Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

How to save Canada’s troubled forestry industry

BY Tom Browne, Warren Mabee and Peter Milley
The Globe and Mail
February 18, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

The past few years have been tough for Canada’s forest industry. …In response to US tariffs and as a partial solution to our continuing housing crisis, Prime Minister Carney has made a commendable move, providing support for the lumber industry and setting a target of doubling housing starts. He’s also announced the Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force. Achieving Mr. Carney’s targets for the forestry sector will require transformation of our wood products and construction industries. …When a log is cut up for lumber, about 40% of the tree is converted to residual chips, and without demand for wood chips to make paper, production of lumber will not be viable. New, alternative uses for those residuals become essential. One option would be to replace a number of idled pulp mills with a couple of large, modern mills.

…New pulp mill designs act as biorefineries, making a range of products. Heat can be exported to district heating plants and power to the grid. Methanol, also known as wood alcohol, can be used in various industrial processes. Currently, methanol is made largely from natural gas, so replacing this product with wood-based spirits offers a carbon advantage. Lignin extracted from pulp mills can be used to displace petroleum-based incumbents in a range of products such as plywood glues and polyurethanes. Currently, because of the steep decline in demand for our pulp and paper products, we are only cutting half the wood that provincial forest ministries deem sustainable. This leaves large amounts of biomass in the forests, which can amplify the threat of wildfires. Reinvesting in our forest sector can help us to lower the risk of catastrophic fires going forward. [to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

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Business & Politics

Forest Products Association of Canada Releases 2025 Annual Report Highlighting Sector Resilience and Urgent Need for Policy Action

By Rebecca Rogers, Director, Communications
Forest Products Association of Canada
February 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC) released its 2025 Annual Report, outlining a year marked by significant economic headwinds, escalating trade pressures, and growing uncertainty for hundreds of rural and northern communities that rely on a strong forest sector. Despite these challenges, FPAC members, partners, and employees across the country continued to advance critical work to support families, protect jobs, and strengthen Canada’s forest-based economy. FPAC Board Chair, David M. Graham, noted that while 2025 was one of the most difficult years in recent memory, the sector enters 2026 well positioned to contribute to a more resilient, future ready Canadian economy. Key federal actions including improved procurement guidelines to support greater use of Canadian wood in government projects, the launch of Build Canada Homes to accelerate affordable housing construction, and new Investment Tax Credits to encourage biomass use for heat and power represent important steps forward for the industry and its workforce positioned to contribute to a more resilient, future ready Canadian economy.

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Canfor secures naming rights for Whitecourt’s new Culture and Events Centre

By Brad Quarin
The Whitecourt Star
February 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

WHITECOURT, Alberta — The new culture centre being built adjacent to Festival Park in Whitecourt will be called the Canfor Culture and Events Centre, after the company Canadian Forest Products which obtained naming rights, according to the Town of Whitecourt. “We’re proud to support the communities where we operate,” Tom Thompson, Canfor Alberta region general manager, said. …Thompson said Canfor supported the centre through its Good Things Come from Trees Foundation. …The Town of Whitecourt began offering naming rights for the new facility and parts within it in the spring of 2025. …Canfor Corporation moved into Whitecourt in 2022 after completing its purchase of Millar Western Forest Products’ lumber operations and wood products assets.

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BC logging association’s joint statement on BC’s 2026 Budget

BC Truck Loggers Association
February 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Truck Loggers Association, Interior Logging Association and North West Loggers Association are pleased BC’s Budget 2026 acknowledges the importance of forestry and includes funding intended to address the province’s ongoing forestry crisis. However, we note the budget forecasted annual harvest levels of only 29 million cubic metres, which fall far short of Premier Eby’s mandate to Forests Minister Ravi Parmar to achieve an annual harvest level of 45 million cubic metres. This is unsustainable for forestry-dependent communities, damaging to the provincial economy at a time of an unprecedented deficit, and deeply discouraging for the forest workers and contractors who have endured too many years of uncertainty. Our associations and the forest industry are collectively committed and prepared to support Minister Parmar and government in achieving positive outcomes for our sector, communities and the broader economy. We remain ready to work collaboratively on practical solutions. However, meaningful progress requires a clear vision and accountable plan to restore markets for British Columbia’s forest sector to move harvest levels toward the 45 million cubic metre objective. 

