Region Archives: Canada

Business & Politics

Canada China Business Excellence Awards

Canada China Business Council
November 15, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, International

At Canada China Business Council’s Forum on November 15, 2024, CCBC announced the winners of the 9th Canada China Business Excellence Awards. The Awards, chosen by an independent panel of judges, recognize organizations from CCBC’s membership that take a leading and innovative role in expanding and nurturing bilateral business relationships. The successful stories of our award winners provide inspiration to other companies, helping to encourage more successful trade and investment between Canada and China. The awards include:

  • Canada Wood Group’s Haiyan ZHANG won Gold in Women in Leadership: This award recognizes female executives or leaders who have made a consequential impact on a company or institution’s success in or with China.
  • Canada Wood Group won Silver in Benefit to Canada: The average Canadian is unaware of the economic benefit that Canadian exports to China bring to Canadians. This award recognizes companies who have achieved business results from exporting Canadian goods and/or services to China

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Trump says he will hit China, Canada and Mexico with new tariffs

By Aime Williams
The Financial Times
November 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Donald Trump has said he will impose tariffs of 25% on all imports from Canada and Mexico, and an extra 10% on Chinese goods, accusing the countries of permitting illegal migration and drug trafficking. …The Canadian dollar fell 0.9% against the US dollar to a four-year low, while the Mexican peso shed 1.3%. The announcements serve as opening shots in Trump’s confrontational new trade policy. “Stiff new tariffs on imports from the US’s three largest trading partners would significantly increase costs and disrupt business across all economies involved,” said a Washington-based think-tank. “Even the threat of tariffs can have a chilling effect.” …Canada’s Chrystia Freeland hailed the bilateral relationship with the US as “one of the strongest and closest . . . particularly when it comes to trade and border security”. They also noted that Canada “buys more from the United States than China, Japan, France and the UK combined”, and last year supplied “60% of US crude oil imports”.

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‘Devastating’: Ontario chief official leads Canadian criticism of Trump tariff plan

By James FitzGerald
BBC News – US & Canada
November 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Doug Ford

A threat by US President-elect Donald Trump to tax imports from America’s three biggest trade partners has caused concern in one of the countries affected, Canada. Doug Ford, the leader of Ontario province, was among those who criticised the move, which he described as “devastating”. The official Canadian response has been more muted. CBC reported there had been a flurry of late-night calls between Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Trump, and between the PM and province leaders. Trudeau pointed out that the number of migrants crossing the border from Canada was much smaller compared to the number crossing the border from Mexico. …The Canadian American Business Council said “we strongly oppose” the proposed tariff, which the council said would undermine a North American trade agreement between Canada, the US and Mexico that was renegotiated under Trump’s first term. The CABC statement added that the move would “harm businesses on both sides of the border.

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As Trump threatens tariffs against Canada and Mexico, here are five things we know so far

By Adrian Morrow
The Globe and Mail
November 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

How many migrants, and how much fentanyl, is actually going from Canada to the U.S.?

Border patrol had 23,721 “encounters” along the Canadian border last year… a sharp increase from 10,021 the year before By comparison, border patrol had 1,530,523 such encounters at the Mexican border last year. U.S. customs agents seized 43 pounds of fentanyl at the Canadian border last year, 0.2% of the total intercepted across the US.

How is this tied to trade?

Mr. Trump has a history of threatening to use tariffs to put pressure on other countries to agree to his demands. …He has also vowed to renegotiate the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement when it comes up for review next year.

Wouldn’t USMCA prevent him from doing this? 

Canada and Mexico could theoretically launch a trade case against the U.S. under the deal if Mr. Trump goes forward with his tariffs. But trade disputes tend to take years to make their way through the system. A more immediate route that Canada and Mexico could try would be imposing retaliatory tariffs on the U.S. Another possibility is a court challenge on the US side.

What would the effect of 25% tariffs be?

While Mr. Trump likes to claim that tariffs are paid by foreign countries, they are actually paid for by people importing the tariffed products into the U.S., with the cost often passed on to consumers.

What is Canada doing?

Canadian officials have been ftrying to build alliances with American politicians and business leaders. More discreetly, some Canadian officials have spent months trying to build ties to Mr. Trump’s inner circle.

