Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

Can reforming BC Timber Sales fix timber shortage?

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
January 23, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Nelson Bennett

An NDP government has had no small part in breaking B.C.’s forest industry… but can an NDP government now fix it? …Premier David Eby pledged to work towards an assured harvest of 45 million cubic metres annually, which would be an improvement of the current harvest levels, and last week, Forests Minister Ravi Parmar announced a new task force tasked with reforming BC Timber Sales, which manages 20% of the province’s AAC. …B.C.’s forest sector faces a plethora of challenges, including current softwood lumber duties, a threat of additional 25-per-cent tariffs on lumber exports and metastasizing government rules and regulations that have increasingly restricted access to timber, the supply of which had already been reduced by past pine beetle infestations and wildfires. More than a dozen sawmill and pulp mills have permanently shuttered in B.C. in the past four years. B.C. lumber producers face the prospect of softwood lumber duties doubling next year, and there’s now the added fear of 25% tariffs being imposed by the Donald Trump administration. 

Domestically, the threat to B.C.’s struggling forest sector comes from federal and provincial policies that increasingly restrict access to the working forests. …Since coming to power in 2017, the BC NDP has implemented a rash of new policies and regulations crimping the timber supply, including old growth harvesting moratoria, new forest landscape plans, ecosystem-based land management, increasing parks and protected areas, shared land-use decision-making with First Nations and caribou habitat protection plans. …The shrinkage in the timber supply has not only put sawmills out of business, but has also affected secondary manufacturing, such as pulp and paper mills. …In an attempt to address some of concerns with access to fibre, Parmar last week announced a six-month review of BC Timber Sales. One of the goals of the review is to provide “predictable and reliable market access to fibre.”

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Summary Wrap-Up: 80th Annual Truck Loggers Association Convention and Trade Show

The Tree Frog News
January 23, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Tree Frog News has been featuring the panels and speakers from the Truck Loggers Association convention over the last week. For those who missed the coverage, here are the summarized stories from the panels, presentations, and discussions – all written by the Tree Frog’s very own editors!

Day One – January 15, 2025

Day Two – January 16, 2025

Day Three – January 17, 2025

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Business & Politics

Trump’s Lumber Tariffs and Disaster Recovery

By the Editorial Board
Wall Street Journal
January 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

President Trump said, “We don’t need Canada to make our cars. We don’t need their lumber because we have our own forests,” he said. “We don’t need their oil and gas.” Mr. Trump is wrong on all three, but we’ll focus on lumber. The U.S. doesn’t produce enough lumber to meet domestic demand and thus imports about a third of the softwood used in home construction, mostly from Canada. …Mr. Trump’s tariff threat has created uncertainty for lumber wholesalers and contractors that could delay rebuilding. The U.S. can’t ramp up lumber production in the near term to meet domestic demand, so contractors will have to eat the tariff cost on lumber from Canada or import more from other countries, which would be expensive. If Mr. Trump wants to increase U.S. lumber production, he could open up more federal land for logging. …More tariffs will punish Americans trying to rebuild. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

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War on Canada, starring Donald Trump, is getting lousy reviews over a nonsensical plot

By Ian Pattison, retired editor
The Chronicle Journal
January 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Doug Ford & Donald Trump

If Donald Trump’s first term was a comedy of errors, this one is already a horror show with a supporting cast of villains and Canada as an intended victim. The U.S. president made a rash of dangerous promises to get elected and just nine weeks in he is stalking his northern neighbour with a vengeance. …The hubris here is breathtaking. A century-and-a-half of proximate friendship and mutual dependence is in danger of evaporating. …The U.S. does need Canadian lumber. Canada is one of the world’s largest producers and exporters of softwood lumber. In 2023, the U.S. imported 28.1 million cubic meters of softwood lumber from Canada – 30% of its supply – primarily for residential and commercial construction. Other sources such as Germany and Sweden can’t hope to match Canadian output. …The U.S. does need Canadian oil. …The U.S. does need Canadian natural gas. …The U.S. doesn’t need Canadian automobiles per se but it does need Canadian automakers.

Additional coverage in Prince George Daily News, by Peter Ewart: Which way Canada in the face of US tariffs?

