Region Archives: Canada

Business & Politics

Here are Canada’s biggest points of leverage in tariff and trade talks with the U.S.

By Mike Crawley
CBC News
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

While Canada’s economy is far more reliant on exports to the US than vice versa, Canadian negotiators have crucial ammunition in their efforts to land a trade deal that reduces or eliminates tariffs imposed by US President Trump. …Canada’s attempts to negotiate relief from Trump’s tariffs on such exports as steel, aluminum, automobiles and softwood lumber are now wrapped into fresh talks on renewing the Canada-US-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA). …Barry Appleton, says Canada needs to shift its strategy by exerting its leverage as a crucial U.S. customer. …Inu Manak, says the US needs Canadian natural resources to achieve the industrial policy goals set out by the US administration. …Canada is among the top sources of foreign direct investment in the U.S., largely as a result of decisions by pension funds. …The US has repeatedly emphasized the importance of steady access to a reliable supply of critical minerals.

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New Partnership Creates Brand New Insurance Options for Forest Owners

By Sandra Bishop
Canadian Forest Owners
March 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Kemptville, ON — Under the leadership of Canadian Forest Owners (CFO), the Ontario Woodlot Association (OWA), along with partnering associations nationwide, has appointed BrokerLink as our exclusive insurance broker. This first-of-its-kind insurance program in Canada offers OWA members access to a comprehensive suite of insurance products tailored specifically to protect the assets of family and commercial forest owners. CFO represents 480,000 forest owners who collectively own about 10% of Canada’s forested land, but account for 20% of the country’s timber production. As a national advocate for sustainable private-land forestry, CFO takes pride in championing solutions that support and protect our communities. “Together with BrokerLink, we’re proud to offer innovative strategies to help our members proactively manage increasing climate-related events and other risks while protecting important assets,” says Andrew de Vries, CEO of CFO. …Access to this product is available to members of the OWA and other provincial associations affiliated with CFO.

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NAWLA Members Approve Bylaws Amendments With Strong Support

By North American Wholesale Lumber Association
PR Log
March 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

CHICAGO — The North American Wholesale Lumber Association (NAWLA) announced that its wholesaler and manufacturer member companies have approved a set of recommended amendments to the association’s bylaws. …The amendments strengthen NAWLA’s ability to serve an increasingly diverse and interconnected distribution ecosystem. Key updates include:

  • Expanding the definition of “wholesaler” membership to reflect the range of distribution models operating in the industry today—including one‑step and two‑step distributors, buying groups and importers/exporters who take title to the products they sell and operate within the wholesale distribution model.
  • Broadening eligibility to participate on the NAWLA Board of Directors, including allowing affiliate members to serve on the Board and manufacturer members to serve as officers on the Executive Committee.
  • Preserving wholesalers as the majority representation on both the Board of Directors and the Executive Committee at all times.

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B.C.’s forestry crisis goes beyond U.S. tariffs

By Jock Finlayson & Ken Peacock
Business in Vancouver
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jock Finlayson

Ken Peacock

The economic crisis gripping B.C.’s forest industry shows no signs of easing. As the landlord and owner of the vast majority of forested land in the province as well as the regulator that largely determines how the industry operates, the provincial government is in the firing line as mills close and thousands of jobs disappear in logging, wood products manufacturing, and pulp and paper production. Whenever questions arise about the calamity unfolding in forestry, Premier David Eby and his hapless Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar are quick to finger U.S. tariffs as the culprit. In reality, the unprecedented downturn in B.C.’s forestry sector has three main causes. American tariffs are one of them. Unfortunately, history teaches that there is little B.C. can do to influence the course of U.S. trade policy. The other two factors pummeling the industry are primarily “home-grown” problems that reflect decisions made in Victoria: A stunning decline in the supply of fibre; and the emergence—over time—of an increasingly complex, costly, and ever-changing regulatory environment. Together, these trends have made B.C. a virtual “no-go” zone in which to deploy capital across all parts of the forest industry supply chain.

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Employment statistics highlight still-tough times in B.C.’s forestry sector

By Derrick Penner
Vancouver Sun
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Last year was hard on workers in some industries within B.C.’s resource sector, particularly forestry, and 2026 doesn’t look like it’s starting much better. Statistics Canada’s February labour force survey, the report that tracks overall unemployment, tracked job losses in both the natural resources and manufacturing sectors for both the previous month and for the 12 months since the same month in 2025. Natural resources … had a year-over-year loss of 9,300 jobs from February 2025 to February 2026. The manufacturing classification, which includes lumber production, had a year-over-year loss of 12,200, according to StatCan. StatCan’s … survey of employment and payroll counted at least 1,200 job losses in forestry, which include logging and supporting jobs, and at least 800 job losses in sawmills between December 2024 and December 2025. …“The worst was probably in the fourth quarter (of 2025) when the full bite of the duties hit, and then the (U.S.) tariffs,” said industry consultant Russ Taylor. “That’s when we saw a lot more of the jobs falling off.”

