of Forest Nova Scotia. …Forest Nova Scotia will use $1 million over two years to help woodlot owners develop and maintain access roads into their woodlots. The funding will allow owners to harvest more wood and lower the risk of wildfires.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

The truth about mass timber: B.C.’s favourite green building material isn’t always a climate hero

By Frances Bula
BC Business Magazine
November 26, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The audience of dedicated urbanists at Vancouver’s Robson Square Theatre was startled earlier this year when the first speaker at a debate about mass timber—which B.C. has been promoting vigorously—said it isn’t the for-sure climate-change silver bullet that everyone likes to think it is. Adam Rysanek, a UBC professor of environmental systems who specializes in energy efficiency, poked hard at the assumption that, because everyone thinks of mass timber as just wood—a plant! that comes out of the ground!—it must be natural and environmentally friendly and surely better than concrete. But Rysanek kept making the point at the Urbanarium debate that those ideas are not fully proven. A study he cited, which aimed to factor in all the uncertainties of carbon emissions in different types of building materials, found there is not a clear answer yet about the differences between mass timber and concrete.

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Sawing through 30-year journey

By David Parsons
The Chronicle Journal
November 21, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

Thirty years ago, a trio of dedicated local artisans, including Larry Watson, Lou Mazerolle and Vic Germaniuk, held a press conference in the basement of the local McDonald’s to announce the formation of the Superior Woodworkers Association. It was later changed to SAW — Superior Association of Woodworkers, where they would pool their resources and with which they hoped to carve out recognition for locally made wood designs and possibly develop a local woodworking trade show. Last month, at St. Michael’s Church in Thunder Bay, the 30th anniversary meeting was held with 20-plus members in attendance and, happy to say, the three founding members. Each of the three described the 30-year journey, projects worked on, and answered questions on a wide variety of topics from the other members. Thunder Bay is lucky to have the continued dedication of these three individuals and the current members of SAW expressed their gratitude.

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Forestry

Mapping the climate niches of forest insects and diseases in Canada under current and future climate

By John Pedlar, Daniel McKenney & Glenn Lawrence
Nature
November 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Insects and diseases are important disturbance agents in Canadian forests and there is concern that their impacts will intensify under climate change. Here we report on an effort to model and map the climate niches of more than 4000 forest insect and fungus species in Canada – including high-profile pest species that are already, or may soon become, established in the country. This work employs occurrence data from historical, national-scale forest insect and disease surveys. …We further employ national forest inventory products (gridded maps) to summarize forest host volumes at risk of infestation by selected insect and disease species. …We demonstrate use of the products through examples, including brown spruce longhorn beetle, southern pine beetle, oak wilt, and map overlays that show hotspots for bark beetles under current and projected climate. We hope this tool will help pest managers to better understand how these species may respond to projected climate change.

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

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

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

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Protesters return to Upper Walbran logging blockade after arrests

By Michael John Lo
Victoria Times Colonist
November 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A game of cat-and-mouse between old-growth activists and RCMP is unfolding in the Upper Walbran Valley, after police cleared a blockade on Tuesday and arrested four people, but were unable to prevent protesters from retaking the road and re-establishing the blockade overnight.  Fresh fires burned around a ­five-metre-tall cougar sculpture overnight as protesters built a wooden barrier on a forestry road where protesters have been camped out since late August. Police were back at the site Wednesday morning, working to extricate ­people who had chained themselves to the barrier to prevent logging in the valley. …The cut blocks, which hold an ­estimated $3 million in harvestable timber, are in Pacheedaht territory, and the nation stands to receive stumpage ­revenue from the logging. Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership is a joint venture between Western Forest Products Inc. and a company controlled by the Huu-ay-aht First Nations, with Western Forest Products as the majority shareholder. 

