Region Archives: Canada

Business & Politics

CPKC locks out employees, moves to full shut down of Canadian rail network

By CKPC
Cision Newswire
August 22, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

CALGARY, Alberta — Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) said it has locked out employees who are members of the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference (TCRC) – Train and Engine (T&E) division effective 00:01 Eastern Time on Aug. 22. That will be followed by the lock out of employees who are members of the TCRC – Rail Traffic Controller (RCTC) division effective 00:01 Mountain Time on Aug. 22. …Throughout nearly a year of negotiations, CPKC has remained committed to doing its part to avoid this work stoppage. CPKC has bargained in good faith, but despite our best efforts, it is clear that a negotiated outcome with the TCRC is not within reach. The TCRC leadership continues to make unrealistic demands that would fundamentally impair the railway’s ability to serve our customers with a reliable and cost-competitive transportation service. …We fully understand and appreciate what this work stoppage means for Canadians and our economy. 

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Canadian businesses bracing for economic gridlock

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
August 21, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

As of midnight, Canada’s railways will stop operating. The federal government could intervene, but the Trudeau government has signalled it is staying out of the dispute and will not use the powers it has at its disposal to force the parties into binding arbitration. …In B.C., forestry companies have had to take curtailments in recent years when freight movements were held up by backlogs or disruptions caused by floods or wildfires. …But those were minor disruptions compared to what Canada is now facing. …A full rail stoppage would cost the Canadian economy $1 billion a day, says the Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters. …In B.C., the forestry sector would be affected, as wood pellet producers, pulp and paper mills and sawmills all rely on rail. “Impacts on production are likely to occur within less than a week, with the threat of complete mill shutdowns and furloughing close behind,” warns the Forest Products Association of Canada.

Additional coverage in Reuters: Stoppage could hit Canadian economy, cross-border trade with US

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Industries that could take a hit from work stoppage at Canadian railroads

Reuters
August 20, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Canada’s freight rail network could come to a grinding halt this week as the country’s two leading railroad operators plan an unprecedented, simultaneous and indefinite work stoppage as talks over labor contracts remain deadlocked. …Canada is the world’s second-largest country by area and relies heavily on trains to transport grain, beans, automobiles, potash, coal and other goods. Here are some sectors that could take a hit from any potential rail stoppage. TRUCKING – About 85% of U.S.-Canada cross-border freight in either direction is primarily handled by Canadian trucking carriers. U.S. freight forwarder C.H. Robinson told Reuters they have seen rates in Canada double overnight. TIMBER – The forest sector is an important contributor to Canada’s economy. In 2022, exports of Canadian forest products stood at C$45.5 billion, according to the Canadian government. * According to the Canadian National Railway website, it is North America’s largest rail carrier of forest products.

In related coverage:

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Looming Canadian railroad work stoppage threatens U.S. supply chains

By Lauren Kaori Gurley
The Washington Post
August 21, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

A looming rail work stoppage in Canada is worrying U.S. businesses and threatening deliveries of cars, timber, petroleum products, grains and other crucial supplies. Already, scheduled shipments of perishable and hazardous products have been halted. …Canadian Pacific Kansas City advised that starting Tuesday, it would stop all shipments that start in Canada, as well as those originating in the US headed for Canada. The U.S. railway Union Pacific has said a shutdown would sideline more than 2,500 railcars from crossing the border each day. One of the largest U.S. rail unions, which is affiliated with the Teamsters, has told members that they can refuse to operate the two Canadian companies’ trains in the United States. The companies say they had planned to continue operations in the United States. …Edward A. Hall, president of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen, instructed the union’s 51,000 members not to cross any “picket line they encounter”.

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Cost of railway shutdown will be ‘borne by all Canadians,’ Ottawa warns

By Uday Rana
Global News
August 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Freight trains across Canada could come to a grinding halt as soon as Thursday with roughly 9,000 railway employees nearing a looming strike or lockout date. …The Teamsters Canada Rail Conference issued a news release saying unless the parties can reach a last-minute agreement, workers will be off the job as of 12:01 a.m. Eastern time Thursday. Not long after the union’s statement, CN Rail issued a notice that it intends to lock workers out at that same time unless an agreement or binding arbitration is achieved. The company says no meaningful progress has occurred despite weekend labour negotiations. …Barry Prentice, at the University of Manitoba’s Asper School of Business, said Canada was already feeling the impact of the looming shutdown. …More than half of the country’s exports travel by rail. Industry groups are also warning about the ripple effects of the stoppages on the wider Canadian economy.