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South Okanagan MP Helena Konanz says feds need to make deal with U.S. on softwood lumber

By Sarah Crookall
Castanet
March 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Helena Konanz

PENTICTON, BC — Similkameen-South Okanagan-West Kootenay MP Helena Konanz… said Canada needs to settle on a softwood lumber agreement with the US after a decade without one. “Forestry communities have the potential to thrive, but only if we knock down the Americans’ insulting tariff barriers,” she said. Last week, Konanz spoke in the House of Commons regarding Trans-Pacific trade agreements. “Softwood lumber is key in my riding, as many members know. Hundreds of jobs have already been lost in my riding during these tumultuous times,” she said. “Families who rely on lumber jobs in my region have now seen an entire year of the Liberal prime minister’s travels. He has travelled frequently to the United States and around the globe, promising deals but still not delivering for lumber.”

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Daniel Cloutier advocates for members at Forestry Communities Forum

By Véronique Figliuzzi
Unifor Canada
March 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Daniel Cloutier

On March 11, Unifor Quebec Director Daniel Cloutier addressed more than 150 leaders gathered at the Forestry Communities Forum organized by the “Fédération québécoise des municipalités”, bringing forward the voice of the workers who sustain the forestry sector in every region of Quebec. At a time marked by mill closures, layoffs and growing uncertainty, he stressed the need for a decisive shift toward higher value-added production and highlighted the importance of developing the Canadian domestic market to help offset the loss of access to the U.S. market. He also reminded participants that working conditions in the forestry sector … are the result of negotiations led by unions that defend the interests of working people, and the gains achieved through these struggles benefit unionized and non-unionized workers alike. …Unifor maintains that Quebec’s forestry sector is ready for a genuine industrial policy, one that is built in an inclusive way and that integrates the voice and concerns of workers.

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BMI Group laying groundwork for redeveloping former pulp mills

Northern Ontario Business
March 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

©BMI Group

BMI Group and Ecostrat are partnering to get former pulp and paper mills across Canada ready for new biomass projects. In a March 12 news release, the firms announced they are looking to establish some of the properties as Biofuel Development Opportunity (BDO) Zones to attract investment at former pulp mills across the country owned by BMI. Through the BDO Zone process, properties are evaluated on criteria that makes them appealing for bio-based development. That could include producing biofuels, renewable chemicals, biogas, engineered wood products, including mass timber, and other advanced manufacturing technologies. Regions that score high in the system receive a BDO Zone rating, which identifies them as being “optimal” areas for bio-based development. Communities can then use that rating in economic development and marketing activities.

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Finance & Economics

US lumber imports fell in the third and fourth quarters of 2025

By Jesse Wade
NAHB Eye on Housing
March 17, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

US sawmill production was unchanged in the third quarter according to the Industrial Production report. Utilization rates for sawmills and wood preservation industries remained near 70% despite a weakened demand environment from lower levels of residential construction in the third quarter of 2025. …The sawmill utilization rate has trended downward since 2017 due to added capacity and stagnant output. However, in the third quarter of 2025, on a four-quarter moving average, the utilization rate rose, as it increased from 68.2% to 68.8%. …Employment in sawmill and wood preservation industries continued to fall, dropping to roughly 85,400 workers in the third quarter. …US softwood lumber imports faced rising duty rates throughout 2025. …These higher duties contributed to import declines in the third and fourth quarters. The fourth quarter import volume was the lowest amount since the first quarter of 2014. Higher duties were not the only market headwind for imports, as residential construction demand faded over the course of 2025.

