Region Archives: International

Business & Politics

Trump’s trade war is pushing Canada closer to China

By Lex Harvey
CNN News
November 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, International

HONG KONG —  It is an image that just a year ago would have seemed unfathomable: the Canadian and Chinese leaders standing side by side. …The tide began turning early last month… Prime Minister Carney and leader Xi Jinping met on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit in South Korea – the first time leaders of the two countries had met in eight years. …That has since been followed by another ministerial visit to China. China also reinstated Canada to its approved travel list for tour groups. …But as leaders in Ottawa and Beijing signal it may be time to start doing business again, some experts warn China could be attempting to exploit Canada at a vulnerable moment. …Meanwhile, the US has increasingly ramped up its economic war on its northern neighbor. …Beijing has said it will drop the canola tariffs if Ottawa does the same for Chinese electric vehicles.

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International Paper to close five German sites, cut 500 jobs

By Katie Pyzyk
Packaging Dive
November 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

International Paper announced it plans to close five sites in Germany as part of its integration with DS Smith, the London-based packaging company it acquired in January. The manufacturing sites included are a conventional box plant, a display and offset site, and three sheet plants; another display site also will partially close. IP expects roughly 500 roles to be affected by the closures, which it anticipates will occur by the end of 2026. IP is engaging with labor representatives, and until that activity progresses it will not comment further. …IP launched the streamlining stateside last year prior to the DS Smith acquisition and in Europe this year following the deal finalization. [Editors note: the planned closures are outlined in a UK regulatory notice linked to IP’s DS Smith integration. German labour law requires formal consultation with employee representatives, and outcomes can change during that process.]

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China restores soybean licenses for U.S. firms, ends log ban

By Ella ‌Cao, Yukun Zhang and Ryan Woo
Reuters in Yahoo! Finance
November 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

BEIJING — China will restore soybean import licences for three US firms ​and lift its suspension on US log ‌imports starting November 10, its customs authority said on Friday in ‌another sign of easing trade tensions between the two nations. …The halt on US log imports was a retaliatory ‍measure after US President Trump’s March 1 order to investigate lumber imports. Investor sentiment improved after Trump met Chinese ​leader Xi Jinping in South Korea, reducing fears that ‌the world’s two largest economies might abandon efforts to resolve their trade disputes. Following the meeting, Beijing lifted tariffs on some US farm goods. …However, traders remain cautious, as a ‍10% ⁠tariff on all US imports remains in effect, limiting ⁠expectations for a broader recovery in trade flows.

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Stora Enso initiates a strategic review of its Central European sawmills and building solutions operations

Stora Enso OYJ
November 14, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Stora Enso is initiating a strategic review of its Central European sawmills and building solutions operations. The 2026 review will cover one business unit of Wood Products business area, including seven sawmills in Austria, Czechia, Poland, and Lithuania, and further processing units with three cross-laminated-timber (CLT) mills, as well as wood procurement, and international sales and distribution operations. Whilst the business in scope has a strong position in an attractive market, it does not bring strategic or operational synergies for Stora Enso’s core renewable packaging operations. …different scenarios will be assessed for the business and assets in scope, including the possibility to divest the business, to strengthen Stora Enso’s strategic focus on renewable materials and packaging. The synergetic sawmills in Northern Europe, including further processing operations, in Sweden, Finland, Estonia and Latvia are not part of the assessment, and this part of the business remains strategically important to Stora Enso going forward.

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Stora Enso completes strategic review and intends to create the largest listed pure play forest company in Europe

Stora Enso OYJ
November 14, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Hallenberg, Torikka, & Voelkel

On 18 June 2025, Stora Enso Oyj announced the initiation of a strategic review of its Swedish forest assets as part of its stronger focus on renewable materials and packaging. After assessing various options, and having completed the divestment of approximately 175,000 hectares of forest land, for an enterprise value of EUR 900 million, the Board of Directors of Stora Enso has completed the strategic review. The Board of Directors has decided to initiate preparations for the separation of the Swedish forest assets business of Stora Enso into a new publicly-listed Swedish company through a statutory partial cross-border demerger of Stora Enso. …According to the assessment of the Board of Directors, the demerger of the Swedish forest assets business into the New Company would be the best alternative to unlock the full potential of both the Swedish forest assets and Stora Enso’s core packaging business as well as to optimise capital allocation and reduce complexity. 

