Region Archives: Canada

Business & Politics

West Fraser Announces Goodwill Impairment and Provides 2026 Operational Outlook

West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd.
January 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

VANCOUVER, BC — West Fraser Timber announced that it will record an impairment of its Lumber segment goodwill in the fourth quarter of 2025 due to persistently challenging economic conditions. The Company is also providing initial 2026 guidance for key product shipments, operational costs and capital expenditures. In Q4-2025, West Fraser expects to record an approximately $409 million non-cash impairment of goodwill as a result of the protracted downcycle that has caused management to recalibrate certain assumptions used in its annual goodwill impairment test. Adjustments to these assumptions include, but are not limited to, species-specific product pricing trends, lower demand and pricing for wood chip residuals, and the depth and duration of the current downcycle and its expected recovery. The impairment represents the entire amount of goodwill associated with the Company’s US lumber operations.

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Canada could be hit hardest by U.S. political upheaval, report warns

By Dorcas Marfo
CTV News
January 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

A new global risk assessment is warning that no country would be more “profoundly affected” by a political upheaval in the US than Canada. Published Monday, the Eurasia Group’s “Top Risks For 2026″ report cites deep economic, security and geographic ties that leave Canada especially exposed to instability south of the border. Eurasia Group, a political risk consultancy, identifies what it calls a potential U.S. “political revolution” – driven by U.S. President Donald Trump’s efforts to consolidate power, “capture the machinery of government, and weaponize it against his enemies” – as the most significant threats to global stability this year. Canada is exposed because it is closely tied to the US through geography, trade and defence, meaning sudden political or policy changes in Washington could have an outsized impact on Canada. Former foreign affairs minister Lloyd Axworthy warned that Canada must be prepared for a more aggressive and transactional US approach.

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PM Carney to host premiers this month as CUSMA talks ramp up

By Mike Le Couteur
CTV News
January 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Prime Minister Mark Carey is planning to host premiers in Ottawa later this month as the Canada-US-Mexico trade agreement (CUSMA) comes up for review later this year. The first ministers’ meeting, which will take place Jan. 29, comes just over a month after the last one. …Negotiations over the trilateral trade agreement were the focus of the last first ministers’ meeting, as the prime minister briefed premiers on what the federal government was doing ahead of the mandatory review of CUSMA, which is scheduled to be completed by July 1. Relief from punishing sectorial tariffs on steel, aluminum and forestry seems unlikely within the next six months, according to the prime minister. …All 13 premiers are expected to hold their own meeting the day before sitting down with Carney. …Canada continues to look for other export markets in the face of US tariffs.

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How Trump’s protectionist trade regime could survive a U.S. Supreme Court setback

By Mark Rendell
The Globe and Mail
January 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

A central pillar of US President Trump’s protectionist trade policy could be struck down early in the new year, but lawyers and trade experts expect the President to rapidly reconstruct his tariff regime using other legal tools while questions remain about whether companies will be able to secure refunds. …A negative decision would be an indictment of the haphazard way Trump has pushed through his protectionist agenda over the past year, and would create a headache for the US government, which has collected more than US$130-billion in tariff revenue using IEEPA that may need to be refunded. …Dozens of companies have already filed lawsuits in the US Court of International Trade to try to protect their right to a refund or position themselves at the front of the line for one. Canada has less of a stake in the Supreme Court case than some other countries. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Old-growth logging protesters could be prosecuted criminally, judge rules

By Roxanee Egan-Elliott
The Times-Colonist
January 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Protesters arrested for allegedly blocking forestry workers’ access to an area of the Upper Walbran Valley to protect old-growth trees — in violation of an injunction — could be prosecuted criminally rather than civilly, a judge has ruled. Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership, the forestry company applied for a court order asking the attorney general to take over contempt proceedings against those charged with breaching the injunction, who were initially charged with civil contempt of court. The company’s request was that the attorney general review the arrests to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to prosecute those arrested with criminal contempt. BC Supreme Court Justice Anthony Saunders granted the application, saying the test for whether there is evidence that could support a finding of criminal contempt against at least one person was clearly met. …The attorney general will have to decide whether to take on the prosecution. That decision could come at a hearing on Jan. 30.

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Reconciliation in B.C. is ‘government’s job, not the courts’: David Eby

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
January 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vaughn Palmer

The BC New Democrats are preparing legislation to discourage the courts from interfering in government reconciliation with Indigenous Nations, Premier David Eby said this week. “It is government’s responsibility, not the courts, to work with First Nations and address issues of reconciliation. … We’ll be amending the Declaration Act to ensure that that is clear.” The Declaration Act, and a related passage in the Interpretation Act, were cited by the BC Court of Appeal in overturning the province’s mineral claims regime. Both were invoked in passing by the BC Supreme Court in recognizing Aboriginal title over public and private land in Richmond. Eby has criticized both decisions as cases of judicial overreach. …“This is not the work of the courts to do on behalf of government.” …Yet in my reading of the debate on the two pieces of legislation, the government position was not as clear cut as Eby makes out.