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Mercer vs International Paper: Paper and Packaging Giants Go Head-to-Head

By William Temple
24/7 Wall St. in Yahoo Finance
March 17, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

Mercer posted Q4 earnings per share (EPS) of -$4.61 against a consensus estimate of -$0.83, a miss that signals the commodity cycle has gone from painful to existential. The headline driver was a $238.7 million non-cash impairment charge, including a $203.5 million write-down on its Peace River hardwood pulp mill. …International Paper’s Q3 2025 losses look alarming on the surface, with a $1.01 billion impairment on its Global Cellulose Fibers business and $675 million in accelerated depreciation from mill closures. But adjusted EBITDA came in at $859 million, up 28% sequentially. IP is taking pain by choice. Mercer is absorbing pain it cannot control. …IP’s pivot to pure-play global packaging via DS Smith gives it pricing leverage and diversified end markets. Mercer’s mass timber order book, at roughly $163 million in contracts including data center projects, is a genuine bright spot, but it cannot offset a pulp business bleeding cash.

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Bank of Canada holds key interest rate at 2.25 per cent

The Canadian Press in CityNews Toronto
March 18, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The Bank of Canada held its benchmark interest rate at 2.25% today as the economy performs below expectations, but war in the Middle East threatens higher inflation. The central bank’s decision to keep to the sidelines today was widely expected, but the future path for the policy rate is much less clear. Governor Tiff Macklem says in prepared remarks that the Bank of Canada is in a “dilemma” with U.S. trade uncertainty keeping the economy soft, but the Iran war sending global oil prices surging and likely spurring higher inflation in the months to come. Macklem says the central bank will look through the immediate inflationary hit from the war, but monetary policymakers will move to prevent persistent price hikes if the conflict persists or broadens. Statistics Canada reported an economic contraction in the fourth quarter of the year and sharp job losses in February.

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Lumber Futures Rebound past $600

Trading Economics
March 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures climbed past $600 per thousand board feet as stabilizing housing sentiment and tightening production capacity across North America reversed a two month downward trend. The NAHB Housing Market Index edged up to 38 in March with buyer traffic and future sales expectations showing marginal gains despite persistent economic uncertainty. While 37% of builders continue to offer price cuts to attract buyers the market is finding support from a 29.1% surge in multifamily housing starts and a 7.2% rise in total residential construction activity. On the supply side mill closures and elevated duties on Canadian imports are projected to remove over 1.3 billion board feet from the market this year. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East further pressure the outlook as rising energy costs inflate transport and shipping expenses for global timber. These factors suggest a shift toward a supply constrained environment that offsets the impact of high mortgage rates.

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Canada’s housing starts edge up, but deeper strains unsettle builders

By Liezel Once
Canadian Mortgage Professional
March 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Canadian housing starts posted a modest rebound in February, but economists and industry data pointed to a market still losing momentum beneath the surface. The latest figures suggest builders are working through earlier project decisions while facing weaker demand, higher costs and a darker macro outlook. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) reported that the seasonally adjusted annual rate of housing starts rose 4.5% month over month to 250,900 units in February. That’s up from a revised 240,148 in January. The six‑month trend – a moving average used to smooth volatility – inched up just 0.4% to 256,005 units, essentially flat. …“Looking ahead, we expect heightened levels of business uncertainty and construction costs to weigh on the rate and trend of housing starts in the near‑to‑medium term.” …Among Canada’s largest centres, Montreal posted an 18% increase in actual starts in February, and Vancouver recorded a 60% jump. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Bespoke Metrics Releases Finalized Mass Timber Project Scoring Methodology

By Bespoke Metrics
Cision Newswire
March 16, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

TORONTO — Bespoke Metrics announced the finalization of its Mass Timber Project Scoring Methodology, following the close of a public comment period. Bespoke Metrics was engaged by the Climate Smart Buildings Alliance and the Canadian Wood Council, through the Mass Timber Insurance Action Plan, to develop this methodology as part of broader efforts to enhance transparency, comparability, and insurability in the use of sustainable construction materials. By standardizing how mass timber experience and risk management practices are evaluated, the framework supports more informed decision-making among owners, insurers, and lenders. …Mass timber presents significant opportunities as a lower-carbon building material, but it also introduces unique risk factors–including combustibility considerations, moisture sensitivity, supply chain constraints, and a more limited pool of experienced subcontractors and suppliers. The finalized methodology is designed to ensure these factors are consistently and transparently reflected in contractor risk assessments. …The final methodology is available here.

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Architect Caroline Inglis navigates Passive House targets and embodied carbon limits in Vancouver’s new community centre

Passive House Canada
March 12, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

A new mass timber community centre rising in Vancouver’s Marpole neighbourhood is a showpiece of a number of progressive goals shaping public architecture in Canada today. The building is designed to meet high performance Passive House standards, ambitious embodied carbon reductions, and reach high levels of accessibility standards, while also responding to the needs of community members who will use the facility every day. ….The Marpole Community Centre is the first new community centre commissioned by the city in about a decade. The project combines Passive House certification, LEED Gold targets, a 40 percent embodied carbon reduction goal, and Rick Hansen Foundation Accessibility Certification. Landing these impressive targets, while keeping the community at the heart of the project has come with trade-offs but also amazing learning opportunities, said Inglis, who will be sharing more about this project at the upcoming Passive House Canada Conference in May.