In related coverage:

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U.S. shafts Canada on lumber, again

Resource Works
August 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

They call it the granddaddy of international trade disputes, and in the latest round, Canada has been hit once again by the U.S. The dispute over exports of Canadian softwood lumber to the U.S. has been ongoing since the early 1980s, with the Americans insisting that the Canadian lumber industry is unfairly subsidized. The U.S. Department of Commerce claims this entitles the U.S. to levy tariffs on lumber. These charges have already cost Canadian producers $10 billion since 2017 and have led to thousands of job losses in Canada. …The Americans are now increasing their current duties on Canadian softwood lumber products from 7.99% to 14.54%. …The U.S. increase is also retroactive, meaning it will apply to 2022 exports as well as future shipments. Canadian industry leaders and governments are outraged. …But if Donald Trump is elected president in November, expect worse. It was under his presidential watch in 2017 that the tariffs went as high as 24%.

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U.S. Nearly Doubles Canadian Lumber Tariffs

The National Association of Home Builders
August 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The U.S. Department of Commerce today raised tariffs on imports of Canadian softwood lumber products from the rate of 8.05% to 14.54% following its annual review of existing tariffs. Although NAHB is disappointed by this action, this decision is part of the regularly scheduled review process the United States employs to ensure adequate relief to American companies and industries impacted by unfair trade practices. …On Aug. 19, the Department of Commerce issued its final results on antidumping and countervailing duties averaging a combined total of 14.54%, and these higher duties are now in effect. For years, NAHB has been leading the fight against lumber tariffs because of their detrimental effect on housing affordability. In effect, the lumber tariffs act as a tax on American builders, home buyers and consumers. With housing affordability already near a historic low, NAHB continues to call on the Biden administration to suspend tariffs on Canadian lumber imports. 

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Judge Backs Feds’ Continuation Of Canadian Lumber Tariff

By Alyssa Aquino
Law 360
August 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The U.S. Court of International Trade on Monday maintained an antidumping tariff on Canadian softwood lumber that was renewed based on a statistical tool disputed in the Federal Circuit, with the trade court stressing that the appeals court had yet to reject the method entirely. [to access the full story a Law360 subscription is required]. [To view the judge’s opinion and order, click here.]

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Fires of 2023 burn holes in tourism operator pockets

By Hope Lompe
National Observer
August 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

The federal government says Canada’s appeal as an international tourist destination has been damaged by the 2023 forest fire season, which was the country’s most destructive on record. Foreign spending in Canada dropped in 2023 over pre-pandemic levels, according to documents obtained by Canada’s National Observer through the Access to Information and Privacy Act. In the Northwest Territories alone, 62 of 180 business members reported revenue loss of $8 million, and $1.8 million in increased costs directly attributable to wildfires in 2023, Innovation, Science and Economic Development (ISED) statistics show. Some of the drop likely resulted from travel advisories issued in 2023 by Germany and the United States. The United States also had air quality advisories for smoke from fires burning in Canada that drifted across the border. The document, a briefing note to the minister, singles out B.C. as one of the hardest-hit provinces.

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British Columbian MP Rob Morrison vows to fight for Canadian lumber industry

East Kootenay News Weekly e-KNOW
August 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Rob Morrison

Rob Morrison, Member of Parliament for Kootenay Columbia, recently pledged to stand up for Canadian lumber producers and workers in the face of punitive new U.S. tariffs, while expressing deep disappointment at the current government’s lacklustre response to this ongoing trade dispute. “It’s time for real action to protect our workers and communities, not just words from Ministers. Our lumber producers and workers need more than expressions of disappointment. They need a government willing to go to bat for them on the international stage,” ,” said MP Morrison. “The current administration’s failure to resolve this dispute or effectively counter these baseless U.S. claims is unacceptable. The U.S. Lumber Coalition’s claims of subsidies and dumping are utterly without merit. It’s time our government stood up and said so forcefully, instead of meekly accepting these punitive measures,” Morrison added.