[to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

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San Group’s Port Alberni mills running intermittently due to log shortage

By Carla Wilson
The Times Colonist
November 16, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The San Group’s mills and remanufacturing plant in Port Alberni are running only intermittently after a curtailment began in October due to a log shortage. Kevin Somerville, VP of operations, said that San Group’s large-log mill is back up and running, but supplies are inconsistent. …San Group announced in mid-October that it was temporarily shutting down its large-log mill and remanufacturing plant in Port Alberni. At that time, it had some supply to run through its small-log mill. The move affected about 75 workers. Supply is off-and-on for the small-log mill and it, too, will be up and down, Somerville said. …The remanufacturing plant was initially out of operation for two weeks but has been running at “half throttle” since, Somerville said. …The province put liens on the San Group’s Port Alberni sawmill lands earlier this year, saying it was owed $22 million in stumpage fees.

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BC Premier Eby says Canada must negotiate from position of strength on US tariff

By Dirk Meissner and Nono Shen
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
November 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West, United States

David Eby

BC Premier Eby said Canada must approach Trump’s plan to impose a 25% U.S. tariff on Canadian goods from a position of strength, as business, trade and community organizations called for quick action on the trade threat. Eby said premiers and Prime Minister Trudeau would meet this week to discuss “our strategic approach”. …Canada and the U.S. have long been top trading partners, on imports as well as exports, and the strength of this relationship put Canada in a solid position when it came to Trump’s tariff threat, Eby said. …Eby acknowledged improvements could be made on Canada’s border, especially when it came to policing contraband and illegal drugs. …The B.C. Lumber Trade Council said the proposed tariff would hurt U.S. consumers and homebuyers by driving up the cost of building materials from Canada. …But some economists and policy analysts warned against falling for familiar Trump negotiation tactics.

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Trump’s tariffs threat not good for Canada

By Cheryl Jahn
CKPG News Prince George
November 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West, United States

PRINCE GEORGE – It couldn’t be in plainer language, laid out on social media. …“I think if we learned anything from the first Trump presidency, it’s that he’s very unpredictable and we should expect more of that in in the future,” says Dr. Gary Wilson, Political Scientist at UNBC. …Eighty per cent of BC’s softwood lumber is shipped to the United States. There is already a tariff of 17% on softwood. But Kurt Niquidet says American lumber consumers will be hit just as hard. “With these tariffs push up the costs and the prices in the US. So it hurts the consumer in the US for softwood lumber that’s been impacting the consumers of lumber. The home builders and so forth, and eroding housing affordability. And then in back in Canada, it negatively impacts our production and has impacts on businesses and workers and communities.” 

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Doman Building Materials Group Ltd. Announces Response to the Recently Proposed U.S. Tariffs

By Doman Building Materials Group Ltd.
Globe Newswire
November 27, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, British Columbia – Doman Building Materials Group Ltd. announced its response to President elect Trump’s proposed 25% tariffs on goods entering the United States from Canada. Although no material details were announced in respect of the Proposed US Tariffs, the Company’s businesses in each country generally operate independently. Accordingly, other than any business already subject to Softwood Lumber duties, the Company does not currently expect to be impacted materially by the Proposed US Tariffs on goods imported to the United States from Canada. “Given the magnitude of President elect Trump’s proposed tariffs and given our growing presence in Canada and even more so in the US, we want to ensure that all of our stakeholders are well informed that based on expectations today, our business would not be impacted in a material way,” commented Amar S. Doman, Chairman and CEO. 

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Trump’s tariffs a hot topic at B.C. energy and resource forum

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
November 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Lisa Baiton

Most Americans, like most Canadians, probably have no idea how important Canada is to American energy security and its comparatively cheap gasoline. But they may soon find out. Should Donald Trump’s threats of 25 per cent tariffs across the board on Canadian imports include oil and natural gas, there would be a crude awakening. Trump’s threat of across-the-board tariffs on Canadian and Mexican imports is sending “shockwaves” through the Canadian business community, said Bridgitte Anderson, president of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade at an energy and resources forum Tuesday in Vancouver. …B.C. lumber exports to the U.S. are already subject to duties of about 15 per cent. Presumably, blanket tariffs on Canadian goods would add another 10 per cent. …While it’s not yet clear whether the threatened tariffs would include energy exports — oil, natural gas and electricity — Trump did make a point of upper-casing his threat to suggest they would apply to everything.