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Your essential guides for construction using wood

naturally:wood
March 18, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

This edition spotlights the release of a new Industrial Guide advancing the use of mass timber in industrial and commercial buildings. Developed through broad industry collaboration, the guide provides practical direction for incorporating wood into manufacturing facilities, warehouses, and hybrid structures. A featured case study from the Woodrise Industrial Guide Alliance brings these concepts to life, demonstrating how mass timber can meet performance requirements while reducing carbon impacts. The project highlights the benefits of prefabrication, efficient design, and innovative engineering in delivering cost-effective and timely construction. The newsletter also points to the broader shift underway in the building sector, as evolving codes, research, and market demand open the door for wood in non-traditional applications. Together, these stories reinforce mass timber’s growing role as a scalable, low-carbon solution for industrial development.

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PCL takes home two Toronto Construction Association Awards

ReNewCanada
March 18, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

PCL Constructors Canada Inc. (Toronto) earned a pair of awards at the Toronto Construction Association’s (TCA) Best of the Best Awards. Presented at the TCA’s 158th Annual General Meeting, PCL was awarded Project Achievement Awards for the Kingsway College Senior School Phase 2 renovation and George Brown Polytechnic’s Limberlost Place. Creating a new era for George Brown Polytechnic students and faculty, Limberlost Place exemplifies what’s possible through collaboration, out-of-the-box thinking and a shared commitment to building a resilient future. The 10-storey mass timber, net-zero educational facility integrates first-of-its-kind solutions including the cross-laminated timber (CLT) slab band structural system and North America’s largest mass timber columns spanning three storeys. Early engagement from the entire team during the preconstruction phase was crucial to design development and determining constructability.

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Forestry

Canada releases the National Freshwater Science Agenda to guide priorities over the next 10 years

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
Cision Newswire
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

GATINEAU, QC — Today, during Canada Water Week, the Honourable Julie Dabrusin, Minister of the Environment, Climate Change and Nature, is announcing the release of the National Freshwater Science Agenda, which aims to better align freshwater science and research efforts across Canada. The Science Agenda is the result of over two years of engagement efforts led by Environment and Climate Change Canada with input from more than 800 science experts, Knowledge Holders, experts, and science users across governments and sectors, Indigenous organizations, and Canada’s freshwater science community. It is grounded in Western science and Indigenous Knowledge and reflects the diverse scientific needs and perspectives that are relevant to partners and stakeholders across the country. It outlines interconnected themes including bridging, braiding, and weaving Indigenous science and Knowledge; water availability; land‑use stressors and water pollution; ecosystem resilience and biodiversity; socio‑ecological considerations; and economic research.

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Forests Canada Creating National Working Group to Improve Post-Wildfire Forest Recovery

Forests Canada
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

TORONTO – National charity Forests Canada supported the planting of more than four million trees across Canada in 2025, with over two million being planted to restore forests ravaged by storms, invasive species, and wildfires. Canada’s forest landscapes are experiencing unprecedented impacts from wildfire, creating urgent and complex challenges for post-fire recovery, regeneration, and long-term forest resilience. To support coordinated national action, knowledge exchange, and the development of best practices for forest resilience, Forests Canada is establishing a National Working Group on Post-Fire Forest Recovery Practices. …”With this new National Working Group, we will be able to gain new insights from a diverse group of participants so that we can all work together to help create lasting and positive outcomes for Canada’s forests,” says Val Deziel, restoration ecologist and Director of Restoration Ecology and Research, Forests Canada.

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siwɬkʷ Water and Climate Forum to take place in Kelowna

By Yashvika Grover
Penticton Western News
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Okanagan Nation Alliance is hosting a two-day water and climate forum in honour of World Water Day on March 23 and 24 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Delta Grand Okanagan Resort. In partnership with Okanagan Similkameen Watershed Collaborative Leadership Table (CLT), the alliance is bringing together Indigenous leaders, local government representatives, researchers, scientists, regional and international water experts and community partners to advocate for climate-resilient governance and collaborative watershed stewardship. ​The forum will teach participants about the importance of watersheds and how to build resilience amid rising risks from wildfires, drought and ecosystem stress.​ …“Our forests are burning, our waters are drying, and the time to act is now — the siwɬkʷ Water and Climate Forum is a call to protect our watersheds and ensure that there is cold, clean flowing water for all living things – now and for future generations,” reads the release.

