Region Archives: Canada

Special Feature

TLA Day 3 opens with screening of BC Is Burning documentary

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
January 16, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Day Three of the Truck Loggers Association convention opened with a private screening of BC Is Burning, a documentary produced by professional forester Murray Wilson examining British Columbia’s escalating wildfire crisis and the forest conditions shaping fire behaviour. Introduced by moderator Vaughn Palmer as an “urgent, powerful documentary,” the film explores how fuel buildup, insect damage, drought, and decades of fire suppression have contributed to larger, more intense wildfires, while highlighting a range of forest management approaches being applied in BC and elsewhere, including California. The screening was followed by a Q&A moderated by Palmer with Dr. Carolyn Smyth of Natural Resources Canada, Rob Schweitzer of the Ministry of Forests and BC Wildfire Service, and Jim McGrath of Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc, all of whom also appeared in the film. Discussion focused on fuel mitigation, fire salvage, carbon dynamics, and policy and permitting constraints.

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TLA Panel 8: Public Perceptions of Forestry

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
January 16, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Public Perceptions of Forestry session brought together two speakers with distinct platforms but a shared focus on how forestry is understood by the public. Moderated by Vaughn Palmer, the discussion featured Hélène Marcoux, Director of UBC’s Malcolm Knapp Research Forest, and Bob Kronbauer, creator journalist known as BC Bob. Marcoux drew on her experience in research, education, and outreach to describe how direct engagement, transparency, and acknowledging past decisions can help build public trust. She shared examples from the Malcolm Knapp Research Forest, including public tours, partnerships with First Nations, and education programs designed to meet audiences where they are and avoid technical language. Kronbauer described his approach to digital storytelling through short-form videos developed with the Truck Loggers Association, focusing on forestry workers and operations. He said showing people at work, rather than advocating positions, has helped reach broad audiences unfamiliar with the forest sector.

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TLA in Conversation with Interim Conservative Leader Trevor Halford

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
January 16, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The final session of the Truck Loggers Association convention featured an on-stage conversation with Trevor Halford, Interim Leader of the Conservative Party of BC and current Leader of the Opposition, moderated by Vaughn Palmer. Joined by TLA President Dorian Uzzell, Vice President Bob Marquis, and Past President Aaron Service, the discussion focused on forestry policy, investment certainty, and regulatory conditions affecting contractors and communities. Halford pointed to permitting delays, regulatory complexity, and policy uncertainty as barriers to investment, arguing that businesses are prepared to invest but are being held back by slow approvals. Responding to questions on DRIPA, fibre supply, and the closure of the Crofton mill, Halford framed his party’s call for repeal and his broader critique around the need for clarity, predictability, and timely decision-making. Audience questions reinforced concerns about risk aversion within government and the need for clearer authority and accountability to sustain forestry employment across the province.

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Summary Wrap-up of the 81st Annual TLA Convention

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
January 19, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Tree Frog News has been featuring the panels and speakers from the Truck Loggers Association convention over the last week. In today’s news are Friday’s panel and keynote speakers. For those who missed the coverage, are all of our summarized stories.

Day One – January 14, 2025

Day Two – January 15, 2025

Day Three – January 16, 2025

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TLA Panel 5: Fostering Collaboration & Partnerships, Part 1 First Nations Partnerships

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
January 15, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Day 2 of the TLA Convention opened with a panel on First Nations partnerships, examining how collaboration between Indigenous communities and industry is reshaping forestry in BC. Moderated by Vaughn Palmer, the session featured Lennard Joe, CEO of the BC First Nations Forestry Council; Chief Ronnie Chickite of the We Wai Kai Nation; and Klay Tindall, General Manager of Lil’wat Forestry Ventures. Joe outlined the rapid growth of First Nations tenure and investment, emphasizing operational feasibility, workforce capacity, and the need for partnerships grounded in mutual benefit. Chickite described We Wai Kai’s expansion from small licences to controlling nearly 220,000 cubic metres annually, highlighting reinvestment in employment, education, and long-term community stability. Tindall shared how partnerships helped transform Lil’wat Forestry Ventures, supporting capacity building, wildfire risk reduction, and stewardship in sensitive areas. In a discussion touching on DRIPA, the speakers emphasized inclusion, local economic benefit, and the importance of durable, collaborative governance in forestry.