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Trump tells World Economic Forum U.S. doesn’t need Canadian oil, gas, autos or lumber

By Luca Caruso-moro
BNN Bloomberg
January 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

US President Donald Trump says his country does not need to import Canadian oil, gas, autos or lumber. … Canada has been very tough to deal with over the years,” he told the World Economic Forum in Davos. “We don’t need them to make our cars. We don’t need their lumber because we have our own forests,” he continued. “We don’t need their oil and gas.” …If the United States were to wean itself off of Canadian exports, it would upend the established trade relationship between the two countries. For example, Canada supplies the lion’s share of the United States’ crude oil imports – more than the rest of the world combined. …Also in 2022, Canada’s total forestry exports were valued at $45.6 billion, with the majority destined for the United States. …Trudeau said Canada is “ready to respond in a strong way, but in a way that will be stepping up, gradually.”  

In related coverage: 

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Trump’s trade war threat pushes Ottawa to bust up interprovincial trade barriers

By Laura Osman and Joanna Smith
The Logic
January 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Scott Moe & Doug Ford

OTTAWA — Donald Trump’s threats of sweeping tariffs on Canadian imports are spurring Ottawa and the provinces to get busy dismantling long-standing trade barriers within the country, Internal Trade Minister Anita Anand said. Removing the impediments—an unrealized policy goal of governments throughout decades—could strengthen Ottawa’s hand in negotiations with the new U.S. president, Anand added. …“There is no question in my mind that reducing internal barriers to trade is beneficial for the Canadian economy, and it’s also beneficial in terms of our negotiations on tariffs with the US.” The federal, provincial and territorial governments plan to hold an urgent meeting next week of the Committee on Internal Trade, which oversees the implementation of the 2017 Canadian Free Trade Agreement, to discuss how to move more quickly. The agreement serves as a rulebook for trade within Canada, with the still-unrealized goal of allowing free movement of people, goods, services across provincial boundaries.

Related coverage in:

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Loss of San Group tax revenue could mean reduced services, tax hikes in Port Alberni

By Carla Wilson Carla Wilson
Victoria Times Colonist
January 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Port Alberni may have to cut ­services and raise property taxes to help make up for lost revenue in the wake of forestry company San Group going into creditor protection, says the city’s mayor. San Group already owed almost $1 million in property taxes from last year. “We are in the process right now of reviewing possible ­service cuts, so we are looking at that as an option,” Mayor Sharie Minions said Friday. “Because there’s last year’s unpaid [tax] that has to be accounted for and then the budget impact for this year as well.” The final budget amount or property tax impact are not yet known, because council is still working on the draft budget, expected to be approved by March 10. …Many of the unsecured ­creditors are based in Port Alberni, a community with a population of just under 28,000 in 2022, according to Statistics Canada. Minions said the impact on the city is “huge.”

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B.C. rejects calls for Paper Excellence investigation as federal probe falters

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
January 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government has turned down a petition to investigate Canada’s largest forestry company at a time when a federal probe into the firm faces the prospect of total collapse. On December 2, 2024, the national Standing Committee on Natural Resources unanimously passed a motion summoning Paper Excellence owner Jackson Wijaya to testify before lawmakers—an order that was enforceable with a legal subpoena if necessary. …Charlie Angus, the NDP’s natural resources critic and member of Parliament for Timmins–James Bay, said Wijaya’s expanded ownership over APP represents a break down in government oversight. …the probe came to a grinding halt when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau … prorogued Parliament. That act wiped out the work of all parliamentary committees, including the motion to summon Wijaya….When asked if B.C.’s Ministry of Forests would heed calls to launch its own investigation into Paper Excellence, a spokesperson deferred to the federal government. 

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Western Retail Lumber Association announces a major rebranding, with focus on members

My Michael McLarney
Hardlines – Home Improvement Industry
January 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Western Retail Lumber Association used its trade show, taking place now in Edmonton, as the platform for announcing a major rebranding initiative. After in-depth consultation with its members and board, partners, and key stakeholders, the WRLA has been renamed as Supply-Build Canada. The change is effective today. “As the association expands its advocacy efforts and external partnerships, the ‘Western Retail Lumber Association’ name became a misnomer,” says association president Liz Kovach. “The building supply industry encompasses building materials beyond lumber, and the association represents manufacturers, distributors, wholesalers, and other categories not represented by just retail.” Because many of the association’s members, especially on the supplier side, have offices and production outside of the West, the new name intends to capture that, “making a wholesale change of name both necessary and timely,” Kovach adds.