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Tla’amin set to reclaim forest stewardship with $80M logging licence deal: ‘A generational opportunity’

By Abby Francis
IndigiNews
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Steven Hofer & hegus John Hackett

Tla’amin Nation is set to take back control over a large piece of its territory, after signing a deal to take over Western Forest Products’ licence to log more than 1,540 square kilometres of forest in their homelands. The nation agreed to buy Western’s tree-farm license for the massive parcel … for $80 million on Feb. 19. The license for the Stillwater Forest Operation covers a vast majority of forest in the qathet (Powell River) area, where Tla’amin is located. The lands themselves are not being returned to Tla’amin; tree-farm licenses are granted by the “B.C.” government to allow companies to harvest on “Crown” lands, typically over 25-year terms. But Tla’amin Hegus (Chief) John Hackett said the ability to steward his people’s land is a major step forward. “This acquisition brings another 43 per cent of Tla’amin territory back under our stewardship and control,” Hackett said in a statement.

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Sicamous endorses Forestry is a Solution to help root the industry

By Heather Black
The Salmon Arm Observer
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) was barking up the right tree with the District of Sicamous, with council officially endorsing its Forestry is a Solution initiative. The request came to the March 11 council meeting, explaining the program that launched on Jan. 20 is a province-wide initiative led by a coalition of community leaders, workers and industry advocates to support forestry in light of new challenges. COFI president and CEO Kim Haakstad said in a letter, “the sector currently faces significant headwinds from global competition, challenging operating conditions, and damaging U.S. trade actions. We believe that by working together, we can show the provincial government that forestry provides the solutions for B.C.’s most urgent challenges.” …The initiative’s goal is to get 5,000 signatures to show support of having government action on those points, with Sicamous council unanimously onboard.

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Osoyoos Indian Band’s Siya Forestry works with Interfor on forest management

By Sarah Crookall
Castanet
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Osoyoos Indian Band’s Siya Forestry is working with logging and manufacturing company Interfor on collaborative forestry management. “The partnership reflects a shared commitment to long-term stewardship and responsible planning, ensuring forestry activities align with community values,” reads a Siya Forestry release. The two teams are working to review potential harvest areas, assess wildlife and riparian areas, and identify culturally important areas before they are developed. The approach aims to focus on the forest as a whole system, going beyond legal requirements. Timber values are considered but so is wildlife habitat, visual quality, traditional use areas, and long-term forest health. …Vern Louie, OIB forest operations lead said “Forestry is a living thing; it needs to be treated that way.” …“There’s been a lot of changes over the years,” said Ron Palmer, Interfor Indigenous engagement representative. “So, it’s important that we are in alignment with their values.”

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When the Forest Breathes by Suzanne Simard review – the Indiana Jones of trees returns

By Mythili Rao
The Guardian
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…One part Indiana Jones, one part Mister Rogers, she is a Canadian national treasure and global environmental icon. …Simard’s new book, When the Forest Breathes, finds her back among the trees, furthering her research while also considering her legacy. …In this book it’s apparent Simard is a kind of mother tree, too – a giant, deeply rooted figure with a critical role to play in connecting and supporting the next generation of forest ecologists. …“Science is not enough,” she has concluded. Hence the search for other avenues for advancing conservation and restoration work: among them, books like this one, which allow her to step outside the linguistic constraints of peer-reviewed research and provide an “interpretation” of her findings and the philosophy behind it. There is poetry in this work deep in the forest, and she doesn’t shy away from it.

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Inside B.C.’s Perilous Forestry Industry

By Jadine Ngan
Macleans Magazine
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A tree felled in B.C.’s coastal rainforest, is towed by tugboat to lumber mills along waterways like the Fraser River. It’s difficult work. In the cold months, gales tear through inlets and the river ices over; tides and storms can yank logs out of formation all year round. For decades, beachcombers salvaged escaped logs and sold them back into use. But fuel and boat costs are rising, and beachcombers’ ranks are thinning. Reave Dennison is sometimes a tugboat worker, sometimes a beachcomber and sometimes even an arborist, doing maintenance work on trees. …Over the last 10 years, he’s assembled a collection of photographs that document the beauty he sees while toiling in the field. …As part of this year’s Capture Photography Festival in Vancouver, Dennison’s images will be displayed at the Pale Fire art gallery from March 19 to May 9. The exhibit, called Tree Work, folds three of his projects into one. 