In related Stora Enso news: Changes in Stora Enso’s Group Leadership Team Tuomas Hallenberg has been appointed President and CEO of Stora Enso’s Swedish forest business, to be demerged from Stora Enso in 2027. Pauli Torikka has been appointed Executive Vice President of the new Wood and Energy business area, to be established January 2026. Lars Völkel has been appointed Executive Vice President Containerboard effective January 2026.

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Metsä Group considers 3-month curtailment at four Finish sawmills

Metsä Group
November 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Metsä Fibre will start change negotiations on possible layoffs of up to 90 days at the company’s sawmills in Lappeenranta, Rauma, Renko and Vilppula. The negotiations are prompted by challenging market conditions for sawn timber and harvesting, which have created a need for production downtime. According to the estimate, if implemented, the planned measures could lead to the lay-off of all personnel at Metsä Fibre’s Lappeenranta, Rauma, Renko and Vilppula sawmills for a maximum of 90 days during 2026. The change negotiations cover the entire staff of Lappeenranta, Rauma, Renko and Vilppula sawmills, approximately 350 people.

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Finance & Economics

Canada’s lumber industry at a crossroads: Shrinking capacity and challenging market diversification

By Håkan Ekström, Global Wood Trends and Glen O’Kelly, O’Kelly Acumen
The American Journal of Transportation
November 12, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, International

Canada’s lumber industry is heavily export-dependent. Roughly 65% of Canadian lumber production is sold abroad, and the US remains by far the largest customer, accounting for about 87% of exports in 2025 . This reliance leaves Canada highly exposed to US trade policy. …Canada’s lumber and forest sector is expected to continue contracting through 2030. Sawmill capacity will decline, particularly among smaller and older operations in regions affected by insects and fires, and export patterns will slowly rebalance away from the US. Rural communities will bear the greatest impacts. If US tariffs are eventually removed, the surviving modern mills could benefit from improved margins as lumber prices are likely to increase in the US. Meanwhile, opportunities exist in gradually growing overseas markets and in the domestic construction sector, where housing starts would need to roughly double by 2035 to meet projected demand. 

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Mercer reports Q3, 2025 net loss of $81 million

Mercer International Inc.
November 6, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, International

NEW YORK — Mercer International reported third quarter 2025 Operating EBITDA of negative $28.1 million, a decrease from positive $50.5 million in the same quarter of 2024 and negative $20.9 million in the second quarter of 2025. In the third quarter of 2025, net loss was $80.8 million compared to $17.6 million in the same quarter of 2024 and $86.1 million in the second quarter of 2025. Mr. Juan Carlos Bueno, CEO, stated: “In the third quarter of 2025, persistent global economic and trade uncertainties, fiber scarcity in Germany as well as the impact of pulp substitution accelerated the decline in pulp market demand and pricing, which negatively impacted our operating results and contributed to a $20.4 million non-cash inventory impairment charge in the quarter.

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Asia’s packaging boom risks flooding global paper markets

By Markku Björkman
Pulp Paper News
November 10, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

The global pulp and paper industry is entering a new period of uncertainty after several turbulent years marked by supply chain shocks, rising costs, and shifting market dynamics. While packaging demand continues to grow, analysts warn that the rapid build-up of new capacity could soon trigger a global oversupply of fibre-based products. According to a recent market analysis, the global paper and pulp market was valued at 500 billion USD in 2024 and is expected to reach 650 billion USD by 2033, representing an annual growth rate of around four per cent. The trend, however, hides deep structural divides – strong expansion in packaging and tissue paper, but continued decline in printing and writing grades. …Analysts agree that the coming decade will determine whether the paper and pulp sector can balance growth with sustainability – or whether the combination of overcapacity, energy costs, and environmental constraints will usher in a new era of consolidation.

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Suzano reports Q3, 2025 net income of R$ 2 billion (US$ 115 million)

Suzano
November 6, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

São Paulo, Brazil — Suzano reported its results for the third quarter of 2025 (3Q25), reporting sales of 3.6 million tonnes of pulp and paper combined, a 20% increase on the same quarter last year (3Q24). The positive result is driven by the operations of the Ribas do Rio Pardo pulp mill, inaugurated in 2024, and by the integration of paper production from assets acquired in the United States in October 2024. Net revenue for the quarter totalled R$12.2 billion, broadly flat on the comparable period last year. Adjusted EBITDA totalled R$5.2 billion and operating cash generation was positive at R$3.4 billion. The movement is mainly influenced by lower pulp prices and a weaker exchange rate for exports. Net profit totalled R$2 billion.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

A Pavilion for Renewal: Canadian Wood in the Heart of Beijing

By Lance Tao
Canada Wood Group
November 3, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