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New marching orders are in for B.C.’s cabinet. They sideline the environment, observers warn

By Ainslie Cruickshank and Shannon Waters
The Narwhal
January 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

…B.C. Premier David Eby has directed his cabinet to prioritize economic development and make it easier for corporate interests to feel confident investing in the province. Eby’s new mandate letters for cabinet focus heavily on finding ways to support B.C.’s industries — including forestry, mining and oil and gas development — by speeding up permitting processes and reducing regulatory burdens… “There were virtually no environmental directions in the letters that weren’t qualified by industry interests or by economic considerations,” said Jessica Clogg, the executive director at West Coast Environmental Law. …Sarah Korpan, government relations for Ecojustice, said the new mandates signal “the environment is nothing more than an afterthought” for the NDP government. …a government spokesperson said the NDP’s commitments to protecting old-growth forests and 30 per cent of the province’s land and water by 2030 remain intact. …Eby’s letter to new Forests Minister Ravi Parmar mentions old-growth forests only once. 

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Ontario Regional Chief Abram Benedict issues statement on Canada-U.S. relations

Chiefs of Ontario
January 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Toronto, Ont.—Ontario Regional Chief Abram Benedict has issued a statement on the relationship between Canada and the United States: I wish to congratulate President Donald Trump on his recent election. I also want to make clear to his government, all levels of Canadian governments, and to Ontario First Nations Leadership, that the Chiefs of Ontario will continue to advocate for the rights and interests of all 133 First Nations in Ontario. …President Trump has made threats to Canada, including annexation of the country and coercion through economic force. For First Nations, it echoes the colonial rhetoric that we’ve dealt with for centuries. …Engaging in costly economic confrontations or extracting natural resources cannot come at the expense of First Nations’ inherent and Treaty rights nor our sovereignty. Rather, it must be done in collaboration and with the spirit of reconciliation. There are no natural resources in this country that are not on First Nations’ lands. 

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New Brunswick pulp mills forced to make changes in face of rising NB Power bills

By John Chilibeck
The Telegraph-Journal
January 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

AV Group Canada, which runs pulps mills in Nackawic, just west of Fredericton, and in Atholville near Campbellton in the province’s north, warns that NB Power’s rates are making it uncompetitive against other firms around the world. Irving Paper says it will reduce operations at its Saint John mill again by half, to deal with the high electricity cost, for an undetermined period. “The current situation regarding escalating power costs… has serious consequences for our facilities,” said Mike Legere, for AV Group Canada. The company employs 1,200, making it the dominant player in both small towns. Energy makes up one-quarter of AV’s input costs at its pulp mills, second only to wood fibre, he said. …And Irving Paper said it welcomed the third-party audit. Since last April, when rates went up, it has warned that New Brunswick’s industrial rates are having a negative impact on the provincial economy. 

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Port of Québec announces appointment of Olga Farman as Chief Executive Officer

By the Port of Quebec
Cision Newswire
January 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

QUÉBEC – The Port of Québec’s Board of Directors is pleased to announce the appointment of Olga Farman as CEO, succeeding Mario Girard’s fourteen-year service in that position. As a member of the Board since 2020 and its Chair since last June, Me Farman, who will take office on February 1, 2025, understands the realities and challenges of the Port. …Ms Olga Farman was a corporate lawyer, until very recently, the managing partner of the Québec office of Norton Rose Fulbright Canada. She is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, Beneva, insurance & financial services, and the Fondation du Musée de la civilisation de Québec. Ms. Farman is a member of the Québec Bar and holds a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) degree and an MBA from Université Laval. She has received multiple awards and distinctions throughout her remarkable career.

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Finance & Economics

Tariff uncertainty hangs over Bank of Canada’s 1st rate decision of 2025

By Craig Lord
Global News
January 27, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The Bank of Canada is being pulled in a few different directions ahead of its first interest rate decision of the year on Wednesday. On one hand, there are signs of trouble bubbling up in underlying inflation that could make an argument for keeping borrowing costs higher for longer. On the other: Donald Trump has reiterated threats to impose tariffs of 25% on Canadian goods that could be set to take effect mere days after the central bank’s rate decision. …A trade blow like that would normally push the Bank of Canada towards steeper rate cuts in a bid to salvage economic growth. But dropping rates too quickly at a time when the loonie is already struggling risks fuelling more inflation on imports from the US. Economists say they’re betting the Bank of Canada will go ahead with another cut.