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Forestry is a solution; just not the way BC forest industry suggests

By Eli Pivnick and Janet Parkins
Castanet
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

At the Natural Resources Forum in Prince George, the Council of Forest Industries announced its new platform entitled “Forestry is a Solution”. It is asking British Columbians to voice their support for forestry workers by pushing the BC government to speed permitting and access to timber but the main problem is that much of the timber needed does not exist because of decades of over-cutting. That is why more than 100 mills in BC have shut down since 2005. What COFI is really asking for is more access to protected areas, fire- and insect-damaged forests and the very modest and dwindling areas of remaining, unprotected old growth forests. …What is needed now are some major changes in how forests are monitored and trees allocated, with a lot less cutting and no cutting in primary forests whether old growth or fire or insect-damaged forests. …But what is allocated for cutting must make ecological sense.

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Kira Hoffman Named a 2026 National Geographic 33 Honoree

UBC Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kira Hoffman

The Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship congratulates Dr. Kira Hoffman, a 2026 National Geographic 33 Honoree, for her groundbreaking work as a fire ecologist studying wildfire behavior, Indigenous-led fire stewardship, and resilience in northwest British Columbia. National Geographic 33 is a program inspired by the 33 founders of the National Geographic Society in 1888. It recognizes 33 individuals from around the world who are driving positive change through science, conservation, innovation, and storytelling, highlighting modern-day trailblazers whose work inspires solutions to global challenges. Dr. Kira Hoffman is a fire ecologist studying wildfire behavior and Indigenous-led fire stewardship. Through her postdoctoral fellowship at the University of British Columbia and the Centre for Wildfire Coexistence, she examines historic fire activity and wildfire resilience in northwest British Columbia.

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Prescribed Fire and Partnerships Help Restore Wildlife Habitat Throughout B.C.

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

British Columbia — As the Forest Enhancement Society of BC marks its 10th anniversary, the Society is reflecting on the investments made and the meaningful impacts achieved, many in partnership with other organizations. …“As we reflect on ten years of FESBC investments, it is clear that sustained funding and strong partnerships are an essential part of how we restore ecosystems and improve wildlife habitat across our province,” said Jason Fisher, Executive Director of FESBC. “Moving forward, we need to look at how all forest management activities, from thinning to fuel management, can be planned and carried out in ways that support and improve wildlife habitat over the long term. Continuing this work will ensure these benefits extend to future generations, setting the table for more healthy and resilient forests.”

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West Kootenay wildfire prevention projects receive $1.4M in funding

By Betsy Kline
Arrow Lakes News
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Columbia Basin organizations and residents are benefiting from $3 million in wildfire reduction funding through a partnership between the Province of British Columbia and Columbia Basin Trust, according to a March 17 funding announcement. The projects are guided by FireSmart principles and aim to reduce wildfire risk and strengthen local resilience. The practical projects range from managing wildfire fuels to educating residents. Actions include hiring FireSmart coordinators, preparing fuel-treatment plans, carrying out on-the-ground fuel management and providing FireSmart training. The program is tailored to the Columbia Basin and is part of B.C.’s Community Resiliency Investment Program. The Ministry of Forests, BC Wildfire Service and Columbia Basin Trust are partners in delivering this support.

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Province preparing for 2026 wildfire season as Environment Canada predicts hot year ahead

CBC News
March 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireFacebook

Thousands of people have applied to be wildland firefighters in B.C., as the province prepares for whatever kind of wildfire season may lie ahead. Environment Canada expects 2026 to be one of the hottest years on record. Meanwhile, B.C.’s River Forecast Centre says low snowpack in some regions could increase the potential for drought this spring and summer. Last year, 1,370 wildfires burned more than 8,863 square kilometres of land in B.C., well above the province’s 10-year average, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service. It was a hot, dry season, particularly at the end of August and beginning of September, which extended fire season into the fall. After several tough wildfire seasons in recent years, the province says it is preparing. …The province says about 2,400 people have applied for seasonal firefighter positions, and it’s given special urban wildfire training to more than 1,700 fire departments, First Nations and contractors.