In Beijing’s historic Dongcheng District, a modest wooden pavilion stood out among glass, steel, and concrete. Built entirely of Canadian hemlock, the 40 square metre structure was the only all wood exhibit at the 2025 Beijing Urban Renewal Week. After two decades of rapid real estate expansion, China’s property cycle has reached maturity. The focus of development is now turning from new construction to urban renewal. This new focus aims to revitalize existing neighbourhoods, improve livability, and reduce carbon emissions. In Beijing, where the central districts of Dongcheng and Xicheng are tasked with preserving centuries old architecture along the imperial axis, renewal is as much about cultural continuity as it is about climate performance. Under this new paradigm, materials matter. Sustainably sourced wood offers both aesthetic warmth and environmental advantage. … Recognizing this shift, FII China and Canada Wood, has positioned wood construction as a natural fit for China’s dual carbon and high quality development goals. 

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57th China International Furniture Fair (Guangzhou) Unveils New Theme “CONNECT • CREATE” and Visual Identity

By China International Furniture Fair (Guangzhou)
Cision Newswire
November 13, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

GUANGZHOU, China — The 57th China International Furniture Fair, set to open in March 2026, has announced its new theme, “CONNECT • CREATE”, alongside a refreshed visual identity. As the global furniture ecosystem undergoes profound restructuring, the CIFF aims to connect all links of the industrial chain–production, distribution, and consumption–to navigate transformation and unlock new value. The global furniture industry is rapidly evolving. Amid economic fluctuations and trade uncertainties, international buyers are increasingly turning to China. Chinese manufacturers are advancing innovation and R&D, supported by a robust and stable supply chain that ensures efficiency and resilience. …Spanning 850,000 square meters and bringing together over 4,900 exhibitors, the CIFF Guangzhou 2026 will feature three major exhibitions: Home Furniture, Office and Commercial Space, CIFM/Interzum Guangzhou. Each section will highlight new trends, from contemporary design collaborations and smart sleep innovations to sustainable office concepts and advanced intelligent manufacturing.

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Joe Giddings on the ‘mind-blowing’ growth of bio-based materials

The Architects’ Journal UK
November 12, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Built by Nature’s Joe Giddings, a co-founder of ACAN, talks about building responsibly with timber and sustainable forestry initiatives On the eve of Cop 30 in northern Brazil. …Giddings takes a deep dive into BbN’s five principles for responsible timber construction, which provide a holistic framework for building with timber without unintended consequences. He also describes BbN’s workstreams to quantify and promote lean use of timber. Current research includes the development of two new metrics for assessing the impact of building with timber: the use renewal ratio (the time that timber remains locked up in a building compared with how long it takes the tree that supplied it to grow) and wood use intensity (the volume of timber used per square metre of building). Giddings challenges numerous tropes. Local is not always best, he says. …To catch up on all episodes of AJ Climate Champions, click here.

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Timber Development UK publishes new guidance on the Construction Products Regulation

Specification OnLine UK
November 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

A new guidance document explaining the requirements of the Construction Products Regulation (CPR) for timber and wood-based products has been launched by Timber Development UK (TDUK). This latest resource for the timber sector clarifies how manufacturers, importers and distributors can ensure they remain compliant when placing timber products on the UK construction market. The Construction Products Regulation, first introduced in 2013, sets legal responsibilities for anyone supplying construction materials covered by a designated or harmonised standard. The new TDUK guide outlines what these obligations mean for timber businesses and how to meet them, including guidance on CE and UKCA marking, Declarations of Performance, and the specific product standards that apply across the wood sector – from structural timber and panels to glulam, LVL, and timber cladding. …The publication is available to download from the TDUK website.

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Industry-first fire safety testing eliminates critical knowledge gap in CLT construction

Willmott Dixon
November 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

UNITED KINGDOM—Willmott Dixon has commissioned comprehensive fire safety tests for cavity barriers on Cross-Laminated Timber to eliminate a technical gap that has created uncertainty and delays on cross-laminated timber (CLT) projects across the sector. The testing programme, which Willmott Dixon did in partnership with passive fire protection specialist Siderise and CLT manufacturer KLH, provides the industry with certified solutions for projects using cross-laminated timber (CLT) and Siderise cavity barriers in both wall and floor applications. Previously, all projects would have required individual technical assessments. …the tests examined three critical interface scenarios that appear across CLT construction projects: wall interfaces in vertical configuration with EW-CB 30 Cavity Barrier; floor and wall interfaces in horizontal configuration with EW-CB 30 Cavity Barrier; and floor and wall interfaces in horizontal configuration with RH25 90/30 Cavity Barrier for rainscreen applications. All three tests passed successfully, covering worst-case scenarios including 100mm five-layer CLT panels tested to rigorous European standards.