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Lumber prices remain flat through the start of 2025 amid uncertainty

By Joe Pruski
RISI Fastmarkets
January 24, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Trends in many framing lumber markets were unchanged amid persistent uncertainty regarding tariffs and frigid temperatures across much of the US. …Western Canadian producers sold cautiously while awaiting clarity on potential tariffs. Buyers had few immediate needs and were content operating with lean inventories despite the threat of volatility. Prices were little changed in overall dull trading. Lumber futures tracked a similar course in terms of interest, but downside was evident as the large premium in the front month eroded. The board fell each day week to date. Meanwhile, subfreezing temperatures across the South and historic snowstorms along the Gulf Coast brought Southern Pine trading to a near standstill. Traders operated with widely diverse views of whether President Trump’s threats of tariffs of up to 25% on Canadian imports as early as February 1 will actually become a reality.

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Chemicals industry, freight rails brace for Trump tariffs on Canada, Mexico

By Lori Ann LaRocco
CNBC News
January 22, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

U.S. trade with Canada and Mexico is back in Trump’s crosshairs with the tariff threat. …Much of the focus has centered on autos but Canada is also the top trading partner of the U.S. for critical chemicals, an industry now bracing for the potential impact. …Mineral firms in Canada are considered domestic sources under Title III of the Defense Production Act and have received U.S. federal funding for critical minerals projects in Canada. …Canada is also the largest supplier of U.S. energy imports, including crude oil, natural gas, and electricity. …Rand Ghayad, chief economist at the Association of American Railroads, said the interconnected rail network between the U.S. and Canada is a cornerstone of North American trade, underpinning economic growth and supply chain resilience. …The inflationary effects from tariffs will take some time to materialize, as these costs will need to be passed through to end buyers.

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‘A complete realm of uncertainty’: Alberta builders prepare for possible tariff impact

By Timm Bruch
CTV News
January 24, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Calgary’s construction industry is hoping the threat of American tariffs doesn’t slow its momentum in 2025. …Bill Black, the head of the Calgary Construction Association, says when it comes to certain building materials, the tariffs could cause unrepairable damage. “Lumber suppliers selling are obviously going to feel a really significant impact on their volume that goes into the U.S.,” Black said. “The overall viability of the lumber business is based on a blend of the two markets, and if one market becomes unfeasible because of tariffs, that then puts pressure on the operating businesses. “That could impact their ability to service the Canadian market as well.” …The city has seen consecutive years of a record number of housing starts, and those in the sector don’t want to lose vital momentum. …Alberta’s forest ministry reiterated the importance of cross-border trade Friday, saying there’s still optimism a tariff-stopping solution can be found.

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Tariff threats highlight gaps in West Kootenay’s forest sector preparedness

By Samantha Holomay
Castanet
January 23, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Tariff plans have raised questions about the West Kootenay’s forest sector preparedness. U.S. President Donald Trump has doubled down on his plans to place tariffs one of the West Kootenay’s most profitable sectors. In an interview with Castanet, Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar said the province plans to respond by instituting regulatory tariffs, speeding up permitting, and diversifying the countries B.C. exports wood to. “Minister of Finance, Brenda Bailey, relayed yesterday what the job and economic impacts of this Trump tariff would be on B.C.. At the same time, he also said that we are much better positioned than other provinces because we have done good work diversifying our economy,” said Parmar. …Some industry experts and opposition MPs argue that … the country has had ample warning time to address trade barriers embedded in the Canadian Free Trade Agreement (CFTA). Other leaders, however, have advised government officials not to impose retaliatory tariffs.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Wildfire Risks May Demand Stricter Building Codes

By Ian Madsen, Senior Policy Analyst
Frontier Centre for Public Policy
January 25, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

The recent devastating and immense wildfires in Southern California that destroyed tens of thousands of structures inspire much sympathy. Soon, thoughts will turn to rebuilding the burned-out homes, businesses and public buildings. This brings up a pertinent question: will the new buildings be as vulnerable to wildfires as the old ones? As in the similarly extensive blazes in Jasper… and West Kelowna, the conventional building materials have included lumber, plywood, oriented strand board, window frames and various plastics, all of which are flammable. …It does not have to be this way –builders have alternatives. Fire-resistant structural wooden beams and posts are available. Builders of so-called ‘mass timber’ high-rise buildings are employing them, including in Canada, but they are not in widespread use. …Thus far, Canadians have shown little appetite, whether at federal, provincial or municipal levels, to mandate costlier higher fire-resistance standards in home building and other construction. 