In CTV News by Anna McMillan: RCMP continue enforcement at logging blockade on Vancouver Island

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Industry and First Nations in Northern B.C. Work Together to Build a Healthier Forest Future

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mackenzie, B.C.In the Mackenzie Natural Resource District, businesses like East Fraser FiberCo. Ltd. (EFF), continue to maximize the recovery and utilization of uneconomical fibre. In collaboration with First Nations and with funding support from the Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC), incremental fibre – low value pulp logs that would be left after harvesting – were transported from areas outside the economic radius to EFF’s chipping facility in Mackenzie, B.C. This work has brought significant environmental and economic benefits to the community, reducing wildfire risk, lowering greenhouse gas emissions by avoiding the piling and burning of wood, and strengthening local and regional communities and their economies. …Over the last decade, EFF has worked with local First Nations to increase fibre utilization, primarily harvesting beetle-damaged stands. In 2020, EFF entered into a wood purchase agreement with Sasuchan Development Corporation and purchased a portion of the volume from their Non-Replaceable Forest Licence within the Mackenzie Forest District. 

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B.C. hosting national wildfire symposium

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

B.C. has invited stakeholders, experts, Indigenous partners and government representatives from throughout the country to a wildfire symposium in Vancouver on Dec. 5, 2025. The focus will be the 2025 wildfire season, wildfire technology, active forest management and national readiness for future wildfires. The symposium includes advancing discussions on a national leadership strategy and stronger collaboration that will shape the framework of wildfire resiliency in Canada. Enhancing a national framework for wildfire resilience, including the challenges and opportunities people and communities are facing, is one intended outcome for the upcoming symposium on wildfires to be hosted in B.C. After the second-worst wildfire season nationally, B.C. is leading the symposium to bring together national and international experts, provincial, federal and territorial governments, as well as key industry and Indigenous partners, with the goal of sharing best practices and considering mitigation and preparation steps for 2026.

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4 arrested at Upper Walbran old-growth logging protest camp

By Laura Brougham
Chek News
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Four people were arrested as RCMP enforced an injunction at an old-growth logging protest near Lake Cowichan, over two months after it was granted. On Sept. 12, a judge granted an injunction to Tsawak-qin Forestry, which is co-owned by Western Forest Products and the Huu-ay-aht First Nations, to end the blockade which had been in place since late August. …The RCMP says the injunction prevents anyone from interfering in any way people from gaining access to or egress from the site within the Carmanah Valley area on Vancouver Island near Lake Cowichan. …RCMP says three were arrested for breaching the injunction and one person was arrested for criminal mischief. …The protesters say there were approximately 60 officers on site. Tsawak-qin Forestry said the approach it is taking to logging in the area follows the Pacheedaht First Nation and the Province of British Columbia’s “shared objective” for the area.

Additional coverage by Andrew Kurjata and Liz McArthur in CBC News: 4 arrested, cougar sculpture dismantled as RCMP move in on forestry protest camp on Vancouver Island

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New mapping tool could help preserve centuries-old forests in B.C.

University of Alberta
November 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A proactive new tool that can help preserve old forests in British Columbia has been developed by University of Alberta researchers. A new study gives crucial insight into where to focus conservation measures, by identifying areas of old-growth forest in areas predicted to be stable in the face of climate change. The approach shifts the focus toward what can still be protected, says Nick Pochailo, who led the study….  “Old-growth forests located in areas of potential climatic stability offer exceptional long-term conservation value. By identifying these places, land managers can prioritize and plan conservation efforts more effectively.” …old-growth forests account for about 25 per cent of BC’s forested areas. They’ve shrunk from 25 million hectares to about half that due to logging, wildfires, and pests like the mountain pine beetle… computer models predict how these ecosystems might shift by the 2050s, then mapped the changes to geographically pinpoint areas most likely to survive. 