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MLA for Kamloops-North Thompson Ward Stamer excited for forestry role

By Hettie Buck
The North Thompson Star/Journal
November 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ward Stamer

Ward Stamer, the newly elected MLA for Kamloops – North Thompson is confident his years of experience in forestry as a logging contractor can be useful in his role as forestry critic in the shadow cabinet alongside the NDP’s Minister of Forests, Ravi Parmar. Stamer, the former mayor of Barriere, was recently appointed to this high-profile position. “I’m hoping to work well together with Minister Parmar,” Stamer said. “…There is so much to be done with regards to wildfire mitigation, fibre supply and the softwood lumber crisis. I certainly hope the NDP will be receptive to constructive input as we work together. …Our softwood lumber agreement hasn’t been ratified since 2015 and we are paying the largest stumpage fees in North America through taxes on our products. These are critical issues to address and I’m ready to do the work as I’ve spent much of my career in the forest industry in B.C.”

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Make forestry great again in BC, business council urges province

By Grant Warkentin
My Comox Valley Now
November 23, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

With the dust from the provincial election mostly settled, the BC Business Council is urging the province to help the struggling forestry sector. In a statement on Friday the council said it is deeply concerned about the future of BC’s second-largest export industry. They say provincial policy and regulation changes, a declining annual allowable cut, softwood tariffs, and volatile prices are eating away at the sector. That’s hurting communities around the province, they say, which are already struggling with affordability and the rising cost of living. A strong natural resources sector, including forestry, is fundamental to prosperity, the council says. They ask the province to hold off on any policy changes that could significantly impact the sector in the near future, and focus on bringing it back to health.

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Trump tariffs hard to navigate but Canada can take action, Windsor and auto leaders say

By Heather Kitching and Kathleen Taylor’s
CBC News
November 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East, United States

Drew Dilkens

As leaders across Canada and in Windsor, Ontario sound the alarm over what a potential 25% tariff imposed by president-elect Donald Trump would mean for the Canadian economy, they also say there are ways to handle it. Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens told CBC News Network Tuesday morning that he believes the promise might be a negotiating tactic aimed at launching discussions on the U.S. Mexico Canada (USMCA) trade agreement, which is up for review in 2026. …Dilkens, who was also mayor of Windsor during Trump’s first term of office, called Trump’s threat “a bit of a rinse, wash, repeat-that-cycle going on again,” recalling conflicts over aluminum tariffs and softwood lumber during the first Trump administration. …Volpe says that one of the keys is to figure out what Trump ultimately wants and recognize Canada’s strength in those areas.

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JD Irving, other companies want to appeal decision that releases them from land claim

By Mia Urquhart
CBC News New Brunswick
November 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Appeal requests were filed by Acadian Timber, H.J. Crabbe & Sons and the JDI intended appellants, which represents 13 companies. According to the JDI appeal, they’re looking for one of two things — for the original claim against them to be dismissed or that they “be reinstated as proper party defendants to this action with full rights of participation therein.” The JDI court document said Gregory’s decision to remove all industrial defendants from the case “was neither requested by the JDI Appellants nor contemplated by the Rule pursuant to which their motion was brought.” Removing them leaves them without a voice in the fight over land that they own, according to their notice of motion. …A spokesperson for Wolastoqey Nation stated, “Justice Gregory’s decision reinforces our position that negotiation between the Wolastoqey Nation and the Crown is our preferred approach.” Treaty veteran doubts court would take private land.

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Canadian National Railway workers vote overwhelmingly in favour of strike action

By Unifor
Cision Newswire
November 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTREAL  – Unifor members of Council 4000 and Local 100 at Canadian National Railway (CN Rail) have voted overwhelmingly in favour of strike action, with 96% of Local 100 members and 97% of Council 4000 members supporting the mandate, preparing to take action should an agreement not be reached by January 1, 2025. “This overwhelming vote sends a clear message to CN that our members are united and prepared to take action to achieve the fair treatment and respect they deserve,” said Unifor National President Lana Payne. “Our members have had enough of concessions that erode their rights and livelihoods and they are standing strong to demand a contract that reflects their value and the critical role they play in CN’s success.” The decisive vote underscores the frustration and determination of CN workers who have been advocating for job security, fair compensation and improved working conditions.