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Business & Politics

Council of Forest Industries president Haakstad says regulations, permit delays strangling BC’s forest industry

By Ted Clarke
The Prince George Citizen
January 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Kim Haakstad

Kim Haakstad… the president and CEO of the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) arrived in Prince George, where she’ll be spending the next few days at the BC Natural Resources Forum. …“Given the circumstances we’re in right now, that pulp mill’s running right now, but that’s not the case for our sawmills in the region. We know there’s some working part-time and almost all have reduced shifts.” Since 2022, BC has lost 15,000 direct, indirect and induced jobs in forestry. …On Tuesday, Jan. 20 COFI announced a coalition of forestry workers, community leaders and industry representatives who have organized an online petition asking the BC government for immediate changes to forestry policies that is says are making it difficult for companies to operate and remain competitive in the wake of punitive U.S. tariffs and severely reduced access to economic fibre.

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Nova Scotia denies accusations of undermining Canada in softwood lumber dispute with U.S.

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
January 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The Nova Scotia government is defending itself after three other provinces levelled accusations that it is being secretive and undermining Canada’s fight against the United States over softwood lumber. Nova Scotia is urging the US Department of Commerce to reject requests from Quebec, Alberta and Ontario for the Atlantic province to provide much greater detail on how it calculates fees charged for harvesting timber. …Nova Scotia asserts that it should not be blamed for its surveys of private timberland owners that could result in higher fees for cutting down trees when compared with other provinces. The US has levied countervailing duties, arguing that other provinces have tree-harvesting fees that are too low when compared with Nova Scotia, which is exempt from US lumber duties. …Lawyers for Quebec, Alberta and Ontario urged the Commerce Department to make inquiries, saying the US should even consider abandoning the private surveys as a benchmark. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Task Force begins work to transform Canada’s forest sector

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
January 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

VANCOUVER, BC – The forest sector is a cornerstone of Canada’s economy and identity. For generations, our forests have supported communities and powered local economies. In response to ongoing trade pressures and the need to diversify and ensure long-term competitiveness, the Government of Canada recently announced the launch of a Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force to identify pathways to restructure, retool and transform Canada’s forest sector. Today, members of the Task Force held their first meeting. Over the next 90 days, the Task Force will engage with industry, provinces and territories, Indigenous groups and labour organizations and will gather public comments through a web portal to be launched shortly. The Task Force’s work will focus on strengthening the sector’s long-term competitiveness and sustainability… Members of the Task Force include Co-Chairs Ken Kalesnikoff, Principal and Director of Kalesnikoff Mass Timber, and Frédéric Verreault, Executive Vice-President of Chantiers Chibougamau.

In related coverage: Unifor’s fight for forestry jobs continues at high-level task force

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In Kamloops for a rare visit, top American diplomat in B.C. discusses state of U.S.-Canada relationship

By Michael Reeve
CFJC Today Kamloops
January 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Shawn Crowley

The relationship between Canada and the US has soured over recent months, with the Trump administration picking fights around the globe with increased tariffs. While CUSMA is set to be renegotiated later this year, Canada and the US still honour the free trade agreement that covers the vast majority of products that traverse the border. …“We fully understand that Canada is looking to diversify its markets. I think right now over 75% of Canada’s exports go to one country, so it’s logical that you would do that,” Consul General Shawn Crowley said. “In the US, we are doing the same thing.” …In BC, there is hope that Ottawa will push Washington on a new softwood lumber deal. …“There was talk of quotas, but they mentioned that a month before the countervailing duties were going to go into effect. That is not enough time. You have to do it a year ahead of time.”

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B.C. hits pause on heritage law rewrite after backlash

By Rob Shaw
Business in Vancouver
January 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Facing growing backlash over the unintended consequences of its reconciliation policies, the B.C. NDP government has hit pause on controversial changes to the Heritage Conservation Act…Forests Minister Ravi Parmar announced the move Monday, saying he’d “heard loud and clear” that municipalities, business groups, the real estate sector and …the public needed more time to understand the changes. “It was very clear to me that I was not in a position to bring forward amendments this spring,” he said. …It’s the opposite approach to where the NDP started on the file just four months ago, charging forward with the changes so aggressively that their passage—following secret negotiations with First Nations and non-disclosure agreements slapped on everyone else—seemed like a fait accompli. …The NDP say they are in listening mode now, on the Heritage Conservation Act. The question is whether the government truly understands that changes built without public trust are simply no longer viable.