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Forestry

‘When the forests die, we die too’: Sudan’s war fuels South Darfur’s ecological collapse

By Eisa Dafallah
TRTWorld
November 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

By 2015, the dense 1,385 hectares Kandowa Forest once filled acacia and mahogany … had vanished entirely. The disappearance of forests like Kandowa reflects a broader environmental catastrophe unfolding across South Darfur, where more than 70 percent of tree cover has been lost over the past decade… The violence that erupted between Sudan’s army and the Rapid Support Forces in April 2023 has only accelerated the destruction, pushing desperate families deeper into what remains of the forests. With gas supplies cut off and charcoal prices soaring fivefold, survival itself now depends on felling trees. …Salim outlined a more comprehensive approach: making alternative energy sources like gas and solar power affordable, launching large-scale reforestation…, and enforcing stronger laws to combat illegal logging and timber smuggling. …”If people have no peace, no jobs, no energy, they will keep cutting trees,” said Khaldi Fathi Salim, with South Darfur’s Ministry of Agriculture. 

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Forest rangers and desperate villagers clash as N. Korea’s reforestation push meets winter fuel crisis

By Seon Hwa
Daily NK
November 14, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Frequent fights are erupting between North Korea’s rural residents who illegally fell trees out of desperation to secure firewood for the winter and the forest rangers tasked with curbing such illegal activity. The forest rangers have ramped up their crackdowns this year, leaving rural residents who are urgently preparing for winter deeply unhappy. …In this circumstance, the current period—right before winter—is when forest rangers are most alert, the source said. In particular, because most people in rural communities use wood as fuel in the winter, forest rangers go into crisis mode when villagers head into the mountains to indiscriminately fell trees for firewood. …Ultimately, these tensions originate from structural problems. The conflict will continue unless the authorities provide a fundamental solution to winter fuel shortages. “As long as there’s no solution to the firewood problem, the tensions will inevitably continue.”

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FSC Passed Motion to Control False Claims for FSC Products

Forest Stewardship Council
November 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) has confirmed that Motion 30/2025 passed at its General Assembly in Panama. The motion establishes a roadmap for a digital information and volume-control system designed to strengthen the integrity of FSC claims and reduce the risk of false or fraudulent declarations within the supply chain. FSC says the measure will support greater transparency and traceability across certified products. …The Policy Motion reads: FSC shall gradually phase in a requirement for Certificate Holders to use a universal information and volume control system. This system shall be implemented using a risk-based, stepwise approach with full implementation no later than 2030. FSC should also establish supporting tools and services to ensure that all producers and companies can comply with the requirement.

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European Parliament backs simplification of EU’s anti-deforestation rules

By Marta Pacheco
Euronews
November 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The controversial law was supposed to come into force in December last year but the latest proposal would see its implementation delayed for a second time to late 2026. European lawmakers backed on Thursday a proposal to slash due diligence requirements for business operators under the European Union’s anti-deforestation law, after pressure from industry groups and countries outside Europe claimed the law was too burdensome. The ballot followed the European Commission’s announcement last month of an IT glitch that effectively delayed the law’s implementation until the end of 2026. …Under the new draft bill to simplify the law, lawmakers backed a Commission proposal that seeks to reduce the data load handled by the IT system linked to the EU’s anti-deforestation law and to cut the administrative burden for farmers, foresters and other economic operators. …While most member states back the delay to 2026, many others continue to hold divergent views.

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Natural forests of the world – a 2020 baseline for deforestation and degradation monitoring

Nature – International Journal of Science
November 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Informed decisions to reduce deforestation, protect biodiversity, and curb carbon emissions require not just knowing where forests are, but understanding their composition. Identifying natural forests, which serve as critical biodiversity hotspots and major carbon sinks, is particularly valuable. We developed a novel global natural forest map for 2020 at 10 m resolution. This map can support initiatives like the European Union’s Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) and other forest monitoring or conservation efforts that require a comprehensive baseline for monitoring deforestation and degradation. The globally consistent map represents the probability of natural forest presence, enabling nuanced analysis and regional adaptation for decision-making. Evaluation using a global independent validation dataset demonstrated an overall accuracy of about 92%.