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What Donald Trump’s plan for heavy tariffs means for Maine-Canada trade

By Billy Kobin
The Bangor Daily News
November 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, US East

President-elect Trump plan to place 25% tariffs on goods from Canada and Mexico will affect everything from logging to energy in Maine given Canada is its dominant trading partner. …Canada’s inclusion in the tariffs could harm Maine’s economy. However, heavy tariffs have played well here on the heels of mill closures, and Maine business leaders have long been expecting a tariff expansion. Canada is far and away Maine’s top trade partner, with the northern neighbor accounting for 70% of Maine’s imports and 31% of its exports this August. …Dana Doran, of the Professional Logging Contractors of the Northeast… said the duties on Canadian softwood lumber from Trump’s first term were different than tariffs but played an equalizing role. Former Republican Gov. Paul LePage, a top Trump supporter in the state, opposed Trump’s softwood lumber policies when the two men overlapped in office, illustrating the complex nature of trade policy in Maine. 

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Finance & Economics

How will a Trump presidency impact lumber markets?

By Joe Pruski
RISI Fastmarkets
November 27, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Re: Trump’s announcement of 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico. …While the announcement garnered much attention, few traders considered the threat credible, and the industry as a whole took a wait-and-see approach to the news. In Western S-P-F, upward price momentum paused as the US holiday approached. Buyers had an easier time covering immediate needs, and declined to extend inventories, especially in spots where winter weather had settled in. Lumber futures was little changed in early trading. Buyers across the South lacked urgency amid abundant supplies of most items. Downward price pressure was unabated. Many veteran traders noted that the price spread between Southern Pine and Western S-P-F was the widest they had seen in their careers and expressed surprise that species substitution was not more prevalent. In Coast markets, upward price momentum and tight supplies kept prices trending higher in uneventful trading. 

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Trump Tariffs Are Latest Inflationary Pressure for US Lumber

By Elena Peng
BNN Bloomberg
November 26, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

US lumber prices, which already have risen in recent months due to lower production in Canada, could see further gains after President-elect Donald Trump’s proposed tariffs. Lumber futures in Chicago rose as much as 2.1% to $599 per 1,000 board feet Tuesday. …Shares of forestry companies, including West Fraser and Interfor fell. Canada has faced a spate of sawmill closures amid higher US duties. The addition of tariffs would further threaten US lumber supplies as the nation seeks to rebuild in areas hit by hurricanes. …Kurt Niquidet, of the BC Council of Forest Industries, said the implementation of tariffs is more uncertain than duties, which are reassessed annually, but both would delve a financial blow to Canadian producers. Tariffs “will further exacerbate our nation’s ongoing housing affordability crisis,” Jim Tobin, president of NAHB… and forests in the US South, the continent’s biggest lumber production region, faced losses during the recent hurricane season.

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Atlas Engineered Products Reports Third Quarter 2024 Financial and Operating Results

Atlas Engineered Products
November 25, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Nanaimo, British Columbia — Atlas Engineered Products is pleased to announce its financial and operating results for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024. All amounts are presented in Canadian dollars.

  • Revenue of $16.5M, representing an increase of 15% year-over-year
  • Wall Panel revenue increased by 120% year-over-year
  • Engineered Wood Products revenue increased by 48% year-over-year
  • Adjusted EBITDA of $3.05M, representing an increase of 3% year-over-year, despite costs of $0.2M associated with automation and expansion of the sales team
  • Sales team has expanded by 63% year-to-date and expect to see significant contributions to revenue growth and profitability in 2025

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canada Wood Strengthens Strategic Partnerships with Three Key MOUs in China

By Lance Tao
Canada Wood Group
November 27, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

Canada Wood has taken a decisive step toward promoting mass timber and hybrid construction in China with the signing of three pivotal memoranda of understanding (MOUs) with key stakeholders. These agreements with Treezo Group, East China Architectural Design & Research Institute (ECADI), and the National Center for Technology Innovation – Green Building (NCTI-GB) underline our strategic pivot to advancing mass timber and hybrid construction in China. They also highlight the growing potential for Canadian wood products to play a significant role in China’s evolving construction market. MOU with Treezo Group, one of China’s leading manufacturers of OSB, plywood, cabinetry, flooring, and prefab buildings, is at the forefront of integrating mass timber into its operations. …Renewed MOU with East China Architectural Design & Research Institute – who focuses on establishing a wood construction innovation center dedicated to advancing mass timber research and development. …Facilitated by BCFII China office, an MOU with The National Center for Technology Innovation – Green Building.