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Huge tower made of wood is unlike anything else under construction in Toronto

Canadian Reviews
January 22, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Toronto’s skyline is getting some company in the form of a new generation of tall towers constructed out of wood, and the first of the bunch is already making headway. The University of Toronto’s new Academic Wood Tower is quickly sprouting… The 14-storey institutional building designed by Patkau Architects and MacLennan Jaunkalns Miller Architects was first proposed in 2018, but it already had a bit of a head start before work even began. …A crane was erected in November 2023, and work on assembling the mass-timber structural frame has gradually progressed in the 14 months since. Timber beams now stretch to the seventh floor of the tower, meaning the building is now approximately halfway towards its final height. …Once complete, the building will stand as Canada’s tallest academic wood building, as well as the tallest timber-framed structure in the country overall. 

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Forestry

Canadian Institute of Forestry and Society of American Foresters Announce 2026 joint National Conference and AGM in Alberta

Canadian Institute of Forestry
January 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Mattawa, ON – The Canadian Institute of Forestry (CIF-IFC) is excited to announce that the 2026 National Conference and 118th Annual General Meeting will take place in Calgary, Alberta, from October 5-8, 2026. This landmark event, hosted in collaboration with the Society of American Foresters (SAF) and the CIF-IFC Rocky Mountain Section, will unite forestry professionals, practitioners, and students from across North America and beyond under the theme, “Leading from where we are for a brighter future.” The event will showcase the leaders of today and empower the leaders of tomorrow to begin acting now to make the world they want to see. …The Conference will serve as a platform to address pressing issues such as climate change, biodiversity, and sustainable forestry and natural resources management while highlighting innovative approaches to ensure a vibrant and resilient future for forests globally.

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Forest Stewardship Council Newsletter

Forest Stewardship Council
January 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada
  • How FSC is using Google Earth Engine to monitor forest degradation and support EUDR compliance: The Forest Stewardship Council is leveraging cutting-edge technology to better monitor and protect the world’s forests. 
  • Introducing Verified Impact is FSC’s evolving approach to monitoring, conservation, and improvement of ecosystem services in forests.
  • Taiwan Becomes First in Asia-Pacific to Achieve 100% FSC Certification for Public Forests: With 100% of public forests now certified under the Forest Stewardship Council their certification covers nearly 1.6 million hectares, representing 71.5% of Taiwan’s total forest area—the highest certification rate in the region.
  • FSC Canada Invites Your Input on the Updated National Risk Assessment for Canada

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From L.A. to Jasper: How Canada can be better prepared for wildfires

By Ricardo Pelai and Ryan Ness
The Hill Times in Canadian Climate Institute
January 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

January isn’t typically the time people talk about wildfires. But the devastating fires in Los Angeles have put this issue back into the headlines. Just six months ago, a similar disaster unfolded on a smaller scale north of the border in the Rocky Mountains, capturing global attention. This past summer’s wildfire in Jasper, Alberta, delivered a stark warning: Canada must urgently step up planning and prevention efforts to address the growing threat of wildfires. …As in L.A., the wildfire in Jasper didn’t come out of the blue. Experts have long warned of high and growing wildfire risk in the Jasper area, exacerbated by accumulated fuel from historical fire suppression and dead trees from pine beetle infestations. Eliminating wildfire risk entirely may not be possible for many communities, but it can be significantly reduced. Governments can use a range of tools and approaches to step up wildfire adaptation efforts.

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Kaslo Community Forest Completes Wildfire Risk Reduction Project with Support from FESBC

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
January 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kaslo, B.C. – As wildfires continue to increase in frequency and severity, the Kaslo and District Community Forest Society (KDCFS) completed a wildfire risk reduction project, covering approximately 8 hectares of KDCFS’s tenure and 2 hectares of Crown land within the Wildland Urban Interface. With funding support from the Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC), the fuel reduction work focused on selectively removing trees to reduce the high fuel content and excess forest debris within a high-use recreation area that has an extensive bike trail network. This fuel reduction treatment will help protect the community from wildfires and serve to enhance both wildlife habitat and recreational values. “As wildfire seasons grow longer and more intense, projects like this are critical for reducing fuels in forests near communities,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “My thanks go to the Kaslo and District Community Forest Society for taking on this important community-driven work…”

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Tree migration could help B.C. forests better prepare for climate change, University of BC study

By Mina Kerr-Lazenby
CTV News
January 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A new University of British Columbia study has pinpointed strategies to help local forests adapt to climate change. …the eight-year study found ways forest ecosystems can be better prepared for the climate threat, with a focus on mitigating the loss of the Douglas fir tree. …professor and co-author of the study Suzanne Simard, said the project looked at the process of relocating Douglas firs that are already adapted to dry, hot weather, further north. …Opting for a two-pronged approach, researchers also explored how various routes of harvesting and regenerating forests would affect the migrated seedlings’ attempt to grow in the face of climate change. Researchers tried various avenues, from clear-cutting to retaining larger densities of the tallest Douglas fir trees, said Simard.