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Conifex reduces to single shift at Mackenzie sawmill, curtails power plant due to rail strike

By Conifex Timber Inc.
Globe Newswire
August 20, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC — Conifex Timber announced that, in light of imminently expected transportation challenges that will affect all Canadian lumber producers for an unspecified period, together with already existing unfavourable market conditions, Conifex is reducing its sawmill operating schedule at its Mackenzie, British Columbia site to a one-shift basis for the foreseeable future and temporarily curtailing its power plant, each commencing on August 26, 2024. We anticipate an end to the curtailment of our power plant by September 30, 2024. …“Unfortunately, a reduced operating schedule at the sawmill is necessary for the foreseeable future due to the combined impact of our inability to ship production on a two-shift basis to end markets for an unspecified timeframe, reduced demand for our lumber products, low lumber prices and punitive lumber export duty impositions,” said Andrew McLellan, President and COO of Conifex.

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Nova Scotia government once again approves aerial spraying of Nova Scotia woodlands

By Joan Baxter
The Halifax Examiner
August 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Nova Scotia Environment and Climate Change (NSECC) has once again issued permits for the aerial spraying of woodlands in Nova Scotia with herbicides laced with glyphosate, identified by the World Health Organization as “probably carcinogenic to humans. This year’s permits, issued to New Brunswick-based J.D. Irving and ARF Enterprises Ltd of Tatamagouche, allow for the aerial spraying of 1,837 hectares of private woodlands in six counties – Cumberland, Colchester, Hants, Queens, Annapolis, and Kings. This is an increase of 422 hectares (1,043 acres) over spray approvals for 2023. The NSECC press release says the proposed time frame for the spraying is between August 15 and October 31, 2024. …The NSECC approvals for the aerial spraying of glyphosate over Nova Scotia come just one day after the NY Times published an in-depth investigation into the mysterious degenerative neurological disease that has affected dozens of people in New Brunswick and may be linked with glyphosate.”

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Kevin Holland receives a new title – Associate Minister of Forestry and Forest Products

By Olivia Browning
Thunder Bay News Watch
August 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kevin Holland

THUNDER BAY – MPP Kevin Holland has joined the cabinet as the new associate minister of forestry and forest products as part of the ministry of natural resources. In an interview with TBnewswatch, Holland said around 60 per cent of the work he does in his riding is in some way related to forestry and mining. “When the premier phoned me on Friday morning and asked me to take over the associate minister role for forestry and forest products, I was humbled by it and immediately excited by the opportunities that he was providing for me. “Forestry is a huge component of my riding in Northwestern Ontario in general. “Being a minister and a member of cabinet now just affords me the opportunity to participate in cabinet meetings and speak more directly with my colleagues at the cabinet level . . . to provide that perspective for Thunder Bay and broaden it for Northwestern Ontario,” he said.

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Finance & Economics

Prices for lumber and other wood products fell 3.4% in Canada in July

Statistics Canada
August 21, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Prices of products manufactured in Canada, as measured by the Industrial Product Price Index (IPPI), were unchanged month over month in July and rose 2.9% on a yearly basis. Prices of raw materials purchased by manufacturers operating in Canada, as measured by the Raw Materials Price Index (RMPI), rose 0.7% month over month in July and increased 4.1% year over year. …Prices for lumber and other wood products fell 3.4% from June to July, mainly on lower prices for softwood lumber (-7.8%). This was the fourth consecutive monthly decrease for softwood lumber and the largest decline since September 2022 (-9.6%). The decline was mainly attributable to lower demand caused by a slowing housing market in both Canada and the United States.

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Latest data has economists predicting multiple rate cuts by Bank of Canada

By Jordan Gowling
The Financial Post
August 20, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Statistics Canada’s July consumer price index showed a significant cooling in inflation, with the rate easing to 2.5 per cent — its slowest pace since March of 2021. Economists believe this latest reading cements a 25-basis point cut by the Bank of Canada in September, and they predict further rate cuts before year’s end. …Claire Fan, at Royal Bank of Canada, said “The scope of price pressures continue to normalize — the diffusion index says the breadth of inflation in Canada is looking similar to pre-pandemic norm in 2019.” …Olivia Cross, economist with Capital Economics, thinks core inflation measures may surprise to the downside of the Bank of Canada’s forecasts, which raises the possibility of a steeper policy cut by the central bank later this year.