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COFI Tokyo Celebrates Milestone 50th Anniversary in Japan

By Shawn Lawlor
Canada Wood Group
November 28, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

On November 12th COFI / Canada Wood Tokyo celebrated our 50th anniversary in Japan. To commemorate this milestone a Wood Forum and Reception were held at the Embassy of Canada in Tokyo. Timed to coincide with the Alberta Forestry Mission to Japan, the wood forum consisted of 5 presentations focused on forest sustainability, innovation and partnership. …This unwavering focus on innovation and collaboration with local industry, code officials and researchers has resulted in a cumulative total of over 3.3 million 2×4 housing starts, 4,500 2×4 fireproof structures, 156 midrise structures and 53 MLIT Ministerial Approvals. Looking forward, we touched upon how new opportunities continue to open up to expanded wood use in Japanese midrise construction and briefed participants on current initiatives to such as R&D on high performance sheer walls and 90 minute fireproof approvals. A total of 190 Japanese stakeholders and key customers participated in the wood forum and reception.

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Canada’s housing crisis: Innovative tech must come with policy reform

By Ehsan Noroozinejad Farsangi and Y.T. Yang
The Conversation Canada
November 26, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Earlier this year, the Canadian government released a new housing plan aimed at building more homes and addressing housing unaffordability. As part of that plan, government announced $600 million in funding to build homes cheaper and quicker using “innovative technologies.” The funding is earmarked for building more housing by automating processes and using materials like mass timber construction, robotics and 3D printing. …Building materials like mass timber, including cross-laminated timber (CLT), offer a renewable low-carbon substitute for conventional materials, reducing a building’s carbon footprint. …Piecemeal solutions or standalone initiatives cannot address the housing crisis. Canada needs a holistic and multi-stakeholder approach that bridges the gaps between federal, provincial and municipal governments, and includes the active participation of industry stakeholders and local communities.

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How a 10-storey, mass-timber structure serves as a case study for commercial buildings

By David McPherson
The Globe and Mail
November 26, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

Amid the traditional concrete and glass structures at Toronto’s East Bayfront, Limberlost Place – a striking mass-timber beauty and the new addition to George Brown College’s waterfront campus – stands out. Located at Queens Quay East and Dockside Drive, the 10-storey, net-zero emissions structure is the first institutional building of its kind in Ontario. Set for a soft opening in January, 2025, the exposed tall wood building has already won more than two-dozen design and sustainability awards, including a Research & Innovation in Architecture Award from the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada and a 2024 LOOP Design Award in the Eco & Sustainable Concept category. Limberlost Place pushes boundaries and sets a new standard for what is possible for mass-timber commercial construction. According to George Brown College, the internationally-acclaimed, award-winning building is expected to contribute to major changes to national and provincial building codes.

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Forestry

El Niño is now a distant memory; will Canada feel winter’s wrath?

By Doug Gillham
The Weather Network
November 27, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

El Niño is now a distant memory, which will allow for a more ‘traditional’ winter to show up this year. Here’s what to expect for the 2024-25 winter season across Canada. …The focus of winter’s fury will be in western Canada, where near-normal and colder-than-normal temperatures are expected to dominate this upcoming season. Meanwhile, eastern Canada will also have periods of cold weather, particularly in December; however, periods of milder weather are expected in January and February, resulting in above-normal temperatures for the season overall, although not as warm as last winter. We also expect a more active pattern this winter with near-normal or above-normal precipitation across most of Canada. The two exceptions are the north coast of B.C. and also southern parts of the Maritimes. Both of these regions will still experience numerous winter storms, but not quite as many as what we see in a typical winter. 

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Out on a limb: Ottawa is falling behind on its promise to plant 2 billion trees

By David Thurton ·
CBC News
November 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Justin Trudeau

The federal government did not meet the targets for its program to plant two billion trees during the program’s third planting season. Numbers provided by Natural Resources Canada show Ottawa did not meet its annual planting and spending targets for the 2023-24 growing season. Ottawa and its partners were supposed to plant 60 million trees last season but only got 46.6 million saplings in the ground. Despite the program’s slow rollout, a spokesperson for Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson’s office insisted it will still reach its 2030-31 target. …The federal government says it has gotten 157.6 million trees in the ground since planting began in 2021. …Jerry DeMarco, federal commissioner of the environment and sustainable development, has called the addition of trees planted under separate programs “creative accounting.” …The government now has only seven growing seasons left to plant more than 1.8 billion trees.