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Osoyoos Indian Band expands FireSmart efforts to boost wildfire resilience

By Brennan Phillips
Summerland Review
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Osoyoos Indian Band (OIB) has continued to expand its measures for protecting the community from wildfires. The OIB’s FireSmart Program, which is led by the band-owned and operated Nk’Mip Forestry company, undertook assessments of various homes and infrastructure sites across the community following training with First Nations Emergency Services Society. The assessments and training build on efforts to educate the community on how to make their homes and neighbourhoods safer. “We’ve made it a priority to connect directly with the community,” said Peter Flett, Registered Professional Forester (RPF), Head of Operations, Nk’Mip Forestry. “Our focus this year has been on education by presenting information at meetings, visiting homes, sharing materials, and having conversations with OIB members about how they can better protect their properties.”

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Potential chronic wasting disease detected in Okanagan deer

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
November 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Province is responding to a potential case of chronic wasting disease (CWD) in a male white-tailed deer harvested east of Enderby. CWD is an infectious and fatal disease affecting species in the cervid family, such as deer, elk, moose and caribou. Initial testing by the provincial animal health laboratory detected prions (which are abnormal proteins) that may indicate CWD in the deer sample. The sample has been submitted to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) for further testing, as the CFIA is Canada’s authority for confirming CWD. Results are expected by early December. The hunter who submitted the sample has been notified of the potential detection. The Province will update the public if the CFIA confirms the sample to be positive for CWD. This is the first potential detection in the Okanagan and the first identified outside B.C.’s existing CWD management zone in the Kootenay region.

Additional coverage from the BC Wildlife Federation: WEBINAR: Chronic Wasting Disease Update

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Lheidli T’enneh First Nation bans herbicide use across north-central B.C.

By Andrew Kurjata
CBC News
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A First Nation in north-central B.C. says it is banning the use of herbicides across all of its territory, which includes Prince George and the Robson Valley. The Lheidli T’enneh First Nation says the ban is being put into place because of the negative impacts herbicides, and glyphosate in particular, have had on the environment and wildlife for which they are stewards. “It is our duty to disallow toxic chemicals in our territory that reduce biodiversity and have negative impacts on our members’ health, wellbeing and the environment where we exercise our living rights and traditions,” Lheidli T’enneh Elected Chief Dolleen Logan said in a statement. She also says the nation expects both government and private industry workers operating in the region to adhere to the ban. It was not immediately clear if the ban would also apply to private and municipal property. More details coming Tuesday morning.

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Return to sustainable levels key behind Annual Allowable Cut reduction near Vernon, BC

By Roger Knox
Vernon Morning Star
November 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The new allowable annual cut (AAC) for Tree Farm Licence (TFL) 49 near Vernon has been chopped. The cut, which is the maximum amount of timber that can be harvested each year, is now 150,500 cubic metres, and takes effect immediately. That’s a 26.2% reduction from the previous AAC. “That decision reflects a return to sustainable harvest levels following wildfire impacts in 2021 and 2023,” said the Ministry of Forests. “It considers updated land base and ecological considerations, including the removal of the Brown’s Creek area from the TFL, and reflects adjustments for increased riparian reserve buffers.” TFL 49 is held in the name of Tolko Industries of Vernon. BC Timber Sales also has volume apportioned. …“The new AAC considers current forest-management practices being implemented on the TFL for enhanced riparian buffers and retention of areas containing cultural heritage resources,” said the ministry. The chief forester’s AAC determination is an independent, professional judgment.

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Invest in Visibility and Connection: The Value of Sponsoring or Exhibiting at the TLA Convention

By Sarah O’Dea, director of events
BC Truck Loggers Association
November 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

For more than 80 years, the annual TLA Convention + Trade Show has been the premier gathering place for forestry’s top decision-makers. Whether you choose to sponsor the convention or exhibit at the trade show, your participation offers unmatched opportunities to connect, showcase, and grow your business. Unparalleled Networking: The TLA Convention + Trade Show brings together the leaders who shape the future of BC’s forest industry. As a sponsor or exhibitor, you’ll gain direct access to influential professionals—contractors, suppliers, government representatives, and business owners—all in one place. …Premium Brand Exposure: Visibility at the TLA Convention & Trade Show extends well beyond the event.Sponsors enjoy high-profile recognition before, during, and after the convention, ensuring your brand stays top of mind among key industry players. Tracey Russell, Vice President-Equipment, Inland Truck & Equipment Ltd. is a regular at the Convention, “We sponsor the TLA Convention + Trade Show every year because it’s one of the best opportunities for exposure and relationship building – connections that have made a lasting impact on our business and our brand.”