Related coverage by:  

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Union wants laid-off Crofton mill workers to get federal support

By Michael John Lo
The Times-Colonist
January 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The union representing 350 Crofton mill workers facing layoffs next month wants federal money earmarked for softwood lumber workers to pay for early retirement for some of its members. Geoff Dawe, president of the Public and Private Workers of Canada, said he’s not sure why it’s taken so long for the provincial government to negotiate its share of a $50-million federal fund aimed at supporting softwood lumber workers. The fund is for income support and costs of re-training an estimated 6,000 forestry workers across the country. …Dawe wants some of that $50 million to go toward an early-retirement fund for members who will be out of work when forestry company Domtar starts laying off its Crofton workers on Feb. 3. …Dawe said the provincial and federal governments should bring back a lump-sum payment program for older mill workers that will “leave them some dignity.”

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UBC Faculty of Forestry announces new name reflecting expanded environmental leadership

By the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
January 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

VANCOUVER, B.C. — The University of British Columbia is renaming its Faculty of Forestry to the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship, marking a significant step in the evolution of one of Canada’s leading centres for environmental research, education and innovation. The change recognizes a shift underway across Canada and around the world: managing forests alone is no longer enough to solve today’s environmental challenges. Climate change, intensifying wildfires and floods, clean water scarcity, food insecurity, and accelerating biodiversity loss all threaten ecosystems and livelihoods alike. Responding to these crises requires ethical, responsible and sustainable management systems grounded in conservation, respect and education – this is environmental stewardship. Environmental stewardship reflects the faculty’s expanded role in climate adaptation, wildfire resilience, flood prevention, water and watershed protection, urban greening, food security, biodiversity conservation and management, greenspace management, environmental equity and the fast-growing low-carbon bioeconomy. …“This change reflects what we have already become,” said Dean Kozak. 

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Don’t miss out on the 81st Annual Truck Loggers Association Convention & Trade Show

BC Truck Loggers Association
January 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The convention is right around the corner and we’d love to see you! Tickets are selling quickly so be sure to get yours before they’re gone! This year’s event offers TLA members and non-members an all-inclusive registration pass, granting access to all sessions and events throughout the convention. Tickets to Suppliers Night, Lunch on the Trade Show Floor and the Loggers’ Dinner and Comedy Theatre can be purchased on an individual basis. Accommodation can be booked at the Westin Bayshore Hotel through the Read More link below. We will again be hosting a Live and Silent Auction at Suppliers’ Night on Friday, January 16, 2026. Donated items raise significant revenue for our TLA Forestry Education Fund which largely supports forestry student scholarships.

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Pulp Friction – A bird’s-eye view of the Crofton mill

By Zoe Blunt, Editor and director of Forest Action Network
The Watershed Sentinel
January 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

After decades of protests, environmental violations, government fines, and civil claims, it’s the end of an era. Crofton’s embattled pulp mill is shutting down after 68 years, leaving 350 workers without jobs and destabilizing dozens of businesses in the region. “The Crofton mill has been challenged for some time now,” Domtar’s Steve Henry said in December 2025. …The mill was once part of a recycling system of sorts; it was designed to turn waste from sawmills into energy, pulp, and paper. But a wave of sawmill closures has decimated BC’s pulp and paper industry. …The Crofton mill was so starved for feedstock it was reportedly importing wood chips from the US. …It’s possible that Domtar will try to sell the mill, or that it could become a worker-invested partnership like the Harmac mill, but prospective purchasers will certainly be wary of the toxic baggage and legal liabilities it carries.

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Look West: Premier’s mission to India supporting good jobs for British Columbians

By the Office of the Premier
Government of British Columbia
January 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Premier David Eby will lead a trade mission to India promoting British Columbia’s businesses, critical minerals and sustainable wood products, supporting work to build a more independent economy and creating more good jobs for people in British Columbia. … “India is a key market for B.C. with enormous opportunities for trade. This trade mission is about deepening our relationships, supporting good jobs in B.C. and strengthening our position as the economic engine of the new Canadian economy,” Premier Eby said. As India moves toward becoming the world’s third-largest economy, the Premier will highlight opportunities for sustainable forestry, clean energy and responsible mining through new partnerships that are available only in B.C. …During the mission, from Jan. 12-17, 2026, Premier Eby, along with Ravi Kahlon, Minister of Jobs and Economic Growth, will meet with government and business leaders in major centres of commerce and technology, such as New Delhi, Mumbai, Chandigarh and Bangalore.