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B.C.-based climate activist deported to Pakistan after protest charges

By Darryl Greer
The Canadian Press in Prince George Citizen
January 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Zain Haq & Sophia Papp

British Columbia-based environmental activist Zain Haq was aboard a plane in Toronto on Sunday afternoon, awaiting a nearly 14-hour flight to Pakistan. But Haq was not on the plane by choice. He was being deported following the expiry of a temporary residency permit and a failed bid by his Canadian wife to sponsor him to stay. …Haq initially came to Canada on a student visa from Pakistan. He co-founded the activist group Save Old Growth and pleaded guilty to mischief charges in 2023 over his role in environmental protests that blocked Metro Vancouver roadways. He was granted a temporary resident permit last spring, but it expired in October, and Haq’s challenge of his deportation in federal court was unsuccessful.

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Forest sector top of mind

By Lorne Doerkson, MLA for Cariboo-Chilcotin
The Williams Lake Tribune
January 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Lorne Doerkson

In recent years, the B.C. forestry sector has been characterized by mill closures, permitting delays, and job losses. …Last week, I met with forests minister Ravi Parmar to bring my concerns to his attention. Though the main focus of our conversation was the forest industry, many of the permitting issues fall under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship as well. We discussed the unpredictability of fibre supply and the burning of cull piles, which I am adamantly opposed to. …B.C. mills will only survive if the fibre approval process is streamlined and access to fibre is expedited. Why wouldn’t we want to simultaneously support mill operations in B.C. and reduce waste?  We must simplify regulations to allow fire-damaged timber and residual fibre to be used efficiently. …A review of BCTS is great but…. time is for sure of the essence! Our industry can’t wait any longer!!

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Love for the outdoors inspired Willow Ellsworth to pursue a career in forestry

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
January 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Willow Ellsworth

Willow Ellsworth’s love for the outdoors inspired her to pursue a career in forestry… From BC Timber Sales she later joined the Ministry of Forests in the Authorizations department, working on road permits, cruising, and log scaling. In 2022, she obtained her Registered Forest Technologist designation and Interior Log Scaling license. Ellsworth started working with NorthPac in 2021 as a Forest Technologist and within a year transitioned to the role of Shipping Coordinator and finally Log Yard and Waste Supervisor. …“I am primarily involved in the Coast Tsimshian Resources LP and NorthPac’s fibre utilization project,” Willow noted. “Initially, we were shipping sawlogs via log cars to Dunkley, and the program has since expanded to introducing a chipper on site and shipping chips to Canfor in Prince George. FESBC funding has enabled NorthPac to haul pulp logs and small tops that are usually left to burn in the bush.”

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Indigenous Resource Network cautions BC government about potential Indigenous impacts when reviewing forestry policies

Indigenous Resource Network
January 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Calgary, AB – The Indigenous Resource Network (IRN) is cautioning British Columbia Premier David Eby and BC Forests Minister Ravi Parmar to consider how forest policy changes could potentially harm Indigenous forestry workers and operators as the new government has committed to reviewing provincial forestry policies. The BC NDP signed an agreement-in-principle with the BC Greens to create a stable provincial government. The IRN is particularly concerned that the agreement commits the government to undertake yet another BC forests policy review as the province is facing expected softwood lumber duties and U.S. tariffs on February 1. We invite the premier and minister to meet with the Indigenous Resource Network to discuss how the province can balance Indigenous forestry resource management with environmental stewardship. We also invite them to view our documentary project Stewards of the Forest: Indigenous Leadership in Forestry to witness how Indigenous forestry operators are balancing resource development with responsible stewardship.