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Candelabra Coral fungus found in New Forest for first time

By William Dalgleish
UK Forestry Journal
November 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

©Wikipedia

A nationally rare fungus has been found in the New Forest, in the southern UK. The Candelabra Coral fungus, also known as Artomyces pyxidatus, was previously thought extinct in the UK, with no records of the fungus during the 20th century. It was rediscovered in Suffolk in 2012 and has since been recorded in at least 10 English counties over the past five years. This autumn marks the first time it has been seen in the New Forest, with sightings at at least six sites in recent weeks. …The fungus is named for its crown-tipped, creamy white branches that resemble a candelabra. It typically grows on decaying wood, particularly beech and silver birch logs, in damp woodland environments. The fungus can reach up to 10cm in height. The New Forest is known for its rich fungal diversity, hosting nearly 3,000 species—about a quarter of the UK’s total.

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Timbeter and Polish state forests enter second stage of nationwide digital timber measurement rollout

Timbeter
November 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Following the success of the initial pilot phase, Timbeter, a global leader in AI-powered digital timber measurement, and Polish State Forests (PGL LP) have advanced to the second stage of implementing photo-optical timber measurement across the country. The large-scale rollout, backed by the Director General’s Order No. 92/2024, is reshaping how timber resources are measured, verified, and managed in Poland’s public forests. The first phase, launched in 2024, introduced Timbeter’s digital technology in 14 forest districts across the Piła and Poznań Regional Directorates, where it enabled accurate and efficient measurement of over 250,000 cubic meters of timber. Building on these results, the second phase now extends implementation to over 700 forest units nationwide, marking a major step toward full digitalization of forestry operations under Lasy Państwowe.

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Why Sweden’s forest policy matters to the world

By Emil Siekkinen
Mongabay
November 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Sweden is one of the world’s largest exporters of forest-based products… Decisions made in Sweden about how forests are managed ripple outward far beyond the kingdom’s borders. That is why the Swedish government’s recent forestry inquiry should matter not just to those living in Sweden, but to anyone concerned about the global climate crisis. The inquiry’s central message is clear: increase forest growth, harvest more biomass, and thereby contribute to the green transition. This might sound promising. More trees mean more carbon absorbed, more wood products to replace unsustainable products. But the plan overlooks the most important part of the forest: the soil. …The government’s proposal even encourages fertilization with nitrogen to speed up tree growth. This can work in the short term, but after a decade, the effect largely disappears. …If Sweden does not get this right, what happens in Sweden’s forests will not stay in Sweden’s forests.

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Türkiye plants saplings to mark every newborn, newlywed family

The Daily Sabah
November 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Ministry of Family and Social Services and the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry have launched the “Every Family One Sapling Our Green Homeland” campaign, a joint initiative that plants a sapling in the name of every newborn baby and newlywed couple across Türkiye. The project aims to support environmental sustainability while promoting demographic growth and family values. Announced within the framework of the “November 11 National Forestation Day,” declared by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the campaign reflects Türkiye’s commitment to both population development and ecological preservation. The initiative is designed to strengthen the country’s ongoing “Green Homeland Mobilization” by encouraging citizens to contribute to afforestation efforts starting from birth or marriage. As part of the campaign’s official launch, Family and Social Services Minister Mahinur Özdemir Göktaş and Agriculture and Forestry Minister Ibrahim Yumaklı visited Ankara Bilkent City Hospital to meet with newborn babies and their families.

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New species of toads that give birth to live young discovered in Tanzania

By Emma Caton
The Natural History Museum, London
November 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

©Michele Menegon

Scientists have uncovered three new toad species that have been hiding in plain sight. These hauntingly beautiful tree toads from Tanzania’s Eastern Arc Mountains have an unusual way of reproducing. Unlike many other frogs and toads, they give birth to live young rather than lay eggs. A description of the three latest additions has been published in the journal Vertebrate Zoology opens in a new window. They are now called Nectophrynoides saliensis, Nectophrynoides uhehe and Nectophrynoides luhomeroensis. All frogs in this genus were originally thought to belong to a single species first described from Tanzania’s Southern Highlands in 1905. But cutting-edge genomic sampling has helped reveal that there are actually multiple species. …Scientists now believe that skipping the tadpole phase enables these frogs to reproduce away from water. Each new species of Nectophrynoides has since been found to share this live-bearing strategy.