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B.C. Budget: LNG a bright spot, but red ink dismays business groups

By Derrick Penner
The Vancouver Sun
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Brenda Bailey

For all the measures touted as keys to unlocking BC’s resource sector, such as speeding up permits for mining activity, Finance Minister Brenda Bailey’s budget includes additional tax hits. …The ministry of forests will see its budget go from $1.3 billion in 2025-26 to $910 million in fiscal 2026-27 to $860 million in 2027-28. …The budget includes some new measures for BC’s beleaguered forestry sector, such as $50 million in new and reallocated federal funds to support for Indigenous scholarships, the purchase of equipment to aid in wildfire fighting and refunding the province’s Fire Smart program. However, Bailey’s document doesn’t make specific mention of measures Forests Minister Ravi Parmar alluded to at the BC Truck Loggers Association. …BC had set a target to harvest 45 million cubic metres of timber, but the document shows the 2025-26 harvest at 29 million cubic metres, with the number expected to stay at that level through the three-year financial plan.

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Council of Forest Industries Statement on BC Budget 2026

The BC Council of Forest Industries
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC – Kim Haakstad, President & CEO of the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI), issued the following statement today in response to the Government of British Columbia’s 2026 Provincial Budget: “As the province navigates significant fiscal and economic challenges, the forest sector continues to face intense pressure. We welcome Budget 2026’s recognition of the urgent crisis facing the forest sector and the government’s plan to make targeted investments that support the sector today while building a more resilient future. We are concerned about the budget’s plan for a harvest level of 29 million cubic metres over the next three years—a figure that sits well below the province’s own Allowable Annual Cut (AAC) of approximately 60 million cubic metres. …Working together we can reverse the trend of mill closures and rising costs of doing business so forestry can continue to contribute to the well-being of families and communities across the province. 

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B.C. budget includes tax increases, job cuts and $13B deficit

By Justin McElroy
CBC News
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Brenda Bailey

The BC government’s 2026 budget announced a series of tax increases, capital project delays, and a reduction of 15,000 public sector jobs over three years. Despite this, major deficits are still forecasted for the indefinite future. “This budget is different from our past budgets, because this moment is different,” said Finance Minister Brenda Bailey in her speech to the legislature on Tuesday. The speech blamed the province’s economic condition on challenges such as US tariffs and a cooling housing market. “It’s time to take a pause on some of the things we want to do to focus on the things we need to do.” A $13.3 billion deficit is forecast for the 2026-27 fiscal year, up from $9.6 billion for this year. …The government announced a diverse range of tax increases that it said would primarily impact higher-income earners, causing an average increase of $76 a year. 

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B.C. forecasts upswing for natural gas and tough times in forestry as deficit soars

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC government is forecasting that the natural gas industry will play a larger role as the top driver of provincial resource revenue, while warning about tough times in the former economic powerhouse of forestry. Natural gas royalties are expected to ring in at nearly $1.3-billion for the 12 months ending March 31, 2027, up 38%. …The government is anticipating $521-million in forestry revenue for the 2026-27 fiscal year, up 3%, but still down sharply when compared with several years ago. …In the 2020-21 fiscal year, forestry revenue surpassed $1.3-billion and natural gas royalties reached $196-million. …Tuesday’s budget introduces a temporary Stumpage Payment Deferral Program in an effort to ease the cash crunch for companies. The voluntary program covers the first 11 months of 2026. …The government anticipates that the trend of depressed annual volumes of tree harvesting will continue over the next several years, restricting the production of softwood lumber. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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B.C. budget supports growth but falls short for many workers, says United Steelworkers

United Steelworkers
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The United Steelworkers union found positives in a difficult BC budget. …Recognizing the uncertainty created by US trade policy… USW Western Canada Director Scott Lunny said… “Today’s budget advances the government’s work towards long-term economic stability, including BC’s goal of securing $200 billion in private-sector investment over the next decade in sectors including mining, forestry and manufacturing”. …USW noted positives, including: a continued commitment in funding to strengthen permitting capacity in resource industries; a $400- million Strategic Investments Special Account to leverage federal government dollars for investment and job creation in key sectors like value-added forestry, responsible mining, manufacturing and clean energy; and unprecedented investment in skilled trades funding as well as a training grant to encourage apprenticeships. …”While we welcome the $20 million to help workers and employers in tariff-impacted sectors like steel and forestry, there is still a missing commitment to stabilizing and sustaining the primary forestry sector,” said Lunny.