Additional coverage in the Nanaimo News Bulletin, by Mark Page: Premier David Eby embarking on trade mission to India

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Industry eyes Crofton mill as replacement talks begins

By Justin Baumgardner
My Cowichan Valley Now
January 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Proponents from across the country have put forward ideas to repurpose the Crofton mill, including manufacturing, real estate and commercial uses. Domtar previously announced the mill would cease production, a move that would result in the loss of about 350 jobs and millions of dollars in property tax revenue for North Cowichan. Mayor Rob Douglas said the municipality would prefer to see industrial activity resume at the site to help bring workers back, but remains open to any proposal that would generate revenue and support the community. …Douglas said several companies have expressed interest since Domtar announced the closure last year, and discussions with the premier and other members of the provincial government have left him optimistic about the site’s future. …Ideas under consideration include another mill, an employee ownership model similar to Harmac in Nanaimo, real estate development, manufacturing facilities and a racetrack.

Related coverage in the Cowichan Valley Citizen, by Robert Barron: Job fair for workers at Crofton pulp mill planned for Jan. 15

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BC forestry: Endless change, constant woes

By Don MacLachlan
Resource Works
January 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Since 2018, notes forestry watcher David Elstone, the British Columbia government has introduced more than 43 measures, policies, plans, systems, laws, reviews and reports about and affecting the BC forest sector. Meanwhile, there have been a series of closures and curtailments (permanent, temporary or indefinite) of sawmills and pulp mills, and thus workforce reductions. “And the fibre-supply crisis has continued to worsen, and . . . the industry is in far worse condition than ever before.” Elstone’s basic message: “Government has been busy designing change rather than figuring out solutions and moving forward. …Kim Haakstad, CEO of the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) echoes the analysis “There’s been a significant amount of change that hasn’t settled itself into the system, and there’s been no look at what regulatory efficiency can be achieved to make processes clearer, more transparent, and more accountable.”

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Vanderhoof, B.C., facing long-term financial impacts of Canfor mill closure

By Hanna Petersen
CBC News
January 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The District of Vanderhoof, says it is now feeling the full financial impacts of Canfor’s 2024 Plateau sawmill closure and is facing a substantial loss of tax revenue for 2026. Canfor closed its sawmills in both Vanderhoof and Fort St. John, B.C., in December of 2024 citing “increasing regulatory complexity, high operating costs and the inability to reliably access economically viable timber.” Kevin Moutray is the mayor of The District of Vanderhoof, says the closure will create a loss of $580,000 in tax revenue equivalent to 11 per cent of its tax base. …Recent closures include the West Fraser’s sawmill in 100 Mile House and Domtar’s permanent closing of its plump mill in Crofton on Vancouver Island. “It’s difficult and sometimes action only happens in a crisis even though you sort of, can see some of it coming,” said Kurt Niquidet, B.C. Lumber Trade Council president and B.C. Council of Forest Industries chief economist.

Additional coverage by Kevin Moutray Mayor, District of Vanderhoof in the Terrace Standard: Vanderhoof mayor responds to impacts of the Canfor Plateau Mill closure

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Biofuel plant could bring the old mill site back to life, create jobs and boost the local economy

By Andrew Flynn
Fort Frances Times
January 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

For a town still feeling the loss of its paper mill more than a decade ago, the promise of new industry is tantalizing; 50 or more new jobs, a much-needed boost to the local economy, perhaps a stepping stone to attract new business or help those already here expand. …the plan to build a new $210-million biofuel plant in Fort Frances is coming close to fruition and it could be a game-changer for the region – if it breaks ground this fall as anticipated. After an exhaustive search, the team has settled on the former Resolute mill site for its pilot project, a refinery that can turn the byproducts of logging … into synthetic gas, diesel and aviation fuel. The town is close to an abundant feedstock source, in the heart of a small labour market, owns its own affordable power production and is not far from colleges primed to provide essential training.

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Maine mill accepts New Brunswick wood again, but producers still struggle to stay afloat

By Silas Brown
CBC News
January 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East, United States

Equipment at Woodland Pulp in Maine roared back to life in mid-December after a 60 day pause in operations, and now one of the state’s largest mills is again accepting wood from New Brunswick producers. …The general manager of the Carleton Victoria Forest Products Marketing Board says the news is welcome but not nearly enough to help embattled private woodlot owners in the province. “Everything is good news at this point, but it is not as good as it could be,” Kim Jensen said. With sales down by about two-thirds from last year, Jensen said some woodlot owners are deciding to pack it up, while others struggle on. Producers are happy to regain the lost market, but say many are still having trouble staying viable. …“A mill can stop and start up, maybe. But a private guy who loses his equipment, he’s lost everything. He’s not coming back.”