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Forestry

Register now for the 2024 Forest Stewardship Council North America conference

Forest Stewardship Council
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

It’s official. Book Now. The Forest Stewardship Council North American Conference will run October 22 to 24, 2024 in Nashville, Tennessee, USA.This year’s meeting is uniquely significant as we unite all stakeholders from across FSC’s extensive network, including members, forest management certificate holders, chain of custody certificate holders, and promotional license holders. Organized jointly by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) US and Canada, the event promises to immerse you in the rhythm of nature and the pulse of innovation at the Renaissance Nashville Hotel, located in the heart of Music City! The 2024 FSC North America Conference is open to FSC Certificate Holders and Promotional License Holders. And, we are extending the invitation to all companies, government organizations, non-profit organizations and individuals with an interest in protecting healthy, resilient forests for all, forever. 

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Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Boosts Forest Health and Wildlife Habitat with Brush Cutting

By Sabrina Spencer
Canada’s First Nations Radio (CFNR) Network
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation in Williams Lake, is making strides in improving forest health in the Chilcotin region with its brush-cutting initiatives. This method involves removing excess vegetation to enhance the overall health of the forest, reduce wildfire risks, and improve wildlife habitats. Daniel Persson, CCR’s forestry superintendent, highlights the importance of these practices in maintaining the forest’s multiple benefits for local communities, including economic, recreational, and ecological values. Thinning dense tree stands, particularly when they are young, allows remaining trees to grow more effectively and creates a more resilient forest. This technique not only boosts the growth of commercially valuable trees but also reduces the risk of severe wildfires by eliminating ladder fuels that can help fires spread.

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Local government calling for better fuel management

By Cheryl Jahn
CKPG TV Prince George
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE – The Antler Creek fire that forced the evacuations of both Barkerville and Wells was first spotted southwest of Barkerville on July 20th. It was noted early on from local government officials that the conditions with dead wood and tricky terrain made it a challenge to get a handle on that wildfire, a fire the head of Barkerville called a “monster fire.” It was also Al Richmond who noted that the fuel sources that became problematic. “That whole corridor along the highway from Quesnel to Wells and into Barkerville is lined with dead pine. It’s a bomb waiting to go off.” He suggests, had there been proper fuel mitigation, the Antler Creek fire would not have taken off to the degree it did. …But the Minister of Forests Bruce Ralston says the Mountain Beetle epidemic did a lot of damage to BC’s forests and efforts were made to address that.

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Destructive tree-killing beetle confirmed in five Vancouver areas

By Stephanie Ip
Vancouver Sun
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

An invasive beetle that destroys ash trees has been confirmed in five areas of Vancouver. After the emerald ash borer was first detected this spring, federal officials conducted surveillance and found that the EAB (emerald ash borer) had impacted ash trees in five areas of Vancouver. Those include Strathcona Park, Andy Livingstone Park, and Coopers Park, as well as an area of Marinaside Crescent (between Davie Street and Coopers Park), and the intersection of Keefer and Heatley Avenue. “The impact of EAB will be less than what was seen in Eastern Canada as ash trees are not as prevalent in Vancouver — they comprise about five per cent of the tree inventory on public lands,” said a park board spokesperson in an email. “We do not have an inventory for ash trees on private lands, but we estimate that it is low as ash trees in B.C. are not a part of the native forest.”

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Grey ghosts in the smoke

By Trina Moyles
The Narwhal
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Dave Moyles was a wildlife biologist with the government of Alberta – his daughter recounts his decades chasing woodland caribou. How does a wildfire crisis threaten an already fragile species? Unprecedented and devastating wildfire seasons in recent years have undoubtedly factored into the equation, and the future of woodland caribou in Alberta has never been more uncertain. In 2023, a record-breaking 3.3 million hectares burned — nearly seven per cent of the province’s forests — disturbing more land than the 11 previous fire seasons combined. A recent report by the Alberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute found woodland caribou lost more than five per cent of critical habitat to wildfires in 2023, with northern herds facing the most severe losses, including nearly 13 per cent in Bistcho Lake range and nearly 14 per cent in the Caribou Mountains. …We’ve reached a tipping point with caribou… They’ve been here so long and yet they could so suddenly — in a relative blink — disappear. 