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Why This Mill Survives When Others Don’t

By Forestnet
You Tube
February 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

‘Making forestry sexy again’ That’s the bold mission Bhavjit Thandi is on as the new face of Richmond Plywood. Most CFOs stay in the boardroom, but 38-year old Bhavjit Thandi hit the mill floor on day one to understand the 70-year-old employee-owned co-op where workers take out mortgages just to get in. We dive into how this “shareholders on the floor” co-op model powers a zero-waste juggernaut that invests millions in automation and hiring more workers while other mills go dark. Expect hot takes on the dangerous “gray market” imports threatening Canadian construction and the brutal reality of battling the world’s most expensive fiber costs. Bhavjit pulls no punches on government red tape, the Trump factor, and why Richply refuses to shut down even when demand tanks.

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Acadian Timber Corp. Announces Appointment of Malcolm Cockwell as Interim President & CEO

By Susan Wood, Chief Financial Officer
Acadian Timber Corp.
February 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Edmundston, NEW BRUNSWICK – Acadian Timber Corp. announced Malcolm Cockwell has been appointed Interim President & Chief Executive Officer, effective immediately. Mr. Cockwell succeeds Adam Sheparski, who has stepped down as President & Chief Executive Officer and as a Director of the Company to pursue other opportunities. “On behalf of the Board of Directors, I would like to thank Mr. Sheparski for his contributions to Acadian,” said Mr. Cockwell. “Looking ahead, Acadian will continue focusing on operational excellence within our existing timberland assets in New Brunswick and Maine.” Mr. Cockwell is a Registered Professional Forester, who has served as Chair of the Company since August 2019. He is the principal of Macer Forest Holdings Inc., the largest shareholder of Acadian, and holds a PhD in forestry from the University of Toronto.

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Unifor seeks ‘urgent’ meeting with Kruger boss about future of Corner Brook paper mill

By Terry Roberts
CBC News
February 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Lana Payne

The union that represents workers at Corner Brook Pulp and Paper and Deer Lake Power is requesting an urgent meeting with top brass at Kruger Inc., as questions mount about the future of the newsprint sector, and Kruger’s ambitious plan to diversify its operations in Newfoundland and Labrador. In a letter to Kruger Inc. CEO Joseph Kruger that was obtained by CBC News, Unifor president Lana Payne expressed concerned about the “lack of clarity and transparency” from the company about its business plan for the century-old operation, and the future of the roughly 300 people who work at the newsprint mill. “It is critical that Kruger engages with mill workers and their union, the community of Corner Brook, and the provincial government,” Payne wrote. …Payne’s letter emerges as the company slowly restarts one of the two newsprint machines at the mill following an extended shutdown, during which all employees were receiving full pay.

Unifor press release: The future of Corner Brook Pulp and Paper Mill

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Northern Ontario town joins call to bolster steel, lumber sectors

By Eric Taschner
CTV News
February 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

A northern Ontario municipality is adding its voice to growing demands for the provincial government to fortify the region’s cornerstone industries as they brace for the impact of ongoing trade hostilities with the United States. Town council in Mattawa has unanimously passed a motion urging the province to introduce stronger protections for the steel and softwood lumber sectors. The move follows a similar resolution passed by the Township of Nairn & Hyman in early December, reflecting escalating anxiety among northern communities heavily reliant on these industries. Mattawa Mayor Raymond Belanger said the local economy remains deeply tied to forestry, making the threat of U.S. tariffs particularly acute. …Dave Plourde, president of the Federation of Northern Ontario Municipalities (FONOM) and mayor of Kapuskasing, acknowledged the deep-seated frustration among northern communities that were built on the back of these resources. …The forestry and lumber industry provides approximately 128,000 jobs…

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Irving Paper to get up to $45 million in Holt tariff relief funds

By Adam Huras
The Telegraph Journal
February 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — The Holt government is dipping into one of its tariff relief funds to provide Irving Paper with up to $45 million it says will maintain jobs at New Brunswick’s only remaining paper mill. It comes after the Saint John manufacturer of paper used for magazines, catalogues and newsprint announced roughly a year ago it was cutting 140 jobs, while criticizing the impact of “soaring electricity costs” and blaming “management issues” at NB Power. That’s while it suggested a subsidy wasn’t the answer as all New Brunswickers and the province’s industry were grappling with the challenge of climbing electricity bills. The money is part of a $54.3-million package for a total of seven New Brunswick companies announced by Opportunities NB. Last spring, Premier Susan Holt announced a $40-million “competitive growth program” that she said would be aimed at stabilizing larger New Brunswick companies that are export-intensive.