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Premier Eby says new markets, reforms will help forestry, but results will take time

By Wolfgang Depner
The Canadian Press
January 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

VICTORIA – Premier David Eby says a recent agreement advancing wood construction in China will deliver results for the forestry industry in British Columbia, but also acknowledges that it will take “time, energy and commitment” to create a sustainable industry. A five-year-agreement between British Columbia’s Forests Ministry and the Chinese government boosts the research, development and promotion of modern wood construction in China, and Eby says it [will help by] diversifying markets. Eby spoke at the BC Natural Resources Forum in Prince George, B.C., saying …punitive tariffs from the U.S. have had devastating effects on the foundational industry of forestry, including mill closures leading to job losses, and communities losing revenue. …Eby says the work around forestry is “challenging” and “it always feels too slow for the urgency of the threat,” but promises that “predictable land access, permit reform, value added investments and new trading relationships” will deliver a better future for forestry.   

Additional coverage in the Prince George Citizen, by Matthew Hillier: Eby sees more international trade as a way forward for BC forestry

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Mill closure blows hole in Houston municipal budget

By Rod Link
The Northern View
January 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

HOUSTON, BC — The District of Houston faces a $1.2 million municipal budget shortfall thanks to the closure of Canfor’s sawmill here because the mill property is no longer considered an active enterprise making it possible to collect taxes based on its previous industrial assessment. And that could mean the District will dip into a budget stabilization reserve of $1.65 million set up in January 2023 for just such a situation. “A core priority of council is to minimize the financial impacts this assessment change has on residents while maintaining service levels for utilities, public safety and infrastructure maintenance,” the District said. The $1.2 million revenue gap represents approximately 20% of the District’s annual taxation income. The release indicated District staffers are looking at various options to deal with the revenue shortfall. 

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Mayor pleads for federal extension of EI program for displaced Crofton mill workers

By Robert Barron
Victoria News
January 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

North Cowichan’s mayor wants the federal government to extend its temporary Employment Insurance program to include workers at the Crofton pulp mill who will be working until mid-April. In letters to Minister of Jobs and Families Patty Hajdu and Jeff Kibble, MP for Cowichan-Malahat-Langford, Rob Douglas said the temporary EI measures that Ottawa introduced last summer in response to major economic conditions across the country, including mill closures, are set to expire on April 11. That’s just three days before approximately 60 workers, who are being maintained at the Crofton mill for operational considerations beyond its closure in early February, will receive their layoff notices on April 14. …Douglas said that, on behalf of the community, he is requesting that the federal government extend the temporary EI measures or implement an exemption mechanism to ensure that all Crofton mill workers affected by the closure are treated equitably.

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Skeena Sawmills forest licence transfer quashed

By Bob Mackin
Prince George Citizen
January 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A BC Supreme Court judge has set aside the Minister of Forests’ approval of the Skeena Sawmills forest licence transfer to a numbered company owned by the Kitsumkalum First Nation. …In a Jan. 7 decision, Justice Matthew Kirchner agreed with the nine hereditary chiefs that the province failed in its legal duty to consult and accommodate Gitanyow when it approved the licence transfer to 1355387 BC Ltd. …The matter will be returned to the minister to reconsider after proper consultation, Kirchner said, “assuming Kitsumkalum still wishes to pursue the approval of the licence transfer.” Skeena Sawmills was offered for sale by a court-appointed receiver after the company’s 2023 bankruptcy. …Kirchner found it unnecessary to consider the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA) in this case, because neither materially impacted the depth of consultation required.

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B.C. aerial firefighting company sues U.S. rival over alleged ‘deceitful’ South Korean deal

By Stefan Labbé
Vancouver in Business
January 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A Port Alberni company is suing a U.S. rival, alleging it engaged in a scheme to exclude it from an international contract to supply aerial firefighting equipment to South Korea. …Under the terms of the South Korean agreement, the vendor who won the first contract would be given preference for the remaining six helicopter deals, according to a notice of civil claim filed late last week in B.C. Supreme Court. Coulson, Erickson Inc. and Oregon-based Columbia Helicopters Inc. were among those qualified to bid on the contract. …The suit says Columbia agreed to use Coulson’s proprietary large-capacity, high-flow firefighting tank in any helicopters bought by the Korean Fire Service. In exchange, Coulson would stand down its bid for the helicopter contracts, effectively clearing a path for its rival. …In court documents, Coulson claimed its U.S. rival breached their contract by installing a competitor’s water tank in the first helicopter.