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Rumour Mill RoundUpDate — Federal Budget 2025 Winds Down 2-Billion Tree Program

By John Betts
Western Forestry Contractors’ Association
November 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A 2-Billion Tree Program report showed that its Provinces and Territories Funding Stream had reached only 40% of its target after four years and signed agreements with 11 of the 13 provincial and territorial governments. …Nevertheless, if … enthusiasm for the 2BT was low, BC was the exception. It accounted for 67.5 million of the 110 million trees planted by 2024, according to BC Ministry of Forest’s Forest Investment Program figures (FIP). Fortunately, FIP signed a four-year $99-million contribution agreement with 2BT that will be honoured according to Budget 2025. BC will continue to plant 40 to 50 million seedlings annually under FIP-2BT until 2029. Unfortunately, reduced harvest in BC has seen the total trees planted per year drop from ~300 million in 2020 to ~230 million in 2026. To make up for those 70 million fewer seedlings, the WFCA proposed to the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, before Budget 2025 was released, that the federal government double the current 2BT contribution agreement. The minister has yet to reply. 

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Zombie fires: how Arctic wildfires that come back to life are ravaging forests

By Patrick Greenfield and Kristi Greenwood
The Guardian
November 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West, International

The return of cold and snow at the close of the year typically signal the end of the wildfire season. …Zombie fires, sometimes betrayed by a plume of steam emerging from the bubbling ground in the frozen forest, were once a rare occurrence in the boreal regions that stretch across the far north through Siberia, Canada and Alaska. But in a rapidly heating world, they are becoming increasingly common. The overwintering burns are small – and often hard to detect – but they are transforming fires into multi-year events. …“It is a massive problem,” says Lori Daniels, a professor at the University of BC. Current estimates show that only about 15% of the northern hemisphere is underlain by permafrost, yet these frozen soils contain roughly twice as much carbon than is now in the atmosphere. By burning slowly and at a lower temperature, they release vastly more particulate pollution and greenhouse gas emissions than flaming fires.

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Owners of popular Christmas tree farm win coveted White Pine Award

By the Huronia Woodland Owners Association
Orillia Matters
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Andrew & Doug Drysdale

The Huronia Woodland Owners Association awarded its White Pine Award last week to the Doug Drysdale Jr. family for their long-term commitment to sustainable forestry and maintaining healthy and productive woodlots. Accepting the award were Doug Drysdale Jr. and his son, Andrew. The Drysdales are the 45th recipients of this award, which is bestowed annually to a person or group that displays remarkable care and promotion of a healthy forest. Interestingly, Reg Drysdale, grandfather of Doug Drysdale Jr., was the second recipient of this award back in 1982. Since 1945, the Drysdale family has operated Christmas tree farms throughout Simcoe County. They were the first to introduce the concept of “cut your own,” and the trend caught on rapidly. Andrew is the fourth generation to operate this well-known enterprise, which has grown to include a retail shop, wedding venue and nursery for landscape trees.