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Only one paper machine operating at Corner Brook mill after major shutdown

By Colleen Connors
CBC News
February 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

The last pulp and paper mill in Newfoundland and Labrador is partially operating again as of Tuesday after a significant shut down that started last fall due to extremely low water levels at Grand Lake. It was one of the longest shut downs in the Corner Brook mill’s history. Kruger Inc, the mill’s owner, indicated it would take weeks to ramp up operations, given the plant was shut during winter’s coldest months. But local politicians believe this partial re-start is an indication of big changes in operations and jobs. …”We will have some periods where we will run. Some work is then needed. That will stop operations, but that will continue to ramp as we go over the next couple of days,” explained Darren Pelley, vice-president of special projects with Kruger Inc. Pelley said Kruger will monitor water levels and continue to make paper when possible. 

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Finance & Economics

Canfor announces asset write-down and impairment charge

Canfor Corporation
February 17, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

VANCOUVER, BC – Canfor Corporation announced today that it will record a non-cash asset write down and impairment charge totaling approximately $321 million in its fourth quarter of 2025 results. Of this amount, $215 million relates to the Company’s lumber segment and $106 million relates to its pulp and paper segment. In the lumber segment, the impairment is associated with the Company’s European operations and reflects ongoing log supply pressures in the region, which have resulted in significant increases in log costs and reduced asset carrying values. In the pulp segment, the impairment reflects sustained declines in global US-dollar pulp list prices as well as continued challenges in securing economically viable fibre necessary to support operations. This impairment charge is non-cash in nature and does not affect Canfor’s liquidity position, cash flows or day-to-day operations.

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CIBC warns overstated housing starts mask economic weakness in Canada

Canadian Mortgage Trends
February 18, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The bank said in a new report Wednesday that the housing market is too soft to encourage builders to break ground on new homes at the pace needed to lift the economy and deliver a long overdue supply injection. “I think that we are in the early stages of this correction when it comes to the impact on the economy,” said CIBC deputy chief economist Benjamin Tal in an interview. Housing makes up a significant portion of Canada’s economy, and Tal said the run-up in prices and heightened real estate investment over the past two decades have only increased its weight on gross domestic product. The Canada Real Estate Association expects home sales to climb 5.1% this year after trade uncertainty drove a market slowdown in 2025. “The way to describe the housing market at this point is that houses are still too expensive to buy, not expensive enough to build,” Tal said.

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In defence of hewers of wood and drawers of water

By The Editorial Board
The Globe and Mail
February 15, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

It’s been nearly a century since political economist Harold Innis popularized the phrase “hewers of wood and drawers of water” in decrying Canada’s dependence on natural resources. …Underpinning that cry is the (wrongheaded) assumption that natural resources such as mining, agriculture and energy are second-grade economic activity, less desirable than manufacturing. …That mistake is the foundation for many public policy blunders over many decades. The numbers demolish that myth, and tell a very different story, one in which energy, mining and other natural resources sectors create enormous economic value and are globally competitive. …The federal government needs to get itself out of the way of some of the strongest parts of the Canadian economy. Stop subsidizing inefficient sectors. Stop raising protective tariffs that harm other parts of the economy. Focus on rolling back unjustified regulatory barriers that harm the ability of the entire economy, particularly globally exposed natural resources sectors, to compete. And, most of all, stop the undervaluing Canada’s great natural advantage in natural resources. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Government of Canada advances wood construction in Quebec

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
February 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

MONTREAL – …the forest sector is facing real pressures, including the impact of unjust U.S. trade measures. The Government of Canada is responding with a strategy: protect what we have and transform the sector so it can grow stronger, more resilient and more competitive. Today at Les Conférences Cecobois et le Forum construction bas carbone et biosourcée 2026, Claude Guay, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, announced that Cecobois is receiving, from the Green Construction through Wood (GCWood) program, $580,000 in federal funding administered by the Conseil de l’industrie forestière du Québec. With this funding, Cecobois will implement new projects aimed at documenting and raising awareness of the benefits of using wood to decarbonize the construction sector, deepening technical knowledge and disseminating expertise. These strategic actions will help increase the use of wood and bio-based insulation materials, as well as promote carbon neutrality in non-residential and multi-residential buildings.