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North Island forestry workers reach tentative deal

By Darron Kloster
Victoria Times Colonist
January 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER ISLAND — About 100 unionized forestry workers on the north Island who’ve been on strike since June have reached a tentative agreement with La-kwa sa muqw Forestry Limited Partnership. The United Steelworkers Local 1-1937 and the LKSM Partnership announced in a joint statement that the agreement is subject to a ratification vote by the union, and no details are being released. “The USW bargaining committee has advised that they will be recommending that its members accept this agreement,” said the joint statement. The deal was reached with the assistance of the BC Labour Relations Board. …LKSM LP is the former Western Forest Products mid-Island forest operation, which remains majority-owned by Western Forest Products. The LKSM partnership is made up of the Tlowitsis, We Wai Kai, Wei Wai Kum and K’ómoks First Nations, all members of the Nanwakolas Council. …The operations cover about 157,000 hectares near Campbell River and Sayward.

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I was shocked, I was upset,’ Ignace mayor says of mill shutdown

By Matt Prokopchuk
North West Ontario News Watch
January 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Kim Baigrie

IGNACE — The phone call came as a surprise to Ignace Mayor Kim Baigrie. On the other end of the line, she said, was an official from Domtar telling her the news that the company’s sawmill in Ignace will be shutting down indefinitely. “I was shocked, I was upset,” she told Newswatch. “I didn’t want to hear that for our community, but I told them I understand the tariffs and the softwood prices, and I realize you can’t operate when you’re losing.” “I understand where they’re coming from, but we want to support our community and the workers.” Domtar confirmed the facility will shut down on March 12, citing “weak” demand for lumber in North America. …Baigrie said the township has a delegation at the Rural Ontario Municipal Association conference in Toronto and is meeting with ministers and government stakeholders, with support for the township and workers key on its agenda.

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GreenFirst Secures $30 Million Term Loan Under Federal Softwood Lumber Program

GreenFirst Forest Products Inc.
January 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NORTH BAY, Ontario — GreenFirst Forest Products announced that it has entered into a $30 million term loan under the Softwood Lumber Program announced by the Government of Canada. The financing was arranged with the Company’s banking partner, BMO, and is intended to support liquidity and ongoing operations amid continued market volatility in the North American lumber sector. The term loan enhances GreenFirst’s financial flexibility and provides additional runway as the Company continues to navigate challenging lumber market conditions while executing on its operational and strategic priorities. “This financing under the federal Softwood Lumber Program strengthens our balance sheet and provides important liquidity during a difficult period for the industry,” said Joël Fournier, GreenFirst’s CEO. …The Softwood Lumber Program was introduced to support eligible Canadian softwood lumber producers facing adverse market conditions.

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Irving says Sussex chip plant jobs moving to Saint John

By Andrew Bates
The Telegraph-Journal
January 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

SAINT JOHN, New Brunswick — Employees working at the chip plant at J.D. Irving, Ltd.’s sawmill outside of Sussex were notified last week that the company is moving those jobs to Saint John. The company informed workers at the chip plant in its Four Corners facility last week that their positions would be “centralized” to the new South Bay Chip Plant in Saint John when it opens this spring, according to vice president, communications Anne McInerney. She described the move as a “small organizational change” that affects 20 unionized workers, plus another five currently vacant positions. …JDI first announced plans to convert the Bald Mountain Rock Quarry site in West Saint John to a wood chip facility in May 2024 alongside Irving Pulp & Paper, Ltd.’s $1.1 billion plan to overhaul the Saint John pulp mill. 

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New Brunswick wood marketing board points to forest industry frustrations

By Laura Brown
CTV News
January 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

A letter from the Carleton-Victoria Forest Products Marketing Board to New Brunswick’s natural resources minister points to frustration building within the province’s forestry industry. The board’s general manager Kim Jensen, says some prices are the lowest they’ve seen in a decade. Jensen writes that US tariffs have been hard on the entire sector, including mills, but there’s been little support for private producers. “I have already heard from landowners who have changed their mind about having their woodlots cut,” she states. “Is the government’s long-term plan for the private forestry sector to just disappear? Because that is what is happening. Under your watch.” …Natural Resources Minister John Herron acknowledged that prices have declined since October. …But Herron didn’t mention any possible provincial support.” …J.D. Irving said 97% of the company’s lumber is under contract and not impacted by the price changes cited in the letter.