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LA fires a reminder that B.C. wildfire prevention is priority one

By Joe Nemeth, BC Pulp and Paper Coalition
Business in Vancouver
January 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Creating these fuel-free zones around communities and neighbourhoods stops a fire in its tracks because there is little or nothing to accelerate their rapid and enormous growth. In 2024, a delegation of professional foresters from B.C. toured Finland to see what we could learn from how others manage their forests. …Over the last 10 years, Finland has lost an annual average of 323 hectares of land to wildfires. Over the same period, B.C. has lost an annual average of 407,000 hectares. Why this vast difference? Finland has practised intensive forestry for decades. Foresters regularly enter stands to remove weak or damaged trees. …This fibre is then directed to nearby pulp and paper mills or community bio-energy plants. No fibre is wasted. …Another Finnish practice is to maintain logging roads, which are broken down and “put to bed” here after harvesting in an area is complete.

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Wildfire buffers explored by City of Powell River

By Paul Galinski
Powell River Peak
January 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

City of Powell River councillors will direct staff to proceed with the city’s wildfire hazard development permit designation to address areas susceptible to wildfire risk. At the January 21 committee of the whole meeting …director of planning services Jason Gow …presented information regarding the wildfire development permit area project. He said in the summer of 2024, Frontera Forest Solutions was retained by the city to lead implementation of a wildfire hazard development permit area. …this project will include the identification of areas susceptible to wildfire risk, and the development of accompanying guidelines and mapping products. …Gow said a wildfire buffer is measured as the distance extending outward from areas near burnable fuels, which are vegetated areas with potential to carry wildfire. …The committee voted unanimously to direct staff to proceed with using a 100-metre wildfire buffer as the basis for the city’s wildfire hazard development permit area designation.

 

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What Squamish learned from California’s wildfires

By Bhagyashree Chatterjee
The Squamish Chief
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In a place surrounded by breathtaking forests and rugged mountains, wildfire preparedness is more than just a precaution—it’s a community effort.  With climate change bringing longer, drier seasons, Squamish residents are coming together to protect their homes and neighbourhoods through the FireSmart program. Squamish faces heightened wildfire vulnerability due to a combination of topography, weather, and fuel accumulation. Squamish’s growing tourism and development also impact wildfire risks. Reflecting on lessons from the current and recent wildfires in California and beyond, Emily Wood, FireSmart co-ordinator, stressed preparation. “FireSmart is the best way to protect your home, and small steps like clearing debris or removing flammable vegetation can make a huge difference.” Wood also pointed to bylaws prohibiting highly flammable plants like cedar and juniper near structures. “These regulations are critical, but enforcement can be challenging,” she acknowledged.

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Tariff threats add to Nelson business uncertainty

By Tom Thompson
Nelson Star
January 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ken Kalesnikoff

What is the impact of a 25 per cent tariff on Canadian products being sold to the U.S.? Let’s look at forestry. Regionally there are local companies employing local people with good jobs, and supporting local contractors and spin- offs to dozens or hundreds of small businesses. The B.C. lumber industry is watching closely. Locally, members of the Interior Lumber Manufacturers such as Kalesnikoff, Atco Wood Products and Porcupine say it is obviously top of mind. Ken Kalesnikoff says there has not been much certainty in the forestry sector for many years, and the uncertainty of lumber tariffs is yet another challenge for the local forestry companies. As much as they don’t know the exact impact yet, it is a huge concern.

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Indigenous communities in B.C. and California promote cultural burns for disaster mitigation

By Santana Dreaver
CBC News
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West, US West

Joey Gonzales, a Tataviam and Chumash model and actor from southern California, is one of the thousands of Indigenous people in California who watched their homeland burn.  “What’s really missing is the Indigenous perspective on these fires, knowing that they could have been prevented.” Cultural burning is a traditional fire management practice that has been used by Indigenous peoples in Canada, the U.S. and around the world to eliminate fuel build-up that contributes to the intensity of wildfires and promotes the regrowth of native species that local Indigenous communities depend on… Mata-Fragua says it’s important for those involved in disaster mitigation to acknowledge and encourage Indigenous practices because Indigenous peoples have been caring for those lands for thousands of years and understand the geography of their regions.

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B.C. Timber Sales review heavy on economics, light on environment

By Bill Metcalfe
Ladysmith Chemainus Chronicle
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government has tasked new Forest Minister Ravi Parmar with reviewing its lead timber agency, B.C. Timber Sales. The Jan. 15 news release announcing the review, and Premier David Eby’s mandate letter to Parmar, both downplay the environment in favour of the business side of forestry… There is no mention of watersheds, biodiversity, wildlife, and climate change in either the news release announcing the review or in the mandate letter, which mentions old growth once in passing. Asked why it is not mentioned in the above six reasons for the BCTS review, or in Eby’s mandate letter, Parmar said, “I’m fully committed to fulfilling my obligations on the old growth action plan. … Biodiversity, taking care of our lands, being good stewards of our land, is critical to me, and it’s going to be a huge part of this review.”