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Quebec’s St-Elzéar Cooperative sawmill modernizes with $32.7M AI investment

Newsy-Today
January 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Scierie St-Elzéar in Quebec, Canada, isn’t just a lumber mill; it’s a glimpse into the future of forestry. A $32.7 million investment in modernization, particularly in artificial intelligence (AI) and automation, is transforming the 80-year-old cooperative into a highly efficient, technologically advanced operation. …The core driver behind this shift is a growing labor shortage. …The St-Elzéar mill has reduced the number of personnel needed for planing operations from 16 to 8, while tripling productivity and boosting product quality by nearly 50%. This isn’t about replacing workers; it’s about shifting their roles. …The integration of AI isn’t limited to a single process. At Scierie St-Elzéar, AI-powered systems now identify wood species, allowing for the creation of more homogenous lumber batches for drying – a critical step in quality control. 

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One of Maine’s largest mills reopens to New Brunswick wood

By Adam Huras
The Telegraph-Journal
January 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, US East

One of Maine’s largest mills is again accepting Canadian wood from New Brunswick, after briefly halting shipments citing the cost of American tariffs. Woodland Pulp in Baileyville, Maine – situated on the banks of the St. Croix River a short drive across the border from St. Stephen – stopped purchases of New Brunswick timber in mid-October in the aftermath of higher US tariffs. Shortly after, it shut down completely for 26 days, citing a challenging global pulp market. That led to the temporary lay off of 144 employees. But now back in operation, Woodland Pulp says its full complement of staff is returning and that the decision was made to restart accepting Canadian fibre, including wood chips. …Spokesperson Scott Beal said it remains unclear how much the mill will purchase from New Brunswick sources going forward.. …Tariffs are paid by the importer. [to access the full story a Telegraph-Journal subscription is required]

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Finance & Economics

Canada sees rapid increase in imports that historically would go to U.S., says analyst

By Anam Khan
BNN Bloomberg
January 8, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Canada is becoming far more attractive in commodity goods to the rest of the world, as it diversifies its trade away from the US, says one analyst. Imports outpaced exports in October. Merchandise imports increased by 3.4% in October while exports increased by 2.1%. Because of this, Canada’s merchandise trade balance went from a surplus of $243 million in September to a $583 million deficit in October. …William Pellerin, a trade lawyer, said whether it be Malaysian kitchen cabinet manufacturers, or Chinese goods, he said “Canada is becoming far more attractive at lower pricing in many commodity goods and in many manufactured sectors.” On the other hand, the data shows exports to the US made up 67.3% of all Canadian exports, which is the lowest since the pandemic. …Cabinet and wood makers face a difficult challenge as they face a 25% tariff and lose access to the US market, said Pellerin.

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Lumber Futures Drop Below $530

Trading Economics
January 6, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures slid below $530 per thousand board feet, testing the lowest levels since October 2024, as weak near-term demand collided with abundant and re-emerging supply. Homebuilding activity remains subdued and mortgage borrowing costs are still elevated, restraining new starts and repair and remodel demand, while US housing starts have softened and 30-year mortgage rates entered January little changed near the mid-6% range. At the same time structural supply pressures are returning, with several panel and OSB mills ramping up or preparing to add capacity and shifts in North American output seeing Canadian curtailments largely offset by higher production in the US South, keeping physical availability ample and capping any upside. In the meantime, inventory and futures market activity increased over the holiday period, amplifying downside moves when buyers stayed sidelined after year-end and seasonal restocking remained muted. [END]

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B.C. economy faces weak growth in 2026 as forestry struggles

By Daisy Xiong
Business in Vancouver
January 8, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Following a year of economic uncertainty, BC anticipates some growth in 2026, though it is expected to be limited. Deloitte Canada forecasts a 1.6% GDP growth for BC in 2026, slightly up from the forecasted 1.4% growth in 2025, according to its report titled Reset over resolutions: Building economic momentum in 2026. …Although BC hosts two of the five major nation-building projects announced last fall—LNG Canada Phase 2 and the Red Chris Mine—weakness in the forestry sector offsets this positive momentum, according to the global professional services firm. …The impact is already visible. Burnaby-based Interfor Corporation announced reductions across North America and the indefinite halt of operations in Grand Forks, BC, last fall. …Deloitte attributes the province’s minor economic growth forecast in part to the B.C. government’s efforts to secure more federal support for the forestry industry.