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Asia-Pacific forestry leaders meet to advance ‘Healthy Forests Feed the Future’ agenda

TanahAir
November 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Jakarta — Over 120 forestry leaders and experts from 20 countries across the Asia-Pacific have convened in Chiang Mai this week to strengthen regional collaboration on sustainable forest management under the theme “Healthy Forests Feed the Future”, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said in a statement. The gathering marks the Thirty-First Session of the Asia-Pacific Forestry Commission (APFC 31) and Asia-Pacific Forestry Week 2025, jointly hosted by Thailand’s Royal Forest Department and FAO. “This platform reinforces our shared commitment to conserve forests as a source of life, livelihoods, and food security,” said Nikorn Siratochananon, Director General of Thailand’s Royal Forest Department. Alue Dohong, FAO Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for Asia and the Pacific, underscored that “healthy forests are the backbone of healthy food systems,” noting their essential role in providing wild foods and sustaining agriculture through ecological services.

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United Nations says forests should form key plank of COP30

By Robin Millard
Associated Free Press in CBS 19 News
November 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The United Nations warned that climate change poses a threat to the world’s northern forests, putting the planet’s most powerful natural defence at serious risk. The UNECE regional agency urged the forthcoming COP30 climate summit to put forest resilience at the centre of efforts to combat global warming. “The forests of the northern hemisphere are crucial,” said Paola Deda, UNECE’s forests division director. “…the attention to forests in COPs has been lost. The technicalities have taken over,” she said. …Some 54 percent of the world’s forests are in: Brazil, China, Canada, Russia and the United States, with the latter three in the UNECE region… Although the world’s forest area has shrunk by 203 million hectares since 1990, in the UNECE region it has grown by around 60 million hectares — an area roughly as big as France. However, these gains “are now being jeopardised by record wildfires, pests, and an escalating climate-driven crisis”, UNECE warned.

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Interpol announces a new global fight against illegal deforestation

By Steven Grattan
The Associated Press
November 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

BOGOTA, Colombia — Interpol and partners launched a global law enforcement effort Wednesday aimed at dismantling criminal networks behind illegal logging, timber trafficking and gold mining, which drive large-scale deforestation and generate billions in illicit profits each year. The effort announced ahead of the UN COP30 climate summit in Brazil will focus mainly on tropical forests in Brazil, Ecuador, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and Peru. “Criminals are making billions by looting the planet’s forests,” Interpol Secretary General Valdecy Urquiza said. “The only way to stop them is through determined law enforcement action and strong international cooperation.” …The announcement follows a major crackdown in the Amazon Basin last week, when Brazilian police, supported by Interpol, destroyed more than 270 illegal mining dredges operating on the Madeira River. Authorities said the raids dealt a significant blow to criminal groups linked to gold-smuggling networks that span Brazil, Bolivia and Peru.

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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation koala population estimates triple, but conservationists cast doubt on figures

By Claire Simmonds
ABC News, Australia
November 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Koala advocates and logging supporters have seized on the release of data showing koala population estimates tripled in the last three years. The CSIRO developed the National Koala Monitoring Program in collaboration with 50 partners, including states and universities. In 2023, when the first estimate was released, between 287,830 and 628,010 koalas were believed to live in Australia. Now CSIRO scientists estimate the population could number from 729,000 to 918,000. …Among those highlighting the data is the MP for the New South Wales Mid North Coast seat of Oxley, Michael Kemp, who says the public has been “misled for decades over koala numbers”. …But Australian Koala Foundation chair Deborah Tabart said the CSIRO figures were “categorically wrong” and that field studies indicated that the national koala population was much smaller. …University of Sydney biologist Mathew Crowther said the “big jump in numbers” could be attributed to “more surveys and better techniques”.

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Experts highlight Türkiye’s advanced, growing forest fire capacity

The Daily Sabah
November 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Wildfire experts from around the globe convened at Istanbul Forest Innovation Week (IFIW) to evaluate Türkiye’s approach to forest fire management, unanimously acknowledging the country’s advanced capacity in both fire detection and intervention. Experts emphasized the integration of cutting-edge technologies, such as unmanned aerial vehicles (drones), as a critical factor in Türkiye’s rising prominence in global wildfire resilience. Tiago Oliveira, chairperson of the Portuguese Agency for Integrated Rural Fire Management, highlighted the multifaceted challenges climate change poses to forests worldwide. He underscored that warming trends are prolonging fire seasons and increasing the number of days with severe fire conditions. Oliveira also stressed the indispensable role of local communities living near forests. … Warning about extreme fire scenarios, Oliveira noted, “When difficult conditions triggered by climate change occur, very intense fires begin, making firefighting extremely challenging because water can become ineffective.”