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Wildfire concerns easing across BC, less than 20 properties on evacuation order

By Will Peters
My Prince George Now
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Only four fires have started in BC in the last 24 hours, while 20 have been declared out in the same time. Currently, 353 fires are burning across the province. That is according to the BC Wildfire Service (BCWFS). …“In general I would say we are in a much different place than we were last season going into the fall,” said Forrest Tower. …While only 18 properties are on evacuation order across the province right now, Bowinn Ma, Minister of Emergency Management and Climate Readiness said nearly 1,600 properties are currently under evacuation alert. BC has just passed one million hectares burned this season, which makes it the province’s fourth-worst fire season on record by hectares burned (behind 2023 – 2,840,104 hectares, 2018 – 1,354,284 hectares, and 2017 – 1,216,053 hectares). Nathan Cullen, the Minister of Land, Water and Resource Stewardship, added over a quarter of the province is also at a drought level 4/5.

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Fort Nelson First Nation says Ben Parfitt’s Tyee story is a hatchet job

By Ed Hitchins
Energetic City Fort St. John
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

FORT NELSON, B.C. — Members of Fort Nelson First Nation (FNFN) head to the polls on August 21st. 26 candidates, including incumbent Chief Councillor Sharleen Gale, are up for seven spots. …Gale has spoken about industry development within the forestry sector for FNFN and is a director on the First Nations Major Project Coalition, an organization supporting First Nations involvement within infrastructure and industry projects. …An article in The Tyee this week alleges mismanagement of funds, including an interest-free loan given to Peak Renewables. …The article, written by Ben Parfitt, also alleges there are concerns regarding $6.7 million that was advanced to FNFN Forestry LP. …FNFN denied the claims in the story. “This article is full of errors and inaccuracies. With only a minimal effort, Parfitt would have discovered our current forestry work is based on salvage operations.” …“This is not journalism. This is a hatchet job that contributes to lateral violence within our community by dividing us.”

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Salvage harvesting planned for wildfire-affected areas in North Shuswap

By Lachlan Labere
The Salmon Arm Observer
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Plans are in place to harvest forested areas of the North Shuswap areas affected by last year’s wildfire. Canoe Forest Products Ltd. (CFP) has been accepting public input on an amendment to the  Gorman Group’s Okanagan Shuswap Forest Stewardship Plan to proceed with salvage harvesting in areas above Scotch Creek and Celista damaged or destroyed by the Bush Creek East wildfire.  “Harvesting in this area is planned to salvage fire-damaged timber before a significant reduction in the economic value of the timber occurs due to a deterioration in the quality…,” reads a public notice issued by CFP. “Salvage harvesting will also address the expected increase in Douglas-fir beetle that will infest any remaining green Douglas-fir timber.

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Government of Canada and Lheidli T’enneh First Nation partner to support Fraser River salmon

Government of Canada
August 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE, BC – The Honourable Diane Lebouthillier, Minister of Fisheries, Oceans Canada and the Canadian Coast Guard announced the Government’s intention to construct a new Pacific salmon hatchery in Prince George, BC, to support conservation and rebuilding of Chinook and sockeye salmon. The proposed hatchery will be built through federal investments under the Pacific Salmon Strategy Initiative (PSSI) and operated by Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) in collaboration with Lheidli T’enneh First Nation and with support from Canfor Pulp Ltd. Construction is expected to begin this fall on federally administered land on the north bank of the Nechako River, near its confluence with the Fraser River. The proposed conservation hatchery will fill a critical infrastructure gap in the upper Fraser River region, serving to boost survival of numerous at-risk salmon stocks.

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First Annual Indigenous Forestry Conference

Indigenous Forestry Conference
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

This event takes place Tuesday, September 10 & Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at the
Best Western Plus Barclay Hotel in Port Alberni, BC. The theme is Optimizing Our Participation in the Forest Economy. Marking a pivotal moment for sustainable forestry practices and Indigenous stewardship of the land. We aim to unite Indigenous leaders, forestry professionals, environmentalists, and policymakers to explore the integration of traditional Indigenous knowledge with modern forestry management practices. We underscore the crucial role of collaboration and respect for Indigenous rights and territories in achieving ecological sustainability and unlocking economic opportunities for Indigenous communities. A significant focus will be on closing the economic gap, emphasizing the need for First Nations’ access to capital to participate meaningfully in the forest sector and creating opportunities for Indigenous entrepreneurs. Register today!