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Multiple energy challenges are major test for Holt Liberals

By Jacques Poitras
CBC News
January 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Susan Holt

NEW BRUNSWICK — It’s no cabinet crisis, but major energy issues are turning into a revealing stress test for Premier Susan Holt’s government. …On the energy front, Premier Susan Holt must contend with differing opinions among ministers. …Natural Resources Minister John Herron is openly pushing for changes to the Electricity Act to let J.D. Irving Ltd. exit the N.B. Power grid and cheaply generate its own renewable power, bypassing the utility’s industrial power rates. He says the change would protect forestry jobs, a sector he regulates. But Herron strays into Legacy’s turf when he points out the change may also avert the need for more gas plants. …The utility says letting large industrial customers exit its grid could put “upward pressure” on other ratepayers, who would be left to cover a greater share of the utility’s fixed costs. That could be be politically costly.

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Finance & Economics

Almost $14 Billion of Softwood Lumber Duties on Deposit

By Paul Krabbe, President
eiforest consulting Ltd.
January 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

As of December 2025, Anti Dumping, Countervailing Duty and Section 232 softwood lumber duties and accumulated interest on deposit with the United States totals nearly $14 Billion.

Deposits $10.6 Billion CAD + Interest 2.6 Billion + FX Gain 0.5 Billion = Total $13.7 Billion

Canadian softwood lumber exporters are currently paying a combined duty deposit rate of 45.16% on lumber imported into the United States.

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Canada’s inflation ticks up to 2.4% in December as last year’s GST break impacts data

By Jenna Benchetrit
CBC News
January 19, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Canada’s annual inflation rate ticked up to 2.4% in December compared to the same period last year, when the federal government implemented a GST break that brought some prices down, Statistics Canada said. The temporary tax cut, which began on Dec. 14, 2024, lasted for two months. It reverberated through monthly inflation data for part of 2025 but officially fell out of the year-over-year movement last month, sending price growth accelerating, according to the data agency. December’s rate was a smidge higher than the 2.2% rate seen in November. It was partly offset by a year-over-year decline in gas prices. With energy excluded, inflation rose to 3% in December. …”The main takeaway here is that after a year of some wide divergences, almost all of the main measures of inflation are now very close to [2.5%], in tune with the Bank of Canada’s view on the pace of underlying inflation,” wrote BMO’s Douglas Porter.

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Canfor Pulp announces expiration of “Go-Shop” Period with no alternative acquisition proposal received

Canfor Pulp Products Inc.
January 20, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC – Canfor Pulp Products announced the expiration of the go-shop period provided for in the previously announced arrangement agreement dated December 3, 2025 between Canfor Pulp and Canfor Corporation, pursuant to which Canfor Corp will acquire all of Canfor Pulp’s issued and outstanding common shares not already owned by Canfor Corp and its affiliates. Under the terms of the Arrangement Agreement, each shareholder of Canfor Pulp will have the option to receive: 0.0425 of a common share of Canfor Corp per Canfor Pulp Share held, or $0.50 in cash per Canfor Pulp Share held. …During the Go-Shop Period, Canfor Pulp was permitted to actively solicit, evaluate and enter into negotiations with third parties that expressed an interest in acquiring Canfor Pulp. …The Go-Shop Period expired on January 19, 2026. Canfor Pulp did not receive any Acquisition Proposals.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Wood-Based ‘Foam’ Tech Developed by UBC Researchers Draws Federal Capital

By Knowlton Thomas
Techcouver
January 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Feng Jiang

The Yinka Dene Economic Development Limited Partnership, or YLP, is partnering with the University of British Columbia’s Department of Wood Science to scale a technology dubbed DicinFoam. The “foam” is actually a biodegradable, fire-retardant material made from ligno-cellulosic nano-materials (“Dicin” translates to “wood” in the Wet’suwet’en language). Development of DicinFoam began when a project, “Developing Fire Retardant Thermal Insulating Materials from Lignocellulosic Nanomaterials for Building and Construction,” garnered sponsorship by the BC Ministry of Forests. This year, the now-patented technology is being scaled toward commercial applications. …Jiang’s team believes that it has developed a scalable technology for recyclable, binder-free micro-fibrillated lignocellulose foams with flame resistance, thermal insulation, and mechanical performance.