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Canada advances global climate leadership at COP30 with international climate finance investments

By Government of Canada, Environment and Climate Change
Cision Newswire
November 13, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

BELÉM, Brazil – Today, at the 30th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30) in Belém, Brazil, the Honourable Julie Dabrusin, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, announced a total investment of $392 million for international climate action projects, advancing Canada’s commitment to global climate leadership and inclusive, locally led climate solutions. Climate change is rapidly threatening food security, disrupting supply chains, and putting pressure on communities in Canada and around the world. Addressing it is not only a moral obligation, but an economic imperative. Projects funded by international climate finance reduce the costs of climate change and promote economic growth and security, while supporting those most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. The $392 million announced today support new and enhanced climate adaptation measures, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and advance sustainable management initiatives in partnership with Canadian and international organizations

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A pivotal moment for climate action: what to expect at COP30 in Belém

By Fiona Harvey
The Guardian
November 10, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, United States, International

Rich countries have lost enthusiasm for combating the climate crisis while China is surging ahead in producing and using clean energy equipment, the president of the UN climate talks has said. More countries should follow China’s lead instead of complaining about being outcompeted, said André Corrêa do Lago, the Brazilian diplomat in charge of the Cop30 conference, which begins on Monday. …Top of the agenda will be national plans on cutting greenhouse gas emissions, which currently would lead to a devastating 2.5C of heating. Vulnerable countries want to draw up a plan that will show how countries can outdo their current inadequate efforts and meet the Paris agreement targets. …The Brazilian hosts are focused on “implementation” – that is, putting into practice commitments that have already been made. Despite efforts by Brazil, bitter disagreements over what the conference should focus on are still likely on Monday.

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Drax still burning 250-year-old trees sourced from forests in Canada, experts say

By Jillian Ambrose
The Guardian UK
November 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West, International

Drax power plant has continued to burn 250-year-old trees sourced from some of Canada’s oldest forests despite growing scrutiny of its sustainability claims, forestry experts say. A new report suggests it is “highly likely” that Britain’s biggest power plant sourced some wood from ecologically valuable forests as recently as this summer. Drax, Britain’s single biggest source of carbon emissions, has received billions of pounds in subsidies from burning biomass derived largely from wood. The report, by Stand.earth, claims that a subsidiary of Drax Group received hundreds of truckloads of whole logs at its biomass pellet sites throughout 2024 and into 2025, which were likely to have included trees that were hundreds of years old. The report could raise fresh questions for the owner of the North Yorkshire power plant, which has been forced in recent years to defend its sustainability claims while receiving more than £2m a day in green energy subsidies from UK bill payers.

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Trump’s energy secretary slams UN climate conference in Brazil, where US absence is glaring

By Derek Gatopoulos Theodora Tongas & Mauricio Savarese
The Associated Press
November 7, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

Chris Wright

US Energy Secretary Chris Wright condemned the COP30 environmental summit as harmful and misguided — defying the global scientific consensus and concern by governments worldwide on climate change. “It’s essentially a hoax. It’s not an honest organization looking to better human lives,” Wright said in Athens. …Wright’s comments came as world leaders gathering over 5,000 miles away, on the edge of the Amazon in Brazil, blasted President Trump for his absence from the UN-sponsored discussions on climate change. His remarks echoed the US administration’s rejection of global climate agreements and Trump’s prioritization of fossil fuels. …At the Athens forum, top US officials criticized European Union carbon reduction policies, arguing they undermine economic growth, democratic alliances, and global leadership in AI and energy innovation. It was a stark contrast with Brazil, where world leaders at COP30 issued urgent warnings about the accelerating pace of global warming.

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Climate change expands wildfire danger worldwide: New study warns of unprecedented risks in the coming decades

By CMCC Foundation – Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change
EurekAlert!
November 11, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

A new study, led by CMCC and Coventry University, reveals that climate change will dramatically expand wildfire danger across the globe, with up to 91% of fire-prone regions experiencing heightened risk by the end of this century. However, these changes are not just limited to areas that are traditionally fire-prone but could also affect ones that have rarely experienced wildfire risk in the past. “Wildfire danger is expanding and intensifying due to climate change,” says CMCC co-author Maria Vincenza Chiriacò. “…climate-driven fire danger is not a distant or localized issue, but a growing global challenge that demands proactive action.” Some of the most pronounced increases in fire danger are expected in southern Africa, the Mediterranean region, northern Asia, northeastern South America, and parts of North America. “The findings highlight how climate-driven fire danger will evolve globally, with important implications for livelihoods and ecosystem resilience,” says co-author from Coventry University, Jonathan Eden.