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Old-growth forest preservation has deep roots in wildfire resiliency: Valhalla Wilderness Society

By Timothy Schafer
The Nelson Daily
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The devastating wildfire season still gripping much of the West Kootenay underlines the need for the Province to make concerted efforts to preserve existing old-growth forests, according to the Valhalla Wilderness Society. Director Craig Pettitt said there is no question the current wildfire season could have been tempered if more old-growth forest had been left intact. “The Minister of Forests has acknowledged that the province’s recent wildfire emergencies are worsened by climate change,” he said. “The need to save old-growth forest now, on the ground, is dire.” …Pettitt said preserving old-growth forests helps moderate B.C.’s fire situation through its role in “absorbing and storing the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that causes climate change, which in turn causes extreme hot weather and drought, which increases the number, severity and speed of spread of wildfires.”

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Dry conditions, lightning contributed to Alberta’s record-breaking 2023 wildfire season: study

By Dennis Kovtun
CBC News
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Wildfires in Alberta last summer burned more area than any previous fire season and a new study shows hot, dry conditions and an unusual amount of fires started by lightning were major contributing factors. These findings come from a new study of the 2023 Alberta wildfires, published in the Canadian Journal of Forest Research. Jen Beverly, a professor at the University of Alberta and one of the study’s authors, says “it’s not unusual in Alberta to have a fire season where you have 700, [or] 800,000 hectares burned. Last year it was closer to two million.” She says the fires themselves weren’t unusual, but there were more big fires than in a regular fire season. In 2023, there were 36 wildfires that covered 100 square kilometres or more in size. 

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Amphibian survey of a B.C. Timber Sales cutblock requested

By Connie Jordison
Sunshine Coast Reporter
August 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A lone frog on the provincial government’s endangered species “blue” list, (population vulnerable to changes in habitat) has raised more questions about B.C. Timber Sales’ (BCTS) decision to log the Joe Smith Creek cutblock (TA0521) on the south Mt. Elphinstone slopes. On June 18, while hiking on a trail in that forest area, near Roberts Creek, Elphinstone Logging Focus (ELF) spokesperson Ross Muirhead photographed a northern red-legged frog (Rana aurora). …Since the rights to log the 13,815 cubic metres of timber on that 13-hectare parcel was awarded to Ocean View Logging on June 4, ELF alerted BCTS about the discovery the day after it happened. In that letter the forest protection group requested an amphibian survey be conducted by a registered biologist and the cutblock’s site plan be updated, per BCTS protocol. “In the meantime, no activities such as tree falling or road building should be undertaken,” ELF wrote in its letter to BCTS.

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Fort Nelson’s Chief has pushed for resource development. A vote this week will test member support.

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
August 20, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

FORT NELSON, BC — Members of the Fort Nelson First Nation will vote in what could be a pivotal election for the band and the roughly 3,000 other people who call the Fort Nelson area their home. …For nearly four years, Chief Councillor Sharleen Gale has deepened the First Nation’s ties with Peak Renewables, a company owned by Brian Fehr, a businessman with close ties to Canfor, BC’s largest forest company. …Gale has said the partnership with Peak Renewables “allows us to lay the foundation for sustainable economic opportunities for our people.” The nation is also exploring geothermal energy projects. …As the FNFN under Gale’s leadership has deepened its ties with Peak, a number of members have begun questioning not just the wisdom but the feasibility of a project that would require such a massive increase in logging.

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Boreal Caribou habitat expansion proposed in Northern B.C.

By Caitlin Coombes
Energetic City Fort St. John
August 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. – The Ministry of Water, Land and Resources Stewardship has sent a Letter of Notice to the Peace River Regional District about several upcoming projects in the Fort Nelson, Peace District and Fort St. John areas. The letter was reviewed by the board of directors during the August 15th regional meeting, and outlined a proposal from the province to establish new wildlife habitat areas for Boreal Caribou. These would be established under the Forest and Range Practices Act, Government Actions Regulations (GAR) and the Boreal Caribou Protection and Recovery Plan. Consultations with First Nations and impacted tenure holders have been ongoing since July by the Ministry. Six areas in the Fort Nelson region are being assessed… Two areas in the Peace River Regional District and Fort St. John Timber Supply Area … are also being considered. …Public consultation is ongoing, and will continue until September 11th.