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Embodied Carbon—Regulating to Reduce

By Aurélia Crémoux
Canadian Architect
February 16, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

As Denmark has recently tightened its standards for new construction with the aim of reducing embodied carbon, what lessons can Canada draw from this experience? In 2023, the Danish Building Code made life-cycle assessment (LCA) mandatory for all new buildings over their first fifty years. …The government also mandated researchers to provide practitioners with a list of generic material data for cases where an Environmental Product Declaration (EPD)—required to perform an LCA. When the regulation came into force in 2023, the entire construction industry was opposed to it, recalls Thomas Graabaek. “ And then slowly there was a movement within architects and engineers that actually we need to have even stricter demands.” …“Unfortunately, in Canada, [architects] have been educated only around operations, [not on its entire life cycle],” explains Kelly Alvarez Doran. He advocates for the establishment of embodied-carbon targets at different regulatory scales. 

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BC Wood Seminar: Learn about Grants and Government Funding Programs that Support BC’s Value-Added Wood Manufacturers

BC Wood Specialties Group
February 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

Zoom Webinar | Wednesday, February 25, 2026 | 10:00am – 11:30am PST | Zoom. BC’s wood manufacturers are facing real challenges from labour shortages and export pressures to rising costs and growing sustainability expectations. The good news? There’s funding available to support your hiring, workforce development, technology upgrades, product innovation, and market expansion. Join this session designed specifically for processors, builders, and related businesses in the value-added wood sector. You’ll learn how to use grants strategically, not reactively, to achieve your business goals. What you will learn:

  • Which government and grant programs apply to your business: hiring, training, market expansion, R&D
  • How to align grants with your growth and sustainability plans
  • Tips on developing a funding strategy
  • Information on CanExport Program and the Trade Commissioners Office

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Ontario teachers union’s new mass timber HQ

By Rich Christianson
The Woodworking Network
February 17, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — The new headquarters for the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation is a state-of-the-art mass timber structure designed by Moriyama Teshima Architects. The 124,000-square-foot building prioritizes sustainability and wellness, utilizing abundant natural light and a structural connection to natural elements. The architectural approach allows the cross-laminated timber and glue-laminated timber to serve as the defining elements of the interior. A clean, monochromatic palette was chosen specifically to highlight the natural beauty of the exposed wood. Key design features include: Exposed Structure: To keep the wooden ceilings visible. …Interior finishes—such as neutral carpet tiles and stone-like textures—were selected to harmonize with the timber and evoke the surrounding ravine landscape. …Acoustic Detail: The design incorporates walnut slat ceiling systems with integrated absorptive material to manage acoustics while maintaining the wood-forward aesthetic.

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Forestry

Young Researchers Have Potential to Transform Canada’s Forests

Forest Products Association of Canada
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Applications Now Open For FPAC’s 2026 Chisholm Awards for Innovation in Forestry. The Chisholm Awards for Innovation in Forestry, awarded by Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC) are now open for applications. This national recognition program highlights the innovative spirit, leadership, and research excellence of students and early-career researchers in Canada’s forest sector. The Chisholm Awards pay tribute to young innovators whose work has the potential to transform Canada’s forest sector, from advancing sustainable forest management and clean manufacturing to breakthroughs in supply chain processes or forest-based product development. “The Chisholm Awards for Innovation in Forestry recognize research and solutions that advance the adoption of Canadian forest products through value chain innovation,” stated Derek Nighbor, President and CEO of FPAC. 

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Community forest advocates headed to Vernon

By Liam Verster
Vernon Matters
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Representatives from the province’s community forest groups will gather in Vernon this summer to find solutions to challenges the sector faces. The B.C. Community Forestry Association will hold its 24th Annual General Meeting in Vernon June 3 to 5. Community forests are licensed provincial lands that are managed through partnerships, usually between municipalities, First Nations, and other stakeholders. They are intended to be managed in a way that prioritizes the needs of the community, such as local stewardship, sustainable forest management, and economic benefits. The association (BCCFA) is a grassroots, membership-based non-profit that acts as advocates for the community forest industry. “Every year we hold a conference and annual general meeting in or near one of our member communities,” Jennifer Gunter, Executive Director of the BCCFA, told Vernon Matters. “This year we will be hosted by the Monashee Community Forest, which is a partnership between the Splatsin First Nation and the Village of Lumby.”

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The myth of the “raw log”

By Stewart Muir
Resource Works
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

By the time a so-called “raw log” is loaded onto a truck — or in a small minority of cases, onto a ship — it has already travelled through a dense web of economic activity that is anything but raw. It has been identified and cruised through professional forest planning. Roads have been engineered and constructed. Heavy equipment has been purchased, financed and maintained. Logging crews have mobilized. Mechanics and welders have serviced machinery. Truck drivers have hauled. Fuel suppliers have delivered. Silviculture obligations have been funded or secured. Stumpage has been paid to the Crown on public lands. In many instances, Indigenous partnerships and benefit agreements structure access and revenue sharing. Every log carries embedded value long before it ever approaches a mill gate or tidewater. Industry analyst David Elstone has noted that it can take more than 100 distinct job functions to sustainably plan, harvest and deliver timber from forest to primary manufacturing. 