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Forest minister sees hope for forestry through industry and trade diversification

By Chris Bush
Nanaimo Bulletin
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Ravi Parmar

…B.C. Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar was on Vancouver Island March 13, to meet with the B.C. Forest Safety Council and to talk about supports for forestry workers. … “We know the biggest challenge to our national forestry sector is the unfair, unjust and unprovoked duties and tariffs that Donald Trump has imposed on us … we are focused on being sure that we can get a long-term deal with the United States,” Parmar said. According to him, the path forward is “very uncertain” for many workers on the Island, especially in Chemainus and Crofton where lumber and pulp mills have shut down. …“We have to move this sector away from ‘boom and bust’ to stability and certainty.” That means getting more value out of lumber produced in B.C. … Raw logs exports, Parmar said, have been reduced by 80 per cent since the NDP took office and new companies are taking up the challenge of manufacturing wood products in B.C.

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District of 100 Mile House endorses Forestry is a Solution initiative

By Misha Mustaqeem
100 Mile Free Press
March 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

District of 100 Mile House Council voted unanimously to write a letter of support, as well as sign a petition related to the Forestry is a Solution initiative. A letter was written to the District Council by Kim Haakstad, the president and CEO of B.C. Council of Forest Industries, which outlined its key priorities: speeding up access to economic wood, improving competitiveness and cost certainty, fixing B.C. Timber Sales and supporting First Nations partnerships. The letter asked council to endorse the campaign, sign a petition and send a letter to their MLA, government officials and the Forests critic. Finally, it asked council to support the District of 100 Mile House staff to share information about the campaign through official communication channels.

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‘My ideas are a little revolutionary’: ecologist Suzanne Simard on intelligent forests, the climate and her critics

By Sophie McBain
The Guardian
March 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Suzanne Simard

…Wildfires have become an ever bigger problem in Canada. …When logging companies clear forest, they replant it with fast-growing conifer species, but these trees are much more flammable than Canada’s diverse, native forest. …But deforested areas do not fully recover, and thanks to logging, the wildfires and a devastating pine beetle outbreak, Canada’s forests, once a vast carbon sink, have since 2001 been a net emitter of carbon. For four decades, Simard, a professor of forest ecology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, has been trying to convince foresters and policymakers that it doesn’t have to be this way. ..Simard says she sometimes feels straitjacketed by science, which moves too slowly to meet the urgency of the climate crisis. …In her latest book, When the Forest Breathes, as in her first, Simard blends science and memoir, a stylistic choice that reflects how closely her personal life and the forest entwine.

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Woodlots Weekly – News and Updates

Woodlots BC
March 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Woodlots BC’s latest Woodlots Weekly highlights opportunities for learning, connection and professional development across the province’s woodlot community. Applications are now open for the Woodlots BC Bursary, a $5,000 award supporting individuals pursuing goals that benefit forestry and their communities, with submissions due May 1, 2026. Planning is also underway for the 2026 Woodlots BC Conference and Workshop, scheduled for October 1–4 at the Tigh-Na-Mara Resort in Parksville. The event will feature the association’s AGM, field tours and presentations, with a theme focused on strengthening communication, collaboration and the long-term resilience of BC’s woodlot sector. The newsletter also promotes an upcoming Woodlot Talk featuring COFI’s Jim Costley on engaging youth in forestry, upcoming BC Forest Safety Council training courses, and updates from the Boundary Woodlot Association. Readers will also find notices about surplus seedlings seeking new homes and a calendar of upcoming forestry conferences and industry events.

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Harvesting Burned Trees May Seem a No-Brainer. But It Poses Big Risks

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, US West

From the moment he became BC’s forests minister, Ravi Parmar has been under pressure to increase logging rates in the province. One way he has decided to do that is by expediting the logging of forests burned in recent wildfires. He issued the Fort Nelson First Nation a new licence to log 100,000 cubic metres of trees in burned forests in BC’s remote northeast corner. …A number of industry associations, including the Council of Forest Industries, asked him to set “definitive, aggressive timelines for completion” of plans to accelerate logging in burned forests. …But increasing “wildfire salvage” of forests, Parmar is travelling down the same road that has seen BC’s logging rates plummet by more than half since the heyday of the 1980s. …Accelerated logging of burned trees may help bend the curve, but history shows that it is short-lived and comes at the cost of degraded ecosystems and even sharper declines ahead.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Urgent fixes to Canada’s industrial carbon pricing systems needed to protect billions in clean investment

By Chris Severson-Baker, Executive Director
The Pembina Institute
March 17, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

With the April 1, 2026, deadline for the Alberta-Ottawa memorandum of understanding fast approaching, leading climate policy experts are calling on Prime Minister Mark Carney to restore the strength and integrity of Canada’s industrial carbon pricing system to increase competitiveness and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The joint letter warns that recent changes to Canada’s climate policy framework undermine the country’s ability to tackle pollution, protect people from climate change and continue progress on legislated climate targets. As other measures have been weakened, paused or outright scrapped, strong, credible industrial carbon pricing systems play an even more decisive role in determining whether Canada can meaningfully reduce industrial emissions and remain competitive in a low-carbon global economy. Industrial carbon pricing… is widely agreed to be the most efficient road to industrial decarbonization and for that reason it is key to Canadian industry competitiveness.