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Nature Conservancy of Canada acquires Acadian seaside forest for new reserve in New Brunswick

Canadian Press in Global News
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A picture-postcard forest on the coast of the Bay of Fundy in New Brunswick is being turned into a nature reserve. Nature Conservancy of Canada said Wednesday it has acquired 2.3 square kilometres of land from the family of Ruby Brown of St. Martins, N.B., about 40 kilometres east of Saint John. The new Fundy Bay View Nature Reserve, located by the St. Martins Sea Caves and near an existing provincial conservation area, is an important location for migratory shorebirds to stop, feed and rest during their travels north and south, said the non-profit conservation group. More than half the forest is mature, coastal red spruce, with a mixture of balsam fir, red maple and white spruce, and it’s home to a diversity of wildlife, including bear, bobcat and moose, as well as bird species at risk.

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Provincewide Tree Planting Starts in Neighbourhoods Affected by Wildfire

By Natural Resources and Renewables
The Government of Nova Scotia
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Some neighbourhoods in Upper Tantallon/Hammonds Plains are getting new trees planted to replace many that were burned in the May 2023 wildfire. “We’ve committed to planting 21 million trees in Nova Scotia as part of a national effort to support biodiversity, carbon capture and quality of life in our communities. This work also supports ecological forestry and green jobs to boost our rural economy,” said Kent Smith, acting Minister of Natural Resources and Renewables. “Along with our federal partners, we’re funding tree-planting projects across the province. I’m very happy that some of the first are helping restore neighbourhoods that were devastated by last year’s wildfire.” These projects are among 23 around the province that have been approved to date. In total, more than 570,000 trees will be planted this fall with about $974,000 in funding. The trees are a mix of red and white spruce, white pine, tamarack, hemlock, red and sugar maple, yellow birch and red oak.

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Canada and Nova Scotia to Plant up to 21 Million Trees and Restore Ecosystems Affected by Wildfires

Natural Resources Canada
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

HALIFAX, Nova Scotia — The Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Canada’s Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, and the Honourable Tory Rushton, Nova Scotia’s Minister of the Department of Natural Resources and Renewables, announced a joint investment of more than $40 million to plant up to 21 million trees by 2031 on private and public lands in Nova Scotia. This funding will result in the planting of more than 21 trees for each resident of Nova Scotia. …The funding will strengthen Nova Scotia’s tree-planting supply chain, from seed collection to nurseries to tree planting and monitoring. This work will create hundreds of jobs across the forestry sector in Nova Scotia. Federal funding comes from the 2 Billion Trees program, part of the Government of Canada’s broader approach to nature-based climate solutions. 

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Steven Guilbeault is on a collision course with Quebec over caribou-protection measures. Will he blink?

By Konrad Yakabuski
The Globe and Mail
August 21, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Steven Guilbeault

Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault has given Quebec an ultimatum to come up with a plan by next month to protect three endangered herds of woodland caribou or face a federal order that would ban logging in parts of the province. The unprecedented move by Mr. Guilbeault has drawn not just the ire of Premier François Legault’s government, which warns that 2,000 jobs could be lost if Ottawa moves forward with its threat of a federal order to protect the habitat of caribou populations in Val d’Or, Charlevoix and Pipmuacan, an area that straddles the Saguenay and North Shore regions. The federal Conservative Party and Bloc Québécois have also denounced Mr. Guilbeault’s move as a heavy-handed intrusion into provincial jurisdiction and called for the minister to appear before an emergency meeting of the House of Commons environment committee. [A Globe and Mail subscription is required for full access to this story]

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Climate change is pushing wildfires closer to urban areas. Firefighters say they’re not prepared

By Nicola Seguin
CBC News
August 28, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A new report from Halifax Regional Fire and Emergency sheds light on what firefighters faced over the nearly three-week operation to put out the fire that broke out on May 28, 2023, in Upper Tantallon, 30 kilometres from downtown Halifax (and burned more than 900 hectares, forcing more than 16,000 people to evacuate and destroying 151 homes), and points out how the urban, structural firefighters didn’t have the training, experience or equipment to deal with a wildfire. Structural firefighters are trained to combat fires in enclosed spaces, like homes, commercial buildings, industrial facilities and public infrastructure, versus their wildland counterparts, who work in forests and grasslands. Experts say that wildfires will encroach on urban areas more often, with climate change and urban sprawl, and municipal firefighters across the country may not be prepared. …Last year was the worst for wildfires on record, and those who study climate change and fires don’t expect much relief going forward.