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Weak economic growth forecast for B.C. in 2026, says new Deloitte report

By Chad Pawson
CBC News
January 7, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s GDP is forecast to increase by 1.6% this year, according to a report from Deloitte, with the anemic growth tied directly to the crushing tariffs being faced by the province’s forestry sector. “I’m not surprised to hear it,” said 100 Mile House Mayor Maureen Pinkney. “We have a resource that just automatically grows out of the ground that we can’t seem to manufacture and, and sell properly for that matter. You know, it’s a very sad state.” The B.C. forestry sector has seen a wave of mill closures over the last few years, including the West Fraser Timber mill in 100 Mile House in December. …The Deloitte report said B.C. “will struggle to withstand” tariffs imposed on its forestry sector by the US. …Deloitte’s economic prediction is a small increase from the province’s previous forecast of 1.3% in growth for 2026. …Across Canada, Deloitte forecasts growth will slow to 1.5 % this year from 1.7% in 2025.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

New study questions the ‘conventional wisdom’ that taller buildings are worse for the environment

By Lloyd Alter
Lloyd Alter Substack
January 7, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Just one more storey? The embodied greenhouse gas impacts of adding height, slab thickness, building code and design tranches is a paper written by Avery Hoffer of the Department of Civil and Mineral Engineering, University of Toronto, which contradicts just about everything I have written about building height. Hoffer, seen presenting his work last year, concludes: “Don’t fear height, fear bad design.” …Hoffer says on his concluding slide, “historical skepticism of tall buildings does not hold up when evaluated through the lens of embodied GHG emissions.” I wrote in my recent book, “When you look at the world through the lens of upfront carbon, everything changes.” Same lens, opposite conclusion! Hoffer references my two favourite studies: Francesco Pomponi’s “Decoupling density from tallness in analyzing the life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of cities”, which found that high-density low-rise buildings have half the life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions of high-density high-rise buildings.

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Study shows costs and sustainability similar across steel, concrete and timber

By Peter Saunders
Canadian Consulting Engineer
December 18, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

WSP, mcCallumSather and ArcelorMittal unveiled the results of a theoretical case study at The Buildings Show earlier this month, which showed the costs and sustainability of using steel, concrete or timber are similar for a typical 12-storey, 287,000-sf, L-shaped residential condominium tower in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). A conference session titled ‘The Triple Bottom Line of Structural Materials: Cost, Speed and Life Cycle Assessment’ featured Brant Oldershaw, P.Eng., WSP’s director of structural, mechanical and electrical engineering for Southwestern Ontario; Willems Ransom, principal and architect for mcCallumSather; Matthew Winters, P.Eng., Steligence project manager for ArcelorMittal; and Mike Cortese, principal sustainability projects manager for ArcelorMittal. As they explained, WSP and mcCallumSather joined steel producer ArcelorMittal’s Steligence program to model and compare the performance of different building materials for the same theoretical project. Consulting engineering firms RJC and MTE also contributed to the project’s structural details.

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Join the BC Wood Export Readiness Training Program Starting Jan 27!

The BC Wood Specialties Group
January 7, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Ready to take your wood products business global? The BC Wood Export Readiness Training Program is a 9-module virtual course designed to equip value-added wood product companies with the tools for international success. Join our 6-week course for wood manufacturers and unlock strategies to thrive! The cost is $189 per person OR $299 for 2 people from the same company. You DO NOT need to be a BC Wood member to participate in this course. A Zoom link will be sent to you closer to the date. Jan. 27 – Mar. 12, 2025 | 8:30am – 10:00am PST | Tuesdays & Thursdays | Zoom

Topics include:

  • Preparing for Successful Export
  • Updating Products & Localization: requirements for wood products in global markets
  • International Marketing: marketing in international markets, culture & formats
  • Selling Direct vs. Through Partners
  • Top Global Markets for Expansion
  • International Pricing and Contracts: pricing, margins, and contract practices
  • International Finance
  • Operations, HR & International Logistics
  • Funding Available for International Expansion

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PHOTOS: A sneak peek at Kelowna’s soon-to-open airport expansion

Kelowna Now
January 5, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

@Kalesnikoff

 …A few weeks back, YLW CEO Sam Samaddar told KelownaNow the exciting expanded airport terminal building project is ahead of schedule and the new space is expected to open up in the first quarter of 2026. Travellers will be seeing it in person soon enough, but Kalesnikoff recently shared a few photos of the new terminal building for those who don’t want to wait. The mass timber used for the project, the biggest airport expansion in Kelowna’s history thus far, was manufactured and supplied from Kalesnikoff’s facility in Castlegar. According to the City of Kelowna, nearly 800 square metres of wood from the Slocan Valley was incorporated in the project, which received a $500,000 grant from BC’s Mass Timber Demonstration Program. …Check out photos of the new terminal building below and look forward to a smoother travel experience at YLW in the near future!