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Forest Stewardship Council Newsletter – November Edition

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
November 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

In this newsletter, headlines include:

  • Highlights from the FSC North American Conference: Over 150 stakeholders joined us in Nashville, Tennessee, to reflect on FSC’s 30 years of impact and map out its future in the region.
  • Funding Announcement for Verified Impact Projects in Canada: the Forest Stewardship Council® Canada is launching two new projects, under the Climate and Landscape Solutions Program area, thanks to a generous three-year grant from Environment and Climate Change Canada.
  • FSC Canada welcomes new Business Development Manager, Joanna Dayaram: she will exclusively support our Retailer and Brand Partners, offering guidance on FSC Promotional Licenses, advancing the Trademark Service Provider (TSP) Program and will drive the development and implementation of our collaborative partner initiatives. 

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Domtar and APP: A Closer Look

By Graeme Rodden
Paper Advance
November 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West, International

Graeme Rodden

The announcement that Jackson Wijaya, founder of Paper Excellence (now Domtar) will assume full control of Asia Pulp & Paper (APP) has reignited the controversy over the connections between the two. …Jennifer Johnson said the move was simply part of the elder Wijaya’s normal course succession planning. She stressed that Jackson has no intention of taking his father’s position overseeing APP. “Importantly, APP and Domtar will continue to operate as they always have: as distinct entities.” …In its latest release, the company did not pull any punches. “…. Jackson’s inheriting APP shares has no impact whatsoever on Domtar and any suggestion to the contrary is ill-informed and patently false.” It seems there is little the Canadian government can do, even if it wanted to. As it is a separate legal entity from Domtar and headquartered in China and Indonesia, any change in APP’s ownership is not subject to the Investment Canada Act.

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Regional District of Central Kootenay: Support for forestry

By Rachael Lesosky
Pentiction Herald
November 27, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The RDCK will send a letter to the Ministry of Forests in support of the Forestry Works for BC Campaign, and of value-added and community-focused forestry. Ken Kalesnikoff, president and CEO of Kalesnikoff Lumber, made a presentation to the board in August regarding the Forestry Works for BC initiative, which seeks to raise awareness about forestry’s role in the well-being of rural and urban communities. Dr. Rachel Holt, an independent ecologist, sent a letter to the board, dated October 15. It asked the board to write a letter in support of a more diversified future. The board discussed her letter and settled on including her points on value-added and community-focused forestry. End of Story

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Parks foundation secures land to protect North Saanich old-growth forest

By Harry Corro
Victoria News
November 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The largest remaining tract of old-growth and mature Douglas-fir forest on the Saanich Peninsula is in the beautiful LAU,WELNEW/John Dean Provincial Park in North Saanich. It sits next to six hectares of land which is now designated as a protected extension of the park. On Nov. 26, BC Parks Foundation announced the purchase of three parcels of land that run along the park’s edge which will now protect one of the last stands of old-growth Douglas fir and Garry oak on the Saanich Peninsula. The property was listed for sale in November 2023. … “Thankfully the foundation was able to raise money to buy the land before anybody else did,” said Maureen Dale, president of the Friends of John Dean Park Society. …Aside from its rich biodiversity, the area also holds significant cultural importance to local First Nations, having played a central role in their people’s stories.

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BC Parks Foundation Donors Protect Old Growth Adjacent to ȽÁU,WELNEW / John Dean Park

By BC Parks Foundation
BC Parks Foundation
November 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A 6 hectare parcel of land containing old-growth forest directly adjacent to ȽÁU,WELNEW / John Dean Park has been permanently protected by BC Parks Foundation. This safeguards one of the last remaining stands of old-growth Douglas fir and Garry oak on the Saanich Peninsula… In 1895, John Dean, a passionate naturalist, former mayor of Rossland, and dedicated civic activist, purchased 100 acres on ȽÁU,WELNEW. Inspired by the W̱SÁNEĆ Peoples’ stewardship, he donated 80 acres to the Province in 1921 to be used as parkland, leaving a legacy for all to enjoy… The foundation will work with First Nations, BC Parks and Friends of John Dean Park Society to discuss future management of the newly protected area. In the meantime, it will remain closed.

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Study finds Indigenous people in B.C. cultivated hazelnuts 7,000 years ago, challenging modern assumptions

By Jon Azpiri
CBC News
November 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Darren Bolton

The hazelnut tree has long been a part of the landscape in parts of British Columbia. A 19th-century settler gave the village of Hazelton in northern B.C.’s Skeena region its name because of the abundance of hazelnuts in the area.  A new study indicates Indigenous peoples in B.C. had been cultivating the beaked hazelnut for thousands of years, which researchers say challenges the notion that pre-colonial Indigenous people in northwestern B.C. were only hunter-gatherers.  The findings indicate hazelnuts had been transplanted and cultivated for at least 7,000 years by Gitxsan, Tsimshian, and Nisga’a peoples. The research emphasizes Indigenous peoples’ contributions to the creation and maintenance of the region’s ecosystems and “cuts through assumptions of B.C. and the Northwest Coast being wild and completely untouched.”