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The University of Victoria engineering buildings push boundaries

The REMI Network
January 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

The University of Victoria (UVIC) is expanding its Civil Engineering campus with two new net-zero, mass-timber buildings that reimagine how architecture can support teaching, research, and climate action. Designed by Dialog, the project includes a six-storey expansion to the Engineering & Computer Science building (ECSE) and a new, purpose-built High Bay Research & Structures Lab (HBRSL). Together, the buildings are designed not simply as places to learn, but as fully instrumented “living laboratories”. …The ECSE’s structure incorporates a hybrid-mass timber system with cross-laminated timber (CLT) floor panels and steel columns and beams, while the HBRSL building incorporates glue-laminated (glulam) beams, columns and CLT floor panels. …Slated for completion later this year, the project has already achieved Zero Carbon Building accreditation and is targeting LEED Gold certification, in alignment with the Canada Green Building Council’s Zero Carbon Building Standards and the International Living Future Institute’s Zero Carbon framework.

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Engineering student wins Canadian Wood Council’s Catherine Lalonde Memorial Scholarship

University of Northern BC
January 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

When PhD student Houman Ganjali takes a break from his projects at the Wood Innovation Research Laboratory, he turns to natural philosophy and finds inspiration in the words of the late theoretical physicist Dr. Richard Feynman, “there is pleasure in finding things out.” What Houman is focused on is to figure out  how we can incorporate point supported cross-laminated timber (CLT), into building designs in new and innovative ways. Recently, Houman earned the Catherine Lalonde Memorial Scholarship, a prestigious national scholarship from the Canadian Wood Council recognizing both academic excellence and innovative research in sustainable construction. The highly competitive award is open to master’s and doctoral students across Canada and recognizes outstanding achievement in the field of wood engineering. “I am truly honored to receive this reputable award,” Houman says, recognizing his supervisor, Dr. Thomas Tannert, and support from UNBC and the UNBC Wood Innovation Research Laboratory.” 

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J.P. Wiser’s tops podium as whisky awards celebrates best of Canada’s liquid gold

By Bailey Seymour
The Alberni Valley News
January 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

©CountyCooperage

Once again, Victoria was home to the country’s largest event celebrating the caramel-coloured booze that helped define the 19th and early 20th centuries. On Thursday, Jan. 15, the Canadian Whisky Awards were held at Hotel Grand Pacific, recognizing the top distillers within the nuanced world of the highly esteemed canuck-made drink. …Canadian whisky is more regulated compared to other countries, especially our American counterparts, in that the federal Food and Drugs Act requires liquor labelled as ‘Canadian whisky’ to be mashed, distilled and aged in Canada, to be aged in wood vessels for at least three years, and it must contain at least 40 per cent alcohol by volume.

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Prince George could become hub for modular home construction: Yu

By Ted Clarke
Prince George Citizen
January 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The federal government is looking for a hub to build modular homes for the Arctic. Prince George, with its forestry infrastructure, industrial base and transportation networks, is being considered as a possible site for that industry. Mayor Simon Yu [said] the city has everything it needs to create a new industry for the region. “We have to seize the moment,” said Yu. “For housing developments up in the Arctic, Prince George will be the centre of action. …This is a key to solve our lumber problem. We’ve got the wood, we’ve got the technology, we have a university here, we have a research program, we have CNC here, we have the workers and we will get this modular home factory going. We need to add value to wood products to create jobs right here and build houses for our overseas markets as well as for Canada.”

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This Canadian start-up makes pulp from straw instead of wood, and it’s ready to scale

By Mark Mann
Corporate Knights
January 14, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Every year in Canada, 30 million tonnes of wheat straw left over from harvesting gets left on farmers’ fields. What if you could turn some of that waste into paper products and alleviate the pressure on forests in the process? The founders of Red Leaf Pulp say they’ve figured out how to make high-quality pulp from agricultural by-products rather than wood from trees, and they’re ready to start producing at scale. The company’s first-of-a-kind pulp mill, slated to begin construction in Regina, Saskatchewan, in the first quarter of 2026, will manufacture what it calls “climate-positive, non-wood pulp” using a process that consumes 95% less water and 70% less energy than traditional mills – all while running on electricity generated by burning biomass from its own waste stream. …Red Leaf also plans to sell the lignin – a component of plant cell walls that gives them their structure – separately as a stand-alone product. 