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Forestry

B.C. court halts major forest licence transfer, citing failure to uphold ‘honour of the Crown’

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
January 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A BC judge has quashed a decision from the province to transfer a major forestry licence to an Indigenous-owned forestry company, after the government was found to have failed to uphold the “honour of the Crown” with a neighbouring nation. The Jan. 8 ruling centred on the BC Ministry of Forest’s decision to approve the transfer of a forest licence to the Kitsumkalum First Nation. The transfer, which occurred after the previous holder Skeena Sawmills entered into bankruptcy proceedings in 2023, was opposed by eight Gitanyow hereditary chiefs. … In his decision, the judge found the government oversimplified the impacts of the transfer, and relied on “hope and optimism” that the two First Nations could reach an agreement. …The Gitanyow had called on the court to quash the transfer of the forestry licence. Instead, the judge forced the province to reconsider the licence transfer while properly consulting with the Gitanyow.

Related coverage in the CBC by Akshay Kulkarni: B.C. gov’t didn’t properly consult with Gitanyow First Nation in forest licence transfer, court rules

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North Cowichan to hire wildfire specialist

By Robert Barron
Ladysmith-Chemainus Chronicle
January 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

North Cowichan will hire a wildfire specialist to support wildfire-protection planning in the municipality. At its meeting on Dec. 3, council voted to allocate $95,000 in North Cowichan’s budget for 2026 for the position from the Climate Action and Energy Plan’s reserve funds, and funding for the wildfire specialist will come from general taxation in following years. As well, council decided to allocate $115,000 in the 2026 budget for the creation of a Strategic North Cowichan Wildfire Plan, with the funding also coming from CAEP reserve funds. Council adopted a resolution establishing wildfire preparedness as a strategic priority in September, and the key actions identified and recommended by staff since then include strengthening the fire department’s wildfire-response capabilities, vegetation management, FireSmart education, evacuation planning, infrastructure standards, and community volunteer initiatives.

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Logging equipment torched near Caycuse Mainline; RCMP investigating

By Sarah Simpson
Ladysmith-Chemainus Chronicle
January 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Three pieces of logging equipment owned by Fraser Valley Timber were torched overnight Jan. 1 into the morning of Jan. 2, putting multiple employees immediately out of work and potentially costing the company hundreds of thousands of dollars in replacement costs. …While a company spokesperson suggested to television media that the fire may be linked to nearby anti-logging protests, members of the Ada’itsx/Fairy Creek blockade denied any involvement. RCMP said investigators have not made any connection between the fire and the protest. Blockade members posted on Facebook that to assign blame to them before the facts are known “serves to vilify old-growth forest protectors without grounds.” …the Office of the Fire Commissioner brought an accelerant detection dog to the scene as part of the investigation. “…the Office of the Fire Commissioner is assisting in determining the circumstances, origin, and cause of the fires,” according to the Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General.

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Vancouver Island logging protesters hit out at arson ‘insinuation’

By Wolfgang Depner
Canadian Press in Victoria Times Colonist
January 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A group protesting old-growth logging on Vancouver Island is hitting out at an “insinuation” they were involved in the suspected arson of logging equipment last week. Sgt. Kevin Mack with Lake Cowichan RCMP says officers responded to the scene of the suspected arson at a site operated by Fraser Valley Timber on Jan. 2, and they are keeping an “open eye to all possibilities.” Two grapple yarders and a log loader reportedly sustained more than $530,000 in damage in the fires… The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but media reports quoted a spokesman suggesting that the proximity of the protest camp wasn’t a coincidence. But the Walbran Valley Blockade protest camp says its code “explicitly prohibits violence and the damage or destruction of property.” It says it supports a full and transparent investigation and that “assigning blame before the facts are known serves to vilify forest protectors.”

Related coverage from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police: Damaged logging equipment

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Beyond mayors, chiefs and councils

Letter by Icel Dobell
Ladysmith-Chemainus Chronicle
January 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

…council was about to vote to log our protected community forest. At the last moment, a chief saved the day. But we are now forewarned — our forest isn’t protected. …a new council could throw down the gauntlet. So, once again we’re asking ourselves, as a community how do we protect the Six Mountains? Now that we know our North Cowichan council can ignore our public consultation, and our vote for conservation, what can we legally do? In the next election, vote in a pro-conservation council? This is our intention, but there are no guarantees. …an extraordinary solution [exists to] protect ecosystems from human destruction. It’s called the Rights of Nature movement (RoN). …founded on indigenous ancestral reverence for nature, as sacred and sacrosanct, beyond human control and ownership… it’s the perfect solution for our Valley where we, N. Cowichan and Quw’utsun, “own” the legal right to protect the ecosystem surrounding our home.