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Ontario government says $17M will train over 36,000 workers mining, construction, energy and forestry

By Austin Campbell
The Timmins Daily Press
August 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The province is putting millions of dollars to train more people for jobs in the trades, specifically in northwestern Ontario. Premier Doug Ford and David Piccini, minister of labour, immigration, training and skills development announced the province’s nearly $17 million investment through the Skills Development Fund to train over 36,000 workers in the mining, construction, energy and forestry sectors. …The announcement includes the construction of new training facilities for Science North, Sheet Metal Workers Union Local 397, and Ironworkers Local 759. This funding also aims to boost training and accessibility for First Nations in the region, with $1 million going to Keewaytinook Okimakinak for training in carpentry and other building trades. …Finally, $580,000 has been dedicated to the Northern Centre for Advanced Technology (NORCAT) to deliver training programs focused on skills and safety knowledge across the forestry, mining, exploration and energy development sectors as well.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

New British Columbia Institute of Technology course focuses on why it matters how we talk about the climate emergency

By Kamyar Razavi
BC Institute of Technology
August 14, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

From forest fires to floods, Canadians are not immune to the ever-worsening effects of the climate crisis. But why is it so difficult to engage people, organizations, and policymakers on the need for urgent action to mitigate the effects of our changing climate BCIT launched a new 12-week, Flexible Learning course, Environmental and Climate News and Analysis, that explores this question through the ways that people talk about the climate emergency. The course examines the social psychology of climate change with a focus on climate and environmental news and analysis. In this course, Dr. Kamyar Razavi, a climate change journalist and veteran television news producer, will teach learners how to construct environmental news stories for impact, as well as how to develop messages that engage stakeholders on issues pertaining to climate change, environment and sustainability. …The course will also examine the environmental and energy policy landscape in Canada…

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Health & Safety

Campaign calls on province to ban glyphosate spraying

By Jim Moodie
Timmins Daily Press
August 19, 2024
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

First Nations elders in the Sudbury-North Shore area are demanding an end to what they call “poison raining from the sky.” Last week a ceremony was held in Sagamok to launch a campaign on the harms of glyphosate-based herbicide use in forestry and hydro projects. Twenty billboards stating Glyphosate Kills All, with a moose illustration, will be erected throughout the Robinson-Huron Treaty lands in coming weeks. Elder Raymond Owl, cofounder of TEK (Traditional Ecological Knowledge) Elders, addressed those gathered last Wednesday in both Anishinaabemowin and English, stating “the time for meetings has come and gone, and action is now required to protect the forest for future generations,” according to a release. …Since glyphosate has been applied as an aerial herbicide, elders “have observed dramatic changes in moose, deer, muskrat and other forest life, as jack pine plantations began replacing mixed forests,” according to the release.

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Forest Fires

‘Must keep our guard up’: West Kelowna firefighters stop blaze spreading to Gorman Bros. lumber yard

By Iain Burns
Kelowna Now
August 19, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

All four West Kelowna fire stations combined to knock down a potentially dangerous fire in the city last night. Fire Chief Jason Brolund said crews battled to prevent the fire spreading towards the storage yard owned by Gorman Bros. Lumber Ltd on Dunfield Road. The first 911 calls came in just before 5 pm, Brolund explained, after a fire was spotted among the grass and trees at the Glenrosa Road and Hwy 97 interchange. “The fire was driven by wind and dry grass, combined with sloping terrain,” Brolund said in a media bulletin. He added: “While this past week’s rain and higher humidity has helped, we still experienced cross-over fire weather conditions this afternoon. Temperatures (above 30ºC) and low humidity (below 30 per cent) with winds (above 30 kilometres an hour) combined to accelerate the spread of the fire. “This is a reminder that we must keep our guard up as fire season continues.”

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Huge Shetland Creek blaze now being held: B.C. Wildfire Service

The Canadian Press in CBC News
August 19, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

The large wildfire that destroyed multiple homes in British Columbia’s southern Interior last month is now being held, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS). Officials say the 280-square-kilometre Shetland Creek wildfire is not likely to spread further, but crews still have hard work ahead. A statement from the BCWS says smoke will remain visible from within the perimeter as crews use hand tools to dig out hot spots and turn over and wet down earth to remove heat from the fire. The fire is still listed as one of five wildfires of note in the province, meaning they are either highly visible or pose a threat to public safety and infrastructure. Last week the Thompson-Nicola Regional District lifted most of the remaining evacuation orders and alerts that were in place due to the Shetland Creek fire, which is burning between the communities of Lytton and Cache Creek about 180 kilometres northeast of Vancouver.

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