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https://fraservalleytoday.ca/2026/02/18/vancouver-foundation

By Mike Vanden Bosch
Fraser Valley Today
February 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

FRASER CANYON — The Nature-Based Solutions Foundation in Vancouver says it has recently acquired two clusters of private land inholdings totaling just over 55 hectares within the traditional territory of the Kanaka Bar Band in the Fraser Canyon for conservation purposes. According to a news release from the conservation organization, the 55 hectares of land are inside the boundaries of Kanaka Bar’s proposed Indigenous Protected & Conserved Area (IPCA). The foundation says the acquisitions will safeguard exceptionally diverse old-growth forests, including habitat that features Canada’s largest documented Rocky Mountain juniper, and they build on NBSF’s earlier purchase of the “Old Man Jack’s” parcel in 2022, thereby bringing the total to three private properties to be returned to Kanaka Bar through Indigenous-led conservation, title-registered legal protection, and long-term stewardship funding.

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Forest loss can make watersheds “leakier,” global study suggests

By UBCO Faculty of Science
The University of British Columbia
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Forest loss does more than reduce tree cover. A new global study involving UBC Okanagan researchers shows it can fundamentally change how watersheds hold and release water. The research analyzed data from 657 watersheds across six continents. It found that both forest loss and changes in forest landscape pattern cause watersheds to release a higher proportion of “young water”—rain and snowmelt that moves through a watershed within roughly two to three months of falling. “Young water is a signal that water is moving quickly through a system,” says Ming Qiu, lead author and doctoral student in UBC Okanagan’s Earth and Environmental Sciences program. “When the young-water fraction is high, it means less water is being stored in soils and groundwater for use during drier periods.” The study was co-authored by Qiu and Dr. Adam Wei, professor in UBCO’s Irving K. Barber Faculty of Science. 

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’Wuìk̓inux̌v Nation sues B.C. over timber licence extension amid final treaty talks

By Stefan Labbe
Business in Vancouver
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A BC First Nation in the final stages of treaty negotiation is suing the province for allegedly breaching the “honour of the Crown” after an official extended an expiring timber licence in its traditional territory. Filed in a BC Supreme Court last week, the application for judicial review from ’Wuìk̓inux̌v Nation seeks to overturn an August 2025 decision… that gave Interfor a three-year extension to log an estimated 50,000 cubic metres of timber. The court application argues that allowing a third party to continue harvesting on the nation’s lands—without their consent and against their environmental concerns—is a step backward that the law no longer allows. The claim, which also names Interfor, arrives at a volatile moment for BC politics: by leaning on a landmark legal precedent set in December 2025, it lands squarely in the middle of a heated debate over how the province manages its natural resources in an era of reconciliation.

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Fibreglass pollution in Cowichan estuary raises concern

By Robert Barron
Lake Cowichan Gazette
February 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

North Cowichan wants something done about the growing amount of fibreglass pollution in the Cowichan estuary. Council passed a motion at its meeting on Feb. 4 that the municipality write a letter to senior levels of government and the appropriate regulatory authorities asking that they raise awareness of the issue and take action to deal with the problem. Coun. Christopher Justice, who made the motion, said that the issue of derelict and deteriorating fibreglass boats is something that is becoming more acute in local harbours and waterways. …North Cowichan Mayor Rob Douglas said the municipality must signal its support for the continued operation of the Western Forest Products sawmill, which operates in that area. He said he spoke to officials at the mill before the council meeting. “They advised me that they are not aware of any fibreglass contamination coming from the mill site,” Douglas said.

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Alberta spending $400M on new water bombers for aging firefighting fleet

By Dayne Patterson
CBC News
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Alberta is spending $400 million to add five new water bombers to its aging firefighting fleet over the next several years. The deal with Calgary-based De Havilland Aircraft is expected to see the first amphibious plane delivered in 2031. The Canadair DHC-515 plane can skim bodies of water and fill its 6,100-litre tank in about 12 seconds. …Premier Danielle Smith said the money is separate from the $160 million the province spends on its wildfire response each year. …The province says 18 air tankers were available to respond to wildfires last year, four of which were Alberta-owned and -contracted. Those four were built between 1986 and 1988. Loewen said the aging planes still have life left in them, but doesn’t want to wait until their retirement to begin bolstering the fleet. The purchase is expected to create about 1,000 jobs while adding to the current fleet.