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Helicopter logging in Stanley Park

By TheBreaker staff
TheBreaker
November 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The latest phase of the $18 million Stanley Park logging operation lifted-off Nov. 19. Two helicopters from Black Tusk Helicopter Inc. are using the Prospect Point Picnic Area as a temporary landing and refuelling site. Their job is to pick-up logs felled on the cliffs above the Stanley Park Seawall, between Third Beach and Prospect Point… The Park Board said the logging is necessary due to the Hemlock looper moth infestation and wildfire fears. Contractor B.A. Blackwell and Associates estimated the pest affected 160,000 trees in the park. In the Stanley Park Preservation Society’s unsuccessful court bid to halt the logging, a lawyer for city hall said another 30 hectares will be logged this fall and winter. Watch a YouTube video here

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Deal with BC First Nation comes back to haunt premier Eby

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
November 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Judy Desjarlais & David Eby

VICTORIA — Premier David Eby earned accolades two years ago when he concluded a $350 million deal to settle litigation over treaty rights with the Blueberry River First Nations in northeastern BC. …Plus, there were restrictions on future development, a joint approval process, commitments to wildlife co-management, and opportunities for Blueberry River to secure a share of future timber and natural gas revenues …“History-making” was the watch word of the day. Industry, business and community leaders all praised the agreement as a turn-the-page moment in Crown-Indigenous relations. …Unfortunately, the province’s relationship with Blueberry River has since unravelled, spawning another round of litigation. …The first signs of trouble emerged in the fall of 2023. Two other Treaty 8 nations challenged the agreement, saying it infringed on their rights and… some Blueberry River members challenged the plan in court. Then in September, Gauthier and three other councillors combined to oust Desjarlais as chief.

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BC Institute of Technology alumnus recovers cultural knowledge through work in forestry

By Alexa Landon
British Columbia Institute of Technology
November 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jordon Gabriel is an expert in forest management and a community-focused Forestry Technician with Líl̓wat Forestry Ventures Ltd. (LFV). But those are not his only titles; he is a member of Líl̓wat Nation, a residential school Survivor, a father, a grandfather, and a British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) alumnus. When Jordon started working in forestry, he worked on a team responsible for block and road layouts for forestry companies. “In those days, things were different—the Nation wasn’t consulted,” Jordon says. “We were told we were going to do our work without having a say.” As a result, the forestry work was done in areas where the Líl̓wat Nation gathered herbs, collected mushrooms, and other cultural activities. …Throughout his career, Jordon has been seeking to blend his technical forestry expertise with the rich cultural knowledge of the Líl̓wat Nation. His dedication to promoting the Líl̓wat Nation culture is reflected throughout his work.

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Cat Lake First Nation and PRT Growing Services establish landmark partnership to support community growth

PRT Growing Services Ltd.
November 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Thunder Bay, Ontario — Cat Lake First Nation (CLFN) and PRT Growing Services Ltd., North America’s largest producer of forest seedlings, have signed a memorandum of understanding today, establishing a significant new partnership to drive sustainable, resilient socioeconomic development in Northwestern Ontario through the regrowth and renewal of Canadian forests. This announcement represents the first phase of a broader initiative aiming to foster local growth within the Cat Lake community through workforce support and training, ongoing employment opportunities at the PRT Dryden nursery, and collaboration on future Cat Lake nursery and seedling initiatives. …The memorandum of understanding was signed by PRT’s Chief Executive Officer Randy Fournier and CLFN Chief Russell Wesley during the Cat Lake First Nation Bio-economy Stakeholder Meeting in Thunder Bay, Ontario, on November 26, 2024.

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Ontario Takes Aim at Wildfire Risk and Hazardous Wells with New Legislation

By James Murray
NetNewsLedger
November 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Ontario government is introducing new legislation aimed at enhancing community safety and protecting the environment by addressing the risks associated with wildland fires and hazardous oil and gas wells. The proposed Resource Management and Safety Act would also streamline the land surveying process to support housing development and pave the way for carbon storage technology… “Our forestry sector is vitally important to Ontario, producing critical building materials, and managing and renewing Ontario’s forests, which can play an important role in reducing the risk of wildland fire,” said Kevin Holland, Minister of Forestry and Forest Products. “These new protections allow the province to help job creators build Ontario and provide better service for communities.”