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New forestry advocate society presses for working forest legislation

By Nelson Bennet
Business in Vancouver
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In a mandate letter to Ravi Parmar, B.C.’s new minister of Forests, Premier David Eby directs Parmar to somehow come up with “a sustainable land base” that will ensure an annual harvest of 45 million cubic metres of timber to help support a floundering forest industry. That could be a tough order to fill, given the caveat attached to Parmar’s mandate that he do this “while fulfilling our commitment to protect old growth.” Old growth, after all, has been estimated to make up about one quarter of B.C.’s annual allowable cut (AAC) overall, and 50 per cent of the coastal AAC… The single biggest uncertainty is dwindling access to raw timber. In its letter to political leaders, the society asks for a working forest protected through legislation.

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Mercer Peace River and Woodland Cree First Nation Extend Logging Partnership Agreement

Mercer International Inc.
January 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

PEACE RIVER, Alberta – Mercer Peace River Pulp and Woodland Cree First Nation have signed a historic agreement extending their co-ownership relationship of Peace River Logging. The renewed partnership extends their positive working relationship and reinforces their commitment to responsible forestry practices. …Mercer and Woodland Cree have co-owned Peace River Logging since 2004, and this new agreement ensures the long-term sustainability of the joint venture and secures the jobs of more than 80 local people. “Mercer Peace River is committed to working with Indigenous communities and we look forward to continuing our relationship with Woodland Cree First Nation,” said Roger Ashfield, Managing Director of Mercer Peace River.”

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Ottawa dragging its feet on protecting endangered caribou: B.C. conservation groups

By Brenna Owen
Canadian Press in the Victoria Times Colonist
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Southern mountain caribou are disappearing in British Columbia and the federal government has been dragging its feet for more than a decade on protecting the endangered herds, conservation groups say in a letter to the environment minister Steven Guilbeault. The letter sent on behalf of the Wilderness Committee, Wildsight (see their press release here) and Stand.earth said three populations of the caribou are in particularly steep decline as logging and other industrial development cuts through their habitat in eastern B.C. Wildsight’s Eddie Petryshen said successive federal governments and environment ministers have “kicked the can further down the road,” and that trend continues today. …Environment and Climate Change Canada did not immediately respond to a request for comment. …Predator reduction may be part of a comprehensive recovery strategy for endangered caribou, Petryshen said, but it doesn’t address the destruction and fragmentation of their habitat, which is the driving force behind their decline.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

B.C. First Nation leader clarifies Northern Gateway comment

By Derrick Penner
Vancouver Sun
January 22, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

The president of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs agreed that Canada faces “perilous times”, but walked back comments he made Tuesday that suggested he had reversed his opposition to the dormant Northern Gateway pipeline project. …“I sincerely apologize for any confusion,” Phillip added, with respect to his comments Tuesday that if Canada doesn’t “build that kind of infrastructure, Trump will and there will not be any consideration for the environment or the rule of law.” Phillip said his answer was still no to “large-scale, destructive resource projects,” such as Northern Gateway. …“Any natural resource development that is being planned must have the consent of First Nations involved and must follow high environmental standards, including not increasing our greenhouse gas emissions and contributing to global warming,” Tom said. …Premier David Eby, said “diversification has to be part of our key strategy,” but skirted a direct mention of Northern Gateway.”

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Health & Safety

Health and Safety News from WorkSafeBC

WorkSafe BC
January 23, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Here are some highlights from this months Safety News:

  • New first aid regulations roll out across B.C. The new first aid regulations have significantly changed the way many employers manage their first aid programs. Find out what actions three B.C. employers took to align with the changes that came into effect on November 1.
  • On January 8, OHS Policies and OHS Guidelines were updated to reflect the current exposure limits for styrene.
  • If you’re an employer with employees who drive for work, one way to help keep them safe is to develop and implement a winter driving safety policy and procedures.
  • To expand our services for employers and workers, WorkSafeBC has created a new role of occupational health and safety (OHS) advisor. OHS advisors will assist employers and workers in understanding their requirements under the Workers Compensation Act and the OHS Regulation

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