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Forestry report draws criticism

By Cheryl Jahn
CKPG Today
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE – [Local forester and forestry advocate Michelle Connolly says what’s being suggested in a recent report, titled “From Conflict to Care: BC’s Forest Future,” is off the mark.] “One of the core beliefs is that people are better at managing nature, than nature is, even though forests have been self-organizing and self-managing for millennia,” says Connolly. “The lack of self-awareness right up front in that report is troubling, because it means that they’re not aware of their own biases and belief systems that are guiding the things they’re putting in this report.” Kiel Giddens, Conservative MLA for Prince George-Mackenzie, says the report overlooks a lot of industry concerns.  …Giddens says, while the report misses the mark overall, he agrees with Objective Number 2 around regional decision making. …But Connolly says where the report truly hits the mark is over what is seen as a lack of transparency in the decision-making processes.

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The BC NDP promised to phase out glyphosate. Forestry companies are still spraying

By Ainslie Cruickshank
The Narwhal
February 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia’s three major political parties found rare common ground in the last provincial election on the forestry sector’s use of glyphosate….During the 2024 campaign, the BC Greens promised to ban the use of all chemical herbicides in forestry. The BC Conservatives committed to stop all aerial spraying of glyphosate. And the BC NDP, which was re-elected with a slim majority that October, promised to phase out the sector’s use of glyphosate altogether. Despite those commitments, chemical herbicides were sprayed across hundreds of hectares of forests in 2025, mostly in the area northeast of Prince George, B.C. …The area forestry companies reported spraying with herbicides each year in B.C. has declined since 1989, when it peaked at about 40,000 hectares, according to a 2019 report by FPInnovations, which describes itself as a private non-profit focused on research and development in the forestry sector.

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Museum Musings: Whistler’s remaining old-growth forests

By Kristina Swerhun
Pique News Magazine
February 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Whistler is fortunate to be surrounded by temperate rainforest, which is essential to the resort’s appeal as a tourist destination. Forests have also proven to be highly beneficial for human mental and physical health. …Old-growth forests, defined as undisturbed for at least 250 years, are vital to addressing the interconnected biodiversity and climate crises. …On the climate side, old-growth forests store vast amounts of carbon in living trees, dead wood, and undisturbed soil. …Since the early 1900s, Whistler’s forests have been logged extensively, and low-elevation old-growth forests that once covered the valley are now found only in limited areas. Commercial logging and thinning have continued by the Cheakamus Community Forest (CCF) since 2009, though old-growth logging was deferred in 2021. …Given that old-growth forests thrive on stability, attempting to manage them doesn’t make ecological sense, especially since they are already among the most climate-resilient ecosystems on Earth.

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Timber technology to get a $5.9M upgrade

University of Alberta – Folio
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Robert Froese

Essential scientific tools used to balance timber harvesting with environmental sustainability are getting a significant update, powered by a $5.9-million investment in University of Alberta research. Forest growth and yield models … are being redeveloped in an eight-year project led by professor Robert Froese, supported with funding from the Forest Resource Improvement Association of Alberta, Alberta Forestry and Parks and the Saskatchewan Ministry of Environment. The work will create a new generation of models … and will provide capabilities specific to Western Canada’s boreal and Rocky Mountain forests that foresters and land managers are asking for, says Froese, Endowed Chair in Forest Growth & Yield in the Faculty of Agricultural, Life & Environmental Sciences. The project will modernize tools used in forest management, for tasks such as timber supply analysis, and for forecasts of how forests will respond to thinning, reforestation activities, tree genetic improvement, innovative silviculture, conservation and climate change.

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University of Toronto forest conservation winter field camp marks 30 years with return to the woods

The Bay Today
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — The origins of one long-running University of Toronto field course trace back to a moment when debates over logging and white pine forests drew national attention. What began as a response to high-profile forestry protests south of Temagami in the mid-1990s has become an annual rite for forest conservation students: getting into the woods to see management practices firsthand. Thirty years on, the annual U of T Master of Forest Conservation Winter Field Camp still honours its original purpose: bringing students into the forest to learn from the land, forest professionals, and the connected communities. The 30th anniversary camp runs from today to Feb. 22 this year and will be based at the Mattawa Adventure Camp, near Mattawa. …At the time, concerns about forestry practices led to an invitation for local North Bay foresters to speak in Toronto. Instead of presenting there, North Bay foresters advised people to visit the site.