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How (not) to save Quebec’s threatened boreal caribou

By the Editorial Board
The Globe and Mail
November 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Scientists consider the caribou an “umbrella species,” meaning that protecting it also shields others in its habitat. …In Quebec, home to “the three most at-risk Boreal Caribou populations in Canada,” political inaction gets in the way of the species’ recovery. If Quebec continues to stall, Ottawa can and should step in. …Boreal caribou have been listed as threatened under the federal Species at Risk Act (SARA) since 2003. Minister Steven Guilbeault found in January, 2023, that “almost all boreal caribou critical habitat located on non-federal lands in Quebec is not effectively protected”. …The government did not act on his recommendation, preferring a “collaborative” approach. …In September, Mr. Guilbeaultoffered hundreds of millions of dollars to help Quebec achieve protection. Yet, the stalemate persists. If Quebec is unhappy with Ottawa’s intrusion, it has a solution: take the action that has been promised for years. [to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

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Forestry business gets boost from Northern Ontario Heritage Fund Corporation

By Mike Stimpson
Superior North Newswatch
November 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Kevin Holland

THUNDER BAY — The Northern Ontario Heritage Fund Corporation is helping a local forestry services company grow with $360,000 in funding for equipment purchases. Superior Resources “has achieved remarkable success” as “a core harvesting partner” since being formed in 2021, Thunder Bay-Atikokan MPP Kevin Holland said Friday in announcing the support. Co-owned by Mikko Koivisto and Ryan Murphy, Superior works with First Nations in harvesting the Lake Nipigon Forest and offers operational support on things like bridge installation and road maintenance.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Abacus Data Partners with Canada’s Forest Trust Corporation to Launch Canadian Climate Action Initiative

By David Coletto
Abacus Data
November 26, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

David Coletto

Abacus Data is proud to announce the planting of a Smart Forest™ in partnership with Canada’s Forest Trust Corporation (CFTC). This initiative represents a significant step towards addressing one of the top concerns for Canadians: climate change. Together with CFTC, they are supporting the planting of diverse tree species and protecting them in one of Canada’s most impactful nature-based climate solutions—Smart Forests™. Designed for long-term sustainability, this partnership promotes the need for nature-based solutions in future-thinking businesses and organizations across the country. Abacus and CFTC are planting 2,000 trees with plans for consistent annual growth through a program that will engage clients in supporting forests. The initial Smart Forest™ is projected to capture around 280,000 kg of carbon over its lifetime… “Together, we’re supporting nature and promoting the many benefits that a Smart Forest™ brings to the planet, people, and our collective prosperity,” said David Coletto, Founder and CEO of Abacus Data.

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Trump Wants to Create US Manufacturing Jobs. We Offer a Plan that can Help

By William Strauss
FutureMetrics
November 24, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

The strategy that the Trump administration could follow will have significant benefits for regions that desperately need the jobs: the coal mining sector and the forest products sector. …This well-proven co-firing strategy, which is already in place in many other countries, can provide certainty for the need for US produced coal, certainty for US coal mining jobs, and stimulate billions of dollars of new capital investment for the production of solid fuel derived from the by-products of the primary forest products sector. …By supporting the blending of 15% US produced bioresource derived solid fuel with 85% US produced coal in coal- fueled power plants, the strategy will support the continued operation of those power plants and therefore will sustain the demand for coal as part of the power generation fuel mix. The plan will also strongly support the otherwise fading markets for residual forest products.

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Carbon RX signs impactful deal with Manitoba First Nation

Caron RX
November 26, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

Regina, SK  – Carbon RX Inc. is proud to announce a new partnership with the Pimicikamak Cree Nation to assist in forest management and preservation of First Nation lands in Manitoba. The project includes 3 million acres of traditional lands in the Canadian boreal forest, home to the Pimicikamak people. “We are the original keepers of the land,” said Chief David Monias, Chief of Pimicikamak. “As part of our inherent rights, we proudly hold historic environmental sovereignty over our traditional lands. We can use modern techniques like carbon crediting to protect and preserve these lands for the next generation. We encourage other Nations to do the same.” First Nation forests generate carbon credits by acting as Mother Earth’s solar panels and absorbing and storing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis. When a forest is managed sustainably or restored, the additional carbon sequestered can be quantified and verified as carbon credits.

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