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Feds will still pay to plant 52M trees in New Brunswick, despite cancelling program

By Adam Huras
The Telegraph-Journal
November 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

OTTAWA — The Carney government will still pay to help plant a previously announced 52 million trees in New Brunswick, even though hardly any of them are in the ground and the program’s funding has been cancelled. The recent federal budget scrapped a program to plant two billion trees across the country by 2031 in order to find hundreds of millions of dollars in savings. It was a climate change initiative first announced by former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during the 2019 election campaign with $3.2 billion over 10 years earmarked to carry it out. New Brunswick was one of the last provinces to reach an agreement for its cut of that money. It didn’t sign on until March 2024. A few months after that, the feds and the New Brunswick government announced $71.6 million to plant more than 52 million trees on Crown lands across the province over the next eight years. [A Telegraph-Journal subscription is required for full access]

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Statement – Canada at COP30: Advancing a shared vision for inclusive and sustainable climate action to keep the 1.5 °C within reach

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
Cision Newswire
November 24, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

BELÉM, Brazil – The Honorable Julie Dabrusin, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, issued this statement at the conclusion of the 30th Conference of the Parties (COP) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Belém, Brazil… “…Canada’s delegation worked with counterparts from around the world … to advocate for measures to confront the urgent realities of a rapidly changing climate and the need to accelerate climate action globally. Throughout the negotiations, Canada worked with countries to strengthen multilateralism; foster dialogue; build consensus; and advance evidence-based, inclusive climate action. …As the world moves rapidly toward net zero, Canada is well positioned to lead. …the science is clear that we need to do more, faster and together, to keep 1.5 °C of warming within reach. …one of Canada’s top priorities for COP30 was to push for more collective action to reduce emissions …to meet the Paris Agreement’s temperature goals.

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Takeaways from the outcome of UN climate talks in Brazil

By Melina Walling, Anton Delgado and Seth Borenstein
The Associated Press
November 22, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

BELEM, Brazil — After two weeks of negotiations, this year’s UN climate talks ended Saturday with a compromise that some criticized as weak and others called progress. The deal finalized at the COP30 conference pledges more money to help countries adapt to climate change, but lacks explicit plans to transition away from the fossil fuels that heat the planet. …Leaders have been working on how to fight the impacts of climate change for a decade. To do that, every country had the homework of writing up their own national climate plans and then reconvened this month to see if it was enough. Most didn’t get a good grade and some haven’t even turned it in. …More than 80 countries tried to introduce a detailed guide to phase out fossil fuels. There were other to-do items on topics including deforestation, gender and farming. …”We started with a bang, but we ended with a whimper of disappointment,” said one negotiator.

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Prince Edward Island’s $170M waste processing facility a North American energy marvel

By Grant Cameron
The Daily Commercial News
November 24, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada East

A design team of more than 100 engineers and personnel is putting the finishing touches on plans for a new, $170-million waste processing facility on Prince Edward Island that will convert municipal solid waste and scrap wood into power for the province’s district energy network. The facility will be capable of processing 90 per cent of the province’s total black cart residential waste, diverting up to 49,000 tonnes of solid waste from going to the landfill annually. Energy from the plant and an attached wood biomass facility will provide power to connected customers. It’s an approach that has not yet been taken by any other energy-from-waste facilities in North America, with most incorporating either turbines or small hot water heating systems. …Using solid waste instead of sending it to landfill will lead to a savings of up to 908,000 tonnes of CO2 by 2052.

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Health & Safety

WorkSafeBC: November 2025 virtual public hearing on proposed regulatory amendments

WorkSafeBC
November 24, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

WorkSafeBC is holding a virtual public hearing on proposed amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation. The virtual public hearing will be streamed live on November 25, 2025, in two sessions. The first will take place from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and the second from 3 to 5 p.m. Participating in the public hearing process: We welcome your feedback on the proposed amendments. All feedback received will be presented to WorkSafeBC’s Board of Directors for their consideration. You can provide feedback in the following ways: 1. Submit feedback online or by email until 4:30 p.m. on Friday, December 12, 2025, via our website, worksafebc.com, or by email to ohsregfeedback@worksafebc.com. 2. Register to speak at the hearing by phone by calling 604.232.7744 or toll-free in B.C. at 1.866.614.7744. Each organization or individual will be permitted to make one presentation.

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