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First Nations chiefs file lawsuit claiming title over forest land in Quebec

By Matt Gilmour
CTV News
February 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

QUEBEC — A group of First Nations chiefs has filed a lawsuit claiming Aboriginal title over three large tracts of land. They say it’s to have more control over forestry but the implications go much further. For months, First Nations land defenders have been disrupting the logging industry on their traditional lands. It started in protest of Bill 97, the controversial forestry reform bill that Quebec scrapped in September. Nitassinan hereditary chief Dave Petiquay says the group of hereditary chiefs — from the Haute-Mauricie and Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean regions want the power to decide who can log on their lands and where. Lawyer Frédéric Bérard argues the Canadian constitution gives them that right. …The lawyer says, if successful, the suit would have repercussions for hereditary chiefs across the country and could impact future major infrastructure projects. The chiefs say they are willing to go all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada.

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Robin Hood-style activist group strikes again — this time in a forest

By Michelle Lalonde
Montreal Gazette
February 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Montreal — An activist group calling itself Les Robins des ruelles has followed its recent Robin Hood-style grocery store heists in Montreal with a claim to have sabotaged planned logging operations in a forest in the Mauricie region. …Translated as the Robins of the Alleyways, the group’s name is intended to evoke the legendary English folk hero who robbed from the rich to give to the poor. The group says on social media that although it delivered the booty to community kitchens and low-cost housing complexes, the grocery heists were political statements against the current economic order. …The latest such move by the group seems to be an action intended to discourage logging in some old-growth forests of Mékinac, in the Mauricie region. In a statement … the Robins say they have “armed the forest by driving steel bars through the trees on the site.” …The president of Forex Langlois Inc., said he is taking the sabotage claims “very seriously” 

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Four key sectors in Canada’s clean economy have potential ‘projects of national interest’ ready to be prioritized: report

Clean Energy Canada
February 19, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Canada should ensure its ‘project of national interest’ designation is helping build competitive clean industries, starting with four key focus areas, according to a new report from the One Canadian Clean Economy Task Force. These focus areas—clean electricity transmission, critical minerals refining, electric vehicle charging, and sustainable modular homebuilding—present opportunities to draw out the greatest possible value from our natural resources, build high-productivity industries, expand export opportunities, and leverage our domestic market. The task force’s new report, Connecting the Dots, highlights potential ‘projects of national interest’ within these four sectors that could be realized in Canada today including modular housing hubs in Ontario and B.C. to drive the construction of more affordable homes with Canadian construction materials. …The One Canadian Clean Economy Task Force is made up of members representing companies across critical minerals, batteries, clean transportation, clean buildings, forest products, clean electricity, and clean technology. 

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Health & Safety

BioNorth Energy’s Craig Brightman: WPAC’s Latest Safety Hero

By Gordon Murray
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
February 17, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

Craig Brightman

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada is pleased to announce our latest safety hero—Craig Brightman, Second-Class Power Engineer and Supervisor at BioNorth Energy. Craig consistently shows exceptional safety leadership. Known for going above and beyond in every aspect of his work, Craig leads effective safety meetings, ensuring his team knows not just the “what” but the “why behind safety work practices. “Craig cares deeply about doing things the right way, says Trevor Murdock, HS&E Coordinator at BioNorth Energy. “He is relentless in his pursuit of excellence.” …The Wood Pellet Association remains committed to celebrating the people whose dedication helps ensure we all return home safety at the end of each day. By recognizing their efforts, we reinforce our shared responsibility for safety and increase awareness of the actions we take every day to make our industry safer.

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WorkSafeBC Health and Safety Enews – February

WorkSafeBC
February 20, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

The WorkSafeBC February eNews highlights fresh tools, safety insights and upcoming opportunities to strengthen workplace health and safety. The newsletter opens with a spotlight on new safety posters designed to prompt safer conversations on topics like responsibilities, bullying, harassment and preventing slips and falls, with some available in multiple languages. It then shares new resources on fall prevention and commercial fishing safety, and summaries of recent incident investigations involving serious injuries across sectors including mining, construction and agriculture. A key operational update previews changes to worker injury reporting, as reporting by fax or mail will be phased out in March 2026 in favour of an improved online system. Updated payroll reporting guidance clarifies that cash tips on T4 slips no longer need to be separately tracked in assessable payroll. The eNews also invites participation in several events, including the Day of Mourning on April 28, a safety conference on Vancouver Island, and a webinar on preventing cargo securement mistakes.

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