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Forestry

First Nations-owned forestry company granted additional court protection as anti-logging blockades continue

By Denise Titian
Ha-Shilth-Sa
January 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Walbran Valley, BC – RCMP are continuing enforcement of a B.C. Supreme Court Injunction that C̓awak ʔqin Forestry Ltd, co-owned by Huu-ay-aht First Nation, was granted to prevent logging protestors from blocking access to their work areas within the Walbran Valley. …“C̓awak ʔqin Forestry respects the rights and perspective of local First Nations in the management of these lands and will continue to collaborate with all Nations whose territories overlap TFL 44, including Pacheedaht First Nation,” stated the company. …But activists like the Walbran Forest Defenders are occupying and blocking access to cut blocks in an effort to prevent logging of old growth trees. They demand a moratorium on all old growth logging. …The latest ruling means that the attorney general will review the arrests to determine whether there is evidence to prosecute those that continue to defy the injunction with criminal contempt.

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Keyera to Establish 95-Acre Forest in Alberta’s Industrial Heartland

By Project Forest
Cision Newswire
January 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

STRATHCONA COUNTY, AB – Project Forest has partnered with Keyera and Strathcona County to establish the Keyera Legacy Forest. This forest restoration initiative is focused on restoring wildfire-impacted land and supporting community biodiversity in Alberta’s industrial Heartland. Located in Strathcona County, northeast of Fort Saskatchewan, the project will restore over 95 acres of ecologically degraded land. Strathcona County will use a Conservation Easement to ensure permanence and create a “green island” within Alberta’s Industrial Heartland. …The Keyera Legacy Forest is a unique example demonstrating how restoration and industry can coexist, delivering long-term community and ecological benefits. This is a rare, once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to responsibly restore designated industrial land. This project represents a voluntary commitment by Keyera to invest in long-term environmental stewardship, guided by values rather than obligation.

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Continuing engagement for Heritage Conservation Act

By the Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
January 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Government is postponing the introduction of proposed amendments to the Heritage Conservation Act that had originally been anticipated for spring 2026. This decision reflects the need to continue engagement to gather and incorporate additional feedback from industry, local governments and First Nations. Input received to date has confirmed the importance of streamlining the permitting for major projects on Crown land and private residential projects, ensuring quicker community rebuilds following a disaster, and better protecting heritage and significant First Nations cultural sites. The Ministry of Forests will continue to engage with industry, project proponents, First Nations, local governments and other interested parties. Specifically, the Province will be inviting industry partners to a cross-sector meeting in the coming weeks to discuss the permitting process, and will continue to welcome feedback as the work progresses.

Additional coverage in the Vancouver Sun, by Alec Lazenby: Heritage Conservation Act changes further delayed over concerns it could halt developmentForests Minister Ravi Parmar says more consultation will be conducted before a bill is presented to the legislature.

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Forestry Is a Solution: Voice Your Support for Jobs and Communities

Council of Forest Industries
January 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE, BC Today, at the BC Natural Resources Forum (NRF), a broad coalition of forestry workers, community leaders, and industry representatives officially launched a new province-wide platform: “Forestry is a Solution”. The coalition is asking British Columbians to voice their support for the workers and families that depend on forestry – a sector that is vital to the province’s heritage and its future. “British Columbia has the forests, the workers, and the expertise to lead the world, yet the sector currently faces significant headwinds from global competition, challenging operating conditions, and damaging U.S. trade actions,” the coalition stated. “This campaign is about homegrown solutions that use our resources to solve our most urgent challenges—from building affordable housing to reducing wildfire risks in our backyard”. The initiative centers on a new digital hub, forestryisasolution.com, which allows supporters to engage directly with provincial decision-makers.

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First Nation to help shape plans for Nimpkish Valley

By Michael John Lo
Victoria Times Colonist
January 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

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‘Na̱mg̱is First Nation will soon have more say over what happens to lands surrounding the Nimpkish, Vancouver Island’s longest river. Implementation of a land-use plan for the Nimpkish Valley, developed by the First Nation and province over the course of a decade, was officially kick-started by ministerial orders signed last week in Nanaimo. ‘It will govern a wide range of land uses, including forestry, tourism, conservation and power generation. The proposed terms of the Gwa’ni Land Use Planning Project would increase protected areas in the valley to 54 per cent from 38 per cent, and reduce forestry and other commercial activities in an area that has been harvested since the early 1900s. …Elected ‘Na̱mg̱is Chief Victor Isaac said the plan will help make the forest sector in the region more sustainable. That sentiment was echoed by the mayors of Port McNeill and Port Hardy.