 

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Hazards linger for Peachland after Munro Lake wildfire

By Colin Dacre
Castanet Kelowna
January 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The in-creek infrastructure for the Peachland water treatment plant is at risk of a landslide in the aftermath of the summer’s Munro Lake wildfire. The wildfire in September 2025 burned 383 hectares of the south slopes of the lower Peachland Creek watershed in the Upper Princeton Avenue area. A preliminary post-fire hazard assessment completed for the Ministry of Forests has recommended the District of Peachland further study the burned slopes above its water treatment facility. “This may include any other hazard associated with the wildfire that may affect water quality and treatment as a result of the burned area uphill from the facility,” said the report. The report places a moderate likelihood — “not probable but possible over a several year period” — of a landslide impacting the dams and weirs associated with the water treatment plant. …The most pressing post-fire concerns are related to forest service roads in the area of the burn.

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B.C.’s zombie fires are burning deep underground. Here’s how they could spark back to life in 2026

By Tiffany Crawford
The Vancouver Sun
January 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The intense 2025 wildfire season in B.C. means firefighters will face challenges in 2026 because of overwintering wildfires, also called holdover or zombie fires, that smoulder deep underground through the colder season. As they spread below the forest floor in the dried-out peat, the fires can ignite in spring, sparking new life into last season’s devastating blazes. Canada’s 2025 wildfire season was the second-worst on record after 2023, with more than 6,000 fires burning more than 83,000 square kilometres across Canada, according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. In B.C., the season started early because of several zombie fires in the northeast region of the province, where fire officials say overwintering fires and underlying drought combined to create challenging conditions in April and May. …Scientists say climate change is making B.C.’s wildfire season longer and more intense as drought dries out the forest floor and heat waves become stronger.

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Don’t worry about logs, the barnacles will be fine

By Lawrence Lambert
Victoria Times Colonist
January 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

If we’ve reached the point where we’re fretting over barnacles being knocked off by drift logs, perhaps we’ve run out of real crises. A recent University of Victoria study warns that wandering logs — nature’s most passive travellers — are scraping B.C.’s intertidal ecosystems into oblivion. …I mean no disrespect to my academic descendants at UVic — my alma mater — but I can’t help recalling a time when a scientist would distinguish between data and drama. Anyone raised on this coast knows those “thundering” drift logs are as much a fixture of our marine landscape as kelp, rockweed, and yes, barnacles themselves. …Here lies the problem with this kind of “drive-by ecology.” A barnacle count taken on a single day, at a single beach, photographed from orbit, becomes a sweeping “coast-wide phenomenon.” Probability alone tells us that the fraction of shoreline ­simultaneously blanketed and agitated by free logs — especially those resting on sand — is marginal.

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Tree nursery growing future Prince Edward Island forests

Government of Prince Edward Island
January 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Hailey Blacquiere

The province’s J. Frank Gaudet Tree Nursery now produces 1.3 million trees a year. To make this happen, the nursery staff grow PEI seeds into ready-to-plant trees. Hailey Blacquiere, manager of production development says they only grow native tree species using seeds from a local orchard that hold collections of trees that are selected as having the best traits. Whatever doesn’t get planted spends the winter at the nursery on Upton Road where a small winter crew are making sure these trees are in peak condition for the next planting season. Smaller saplings in trays are put down for the winter, which means they are bundled in special containers made of pallets, built on site, says Blacquiere. …Reforestation is a big part of why the nursery produces so many trees. Whether it’s replanting after extreme weather, shoring up buffer zones or turning land back into forest, excellent tree production is crucial.

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Indigenous-led conservation efforts match or surpass similar initiatives when properly funded, new research shows

By Patrick Lejtenyi
Concordia University
January 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Federally funded Indigenous-led conservation programs are delivering highly effective climate and biodiversity outcomes, aligning with national greenhouse gas mitigation and biodiversity goals, according to a new paper led by Concordia researchers. Writing in the journal Earth’s Future, the authors say these programs, as Indigenous-led Nature-based Solutions (NbS), can be just as or even more effective at carbon storage and biodiversity conservation as conventional national and provincial parks. “Most of the knowledge we have about Indigenous-led conservation efforts comes from countries in the tropics,” says lead author Camilo Alejo, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Geography, Planning and Environment. “We want to explore the effect of government support on Indigenous-led initiatives in the Canadian context.” The study examines two Indigenous-led NbS: the Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas (IPCA) and the Indigenous Guardians programs.