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Germany promises support for Brazil’s tropical forest protection scheme at UN climate talks

By Gavin Blackburn
Euronews
November 7, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Germany’s Chancellor Friedrich Merz has pledged support for a Brazilian initiative to support the conservation of the world’s endangered forests, at international talks on the edge of the Amazon rainforest ahead of the annual United Nations climate conference, COP30. The initiative, dubbed the Tropical Forest Forever Facility, drew $5.5 billion (€4.7 billion) in pledges, with Norway and France promising to join Brazil and Indonesia in investing. Merz said that Germany would make a “considerable” pledge, but didn’t specify an amount. The fund eventually seeks to leverage investments into $125 billion (€108 billion) that can be used to pay 74 developing countries for every hectare of forest they conserve. Dozens of governments have expressed support for the fund and are engaged in talks to learn more about it, Brazil’s Finance Minister Fernando Haddad said, including China and the United Arab Emirates.

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Brazil’s Forest Fund Gets Its First Pledges – A $5 billion start

By Daniel Carvalho and Dayanne Sousa
Bloomberg
November 7, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Brazil’s main plan to protect the Amazon rainforest, the centerpiece of its COP30 climate agenda, is moving ahead — with Norway playing a key role in its launch, though initial funding falls well short of expectations. The Tropical Forest Forever Facility, or TFFF, designed to support the conservation of endangered forests worldwide, will receive around $5 billion in pledged contributions — far short of its $25 billion target. Norway and France have agreed to join Brazil in investing in the fund, while Germany will announce its contribution on Friday, Brazilian ministers said on Thursday. “It is an unprecedented initiative,” President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said. “Forests are worth far more standing than felled.” The new fund could play a pivotal role in forest protection as the current climate policies and green finance remain insufficient to address the magnitude of the global challenge, said Lula.

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Google deal for Amazon reforestation makes Brazilian startup its top carbon credit supplier

By Brad Haynes
Reuters in BNN Bloomberg
November 6, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

BELEM, Brazil — Google has struck its biggest carbon removal deal, agreeing to finance restoration of the Amazon rainforest with Brazilian startup Mombak, as big tech hunts for high-quality credits to offset emissions tied to energy-hungry data centres. The companies said the deal would offset 200,000 metric tons of carbon emissions. …The agreement highlights how big tech is looking for ways to soften the climate impacts of its huge investment in power-intensive data centres for AI, driving demand to offset carbon emissions through Brazil’s nascent reforestation industry. Last year, Alphabet’s Google committed more than US$100 million to an array of different carbon capture technologies, from enhanced rock weathering and biochar to direct air capture and a project making rivers more acidic. But when it came time to double down, it was hard to beat the efficiency of planting trees. [to access the full story a Bloomberg subscription is required]

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Drax power plant to go on earning ‘over £1m a day’ from burning wood pellets

By Jillian Ambrose
The Guardian
November 5, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Britain’s biggest power plant will continue to earn more than £1m a day from burning wood pellets under a new government subsidy contract designed to halve its financial support, according to analysts. The Drax power plant in North Yorkshire is in line to earn £458.6m a year between 2027 and 2031 after the government agreed to extend its subsidies beyond 2026, according to analysts at Ember, a climate thinktank. The earnings are well below the £869m in subsidies handed to the Drax power plant last year for generating about 5% of the UK’s electricity from burning biomass after the government promised to curb the use of biomass in Britain’s power system. Under the contract, Drax will be paid to run just over a quarter of the time, down sharply from almost two-thirds of time currently. But the price it will earn for each unit of electricity generated will rise.

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EU Agrees Weakened Climate Target in Final-Hour Deal for COP30

By Kate Abnett, Inti Landauro and Benoit Van Overstraeten
Reuters in Insurance Journal
November 5, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

EU climate ministers agreed a 2040 climate change target in the early hours of Wednesday after watering down the goal in last-minute negotiations, as they raced to clinch the deal before the UN COP30 summit in Brazil. Climate ministers from European Union countries approved in a public vote a compromise to cut emissions 90% by 2040, from 1990 levels, but with flexibilities to weaken this aim. The weakened target would let countries buy foreign carbon credits to cover up to 5% of the 90% emissions-cutting goal. That would effectively weaken to 85% the emissions cuts required from European industries, and pay foreign countries to cut emissions on Europe’s behalf to make up the rest. The EU also agreed to consider the option, in future, to use international carbon credits to meet a further 5%. Additionally, countries agreed a 2035 target to cut emissions in a range of 66.25-72.5%. The UN asked all governments to submit 2035 climate plans before COP30 opens Thursday.

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