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Carney climate plan at risk as Canadian oil companies stress need to boost production

By Amanda Stephenson
Reuters
March 18, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

A key plank of Canadian Prime Minister Carney’s climate plan will likely miss its target implementation date, industry sources said, raising new doubts about Canada meeting its environmental goals in the face of higher oil prices and uncertain US trade policy. Carney, a former UN ​climate envoy, committed last fall to negotiating a stronger industrial carbon pricing policy with Alberta by April 1. He is counting on a strengthened pollution pricing scheme to keep ‌Canada’s emission reduction targets on track after rolling back many of his predecessor Trudeau’s climate policies to restore friendlier relations with the oil-and-gas producing province and prioritize economic growth. Two industry sources say these negotiations have been challenging, and that no deal will be struck by the April 1 deadline because large oil sands companies are pushing back on parts of the federal proposal. …Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodgson has acknowledged there may be a slight delay.

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Health & Safety

Canada’s wildland fire agencies want better masks. If only it were that easy

By Matthew McClearn
The Globe and Mail
March 13, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

Wildfire smoke is a toxic cocktail of gases, small particles and other ingredients. It’s known to contain hundreds of chemicals. It contains particulate matter, sometimes referred to as soot. …According to an article published by Stanford University, repeated, acute exposure to smoke can shorten firefighters’ life expectancy by about a decade. …Guy Bourgouin, an NDP member of provincial Parliament in Ontario, has demanded breathing protection for wildland firefighters in the province’s legislature. He says the government has been receptive. …Provincial agencies share information and resources through the non-profit Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. It sets standards, including a fitness test used to determine whether a candidate is strong enough to withstand the job’s rigours. But CIFFC has no discernible role in breathing protection and denied an interview request for this story. …The BC Wildfire Service has emerged as Canada’s leader in this quest. Working with the University of Alberta, in 2019 it began studying smoke’s contents and sought to determine whether they were getting into workers’ bodies, with or without N95 masks. [The Globe and Mail is a subscription publication]

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Spring safety updates: New WorkSafe Magazine, MSI prevention, crane safety, and more

WorkSafeBC
March 18, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

The Tree Frog Forestry News encourages readers to check out the WorkSafeBC Spring 2026 issue of WorkSafe Magazine. The lead story has a strong focus on preventing “struck-by” incidents and improving safety around mobile equipment. It highlights how B.C. forest-product operations are redesigning worksites with engineered controls—such as barriers, walkways, and traffic systems—to better separate workers from moving equipment. Additional features include practical tools to help employers assess and control struck-by risks, along with guidance on roadside work planning and traffic management. The issue also tackles hearing safety, cautioning that personal audio devices are not a substitute for approved hearing protection. WorkSafeBC updates round out the edition, including a refreshed commercial fishing safety guide, clarified rules for reporting tips and gratuities, and progress on asbestos licensing and certification programs. Together, the issue emphasizes proactive planning, clear controls, and shared responsibility as key to safer workplaces across B.C.

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West Fraser charged in Alberta workplace death incident

By Tim Kalinowski
The Cochrane Eagle
March 16, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

COCHRANE, Alberta — West Fraser Mills has been charged in relation to a workplace death in Alberta two years ago. According to Alberta’s Operational Health And Safety (OHS), the workplace fatality took place at West Fraser’s Slave Lake Pulp on March 13, 2024. The charges stated that a worker servicing a CAT wheel loader “was positioned underneath the machine, which was elevated on wooden blocks. The equipment unexpectedly moved, resulting in a fatal injury to the worker.” The co-charged in the incident include West Fraser Mills, West Fraser Mills Slave Lake Pulp and Pacesetter Equipment. All three entities are facing five counts. …Pacesetter Equipment is also facing one additional count: Failure to ensure the worker was not under a suspended load unless the load was supported by a vehicle hoist designed for that purpose. …The charges were officially laid on March 5, 2026.

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