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Health & Safety

Port Alberni Fire knocks down blaze at former Western Forest Products saw mill

By Liz Brown
Chek News
January 8, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Port Alberni Fire Department (PAFD) responded to a blaze at the former site of the Western Forest Products saw mill where flames reached heights of 30 feet, says Fire Chief Mike Owens. Port Alberni Fire Chief Mike Owens says… the bulk of the blaze was knocked down by the initial on-duty crew, with the rest of work spent tackling the nooks and crannies of hot spots from woody debris left in voids and high beams. “The challenge with these old saw milling type of properties is there can sometimes be accumulations of debris that was left when it used to be used as a saw mill,” he says. …Since its closure in 2022, the mill has been acquired by Amix, and recent activity on the property has included mainly deconstruction and land clearing of the former saw mill operation.

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Russ Taylor’s unexpected journey – 39 Days in hospital

Russ Taylor
Russ Taylor Global
January 5, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Russ Taylor

For decades, Russ Taylor has been one of the forest sector’s most respected and trusted market voices — and a long-time friend and contributor to the Tree Frog community. Through his consulting work and industry analysis, Russ has helped the sector navigate global wood markets, cycles, and structural change with clarity and independence. But in late 2025, his own journey took an unexpected and life-threatening turn. We wish Russ a smooth and speedy recovery.

What first seemed like a minor bicycle accident just days before an overseas trip and a presentation at a Swedish Wood Association conference turned out to be anything but. By the time I returned to Vancouver, I was admitted to hospital with fractured ribs, internal bleeding, a lacerated spleen, and complications that required surgery, intensive care, ventilation, and dialysis. I spent 39 days in hospital and went through several critical episodes before finally stabilizing and returning home just before year-end. …My message is simple but important: listen to your body, don’t ignore mystery symptoms, and never take Canada’s high-quality, universal healthcare for granted.

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New Brunswick mill worker reinstated despite antisemitic remarks

By Jim Wilson
Human Resources Director Canada
January 8, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

An arbitrator has ordered the reinstatement of a New Brunswick paper mill worker fired for making harassing comments to an Israeli truck driver, ruling that while the conduct breached the employer’s harassment policy, dismissal went too far. In UNIFOR, Local 523N v. Lake Utopia Paper, arbitrator Guy Couturier, held that Ethan Chamberlain should return to work at Lake Utopia Paper, a division of J.D. Irving, Limited, after serving a four‑month suspension without pay or benefits and completing sensitivity training. Chamberlain, a shipper with about four years’ service, was dismissed on May 7, 2025 for allegedly violating the company’s Safe and Respectful Workplace Policy during an exchange with long‑haul driver Igor Marichev.  “The Board is satisfied that the complainant’s health and safety was threatened by the comments, giving the definition of ‘harassment’ a fair, large and liberal interpretation,” he wrote, finding that the language “meets the definition of harassment, as intended in the policy.”

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Forest History & Archives

Collecting a Future Forest: My First Cone Harvest in Northern British Columbia, 1968

By Don Pigott
Yellow Point Propagation Ltd.
January 7, 2026
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada, Canada West, International

Don Pigott

Don Pigott is a forest seed and silviculture specialist whose career spans more than five decades in BC and internationally. He spent 13 years with MacMillan Bloedel’s Forest Research Division working in silviculture, tree improvement, and seed orchard management before founding Yellow Point Propagation in 1982. Through Yellow Point, Don has worked extensively in seed collection, processing and storage, tree improvement, gene conservation, ecological restoration, and international cooperative research projects. This story looks back to where that career began.

In the spring of 1968, I was between my first and second year of forestry… jobs were hard to get, but I had the good fortune to land a job with a Forest Service marking crew in Quesnel. …What followed was a summer spent moving north, living out of a rusty 1956 Dodge station wagon, and working out of tiny ranger offices nestled between lakes and mosquito swamps. …You had to be quick… as hordes of mosquitos would follow in behind you. The work was varied and often enjoyable—checking bush mills, issuing burning permits, mapping scarified cutblocks, and learning firsthand why regeneration was such a challenge in the Interior at the time. …We could often establish hundreds of plots without finding any regeneration.

Then came the cone crop. …One of the best spruce cone crops in many years, and suddenly the focus shifted to seed. Armed with a .22 rifle that proved nearly useless, an axe, and later a rotating cast of fallers and helpers, we set up camp at Mossvale Lake. …It wasn’t pretty, efficient, or cheap. …Crews came and went, equipment failed, tempers flared, whiskey appeared, and responsibility arrived faster than experience. In the end, the quota was met—and the bill was memorable. …One of the most expensive collections in the history of the Forest Service. Looking back, that first cone collection was rough, chaotic, and deeply formative… a beginning that shaped everything that followed.

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