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B.C. judge rejects class action over deadly Duffey Lake landslide

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
January 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A judge has struck down an attempt to launch a class-action lawsuit against the B.C. government for its alleged role in a deadly landslide that killed five people on a highway northeast of Whistler. …But the core of the case hinged on an old forest service road that had never been deactivated….The plaintiff’s lawyer Robert Gibbens claimed the province had known about it for 15 to 20 years but failed to ensure it was properly decommissioned. …But in his decision, Thomas found that while the Ministry of Transportation manages highways, the statutory authority to deactivate service roads lies with the Ministry of Forests. When the judge examined that ministry’s responsibilities, he found an exemption in the Forest and Range Practices Act that provided decision-makers with legal immunity from damages.

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Gwa’ni Land Use Planning Project moving forward

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
January 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

On Jan. 15, 2026, four ministerial orders were signed to advance the implementation of the Gwa’ni Land Use Planning Project on Vancouver Island. The Gwa’ni Land Use Planning Project has been jointly developed by the B.C. government and ’Na̱mg̱is First Nation, with extensive input from industry, the public, communities, stakeholders and other interested parties. Among other goals, this project seeks to promote the values agreed upon through engagement, including: protect biodiversity, ecosystems and ’Na̱mg̱is First Nation cultural values within the Nimpkish Valley watershed; provide improved operational clarity for the forestry industry; and balance environmental, social and economic values within the planning area. The project supports the Tree Farm Licence 37 Forest Landscape Plan. In December 2025, ’Na̱mg̱is First Nation and the Province signed a joint decision-making agreement that advances reconciliation by supporting predictable harvesting and sustainable forestry operations on the north Island. 

Additional coverage in Chek News, by Jeff Lawrence: B.C. and ʼNa̱mǥis First Nation advance Gw’ani land-use plan for Nimpkish Valley

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Cree leadership urges halt to caribou hunting as numbers fall

By Vanna Blacksmith
CBC News
January 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

For generations, caribou have sustained Cree families, their culture and their way of life. Now, that relationship is at a critical moment, as the Leaf River herd population continues to decline. The Cree Nation Government (CNG) have issued a territory-wide call to pause caribou hunting, urging Cree not to harvest across Eeyou Istchee, the traditional territory of the Cree of northern Quebec. “We’re going to have a hard time blaming somebody else for this issue because it is only First Nations that are hunting right now. We need to step up and be proactive,” said Paul John Murdoch, who is the grand chief of Eeyou Istchee. This decision was based on consultation from land users and study results from the Quebec government, said Murdoch. Leaf River herd consisted of approximately 136,000 caribou in 2025, down from 175,000 in 2024, according to wildlife studies. In 2000, the herd’s population was 600,000. That’s more than a 75 per cent decline in 25 years.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Canada forecasts 2026 to be among the hottest years on record

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
Cision Newswire
January 19, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – The Government of Canada has released its annual global mean temperature forecast, providing early insight into expected global temperature conditions for 2026. Following record-breaking global heat in 2023 and 2024 and a comparably warm 2025, global temperatures are expected to remain at historically high levels. Environment and Climate Change Canada’s latest global mean temperature forecast indicates that 2026 will likely be among the hottest years on record, comparable to 2023 and 2025 and approaching 2024, which remains the warmest year ever observed. …Canada’s long-term forecasts indicate that the period from 2026 to 2030 will likely be the hottest five-year period on record. …To address the drivers of rising global temperatures, the Government of Canada is taking action to reduce emissions. …Reducing greenhouse gas emissions protects human health and reduces climate impacts while supporting economic growth. 

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Health & Safety

USW welcomes long-overdue combustible dust safety reforms on anniversary of Babine Forest Products explosion

By United Steelworkers Union
Globe Newswire
January 20, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE, BC — On the anniversary of the Babine Forest Products mill explosion, the United Steelworkers union is remembering the two workers killed and the more than 20 others injured in the 2012 tragedy, while welcoming long-overdue reforms to BC’s combustible dust safety regulations. Fourteen years ago, two workers went to work at the Babine sawmill near Burns Lake, BC, and did not return home after a powerful explosion caused by combustible wood dust. The disaster remains one of the deadliest industrial workplace tragedies in the province’s history. …At its November 2025 meeting, WorkSafeBC’s Board of Directors approved significant amendments to Part 6 of the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation to modernize how combustible dust hazards are regulated in BC. …The new requirements include mandatory combustion risk assessments, written combustible dust management programs, stronger controls on ignition sources and dust accumulation, and enhanced training and worker consultation. The amendments will come into force on Jan. 4, 2027.

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