Region Archives: International

Special Feature

President Trump is now a critical variable in the fortunes of Canadian companies in the US

Robert Mckellar
The Tree Frog Forestry News
February 25, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: International

Robert McKellar

Tree Frog:
A lot has changed in the six months since you wrote about political risk management in the Canadian forest products sector. In the media and thus the Tree Frog News, we’ve been hearing a lot about US lumber duties and tariffs and their potential impact on both sides of the border. But before we talk about that, can you comment on what’s changed from a political risk perspective?
Harmattan:
Back in August 2024, I pointed out that the sector had long enjoyed stability, largely because Canada’s primary market—the US—had been open, rational, and predictable. That sense of stability was rooted in a belief that even occasional trade disputes were manageable within a predictable framework. But as we noted then, political risk is not just about places, but also about periods, and things can change even in places we’re very used to. And yes, since that time, we’ve witnessed a dramatic evolution. …President Trump is now a critical variable in the fortunes of Canadian companies in the US, and indeed a major factor in the evolution of the international system. Getting a sense of the man and what he means is probably the most direct route to contextual insight for what follows. I’m not an expert on Trump or even US politics. But like most political risk consultants, I have been fascinated by his rise and character, and have kept an eye on the more discerning observations. What follows is a brief sketch.

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Business & Politics

China targets US soybeans, logs in stepped-up response to Trump tariffs

Reuters in Trading View
March 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

China suspended on Tuesday the soybean import licences of three U.S. firms and halted imports of U.S. logs, stepping up its retaliation for Donald Trump’s decision to impose an extra 10% duty on China. …The suspension of U.S. logs was a direct response to Trump’s move on March 1 to order a trade investigation on imported lumber. Trump had earlier told reporters that he was thinking about imposing a 25% tariff rate on lumber and forest products. “The announcement of import restrictions on U.S lumber and soybeans linked with phytosanitary issues follows a long history of similar measures by Beijing,” said Even Pay, agriculture analyst at Trivium China. …China is one of the world’s largest importers of wood products and the third-largest destination for U.S. forest products. It imported around $850 million worth of logs and other rough wood products from the U.S. in 2024, according to Chinese customs data.

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China hits US soybean firms, halts lumber imports as it steps up retaliation against Trump tariffs

By Mei Mei Chu and Ella Cao
Reuters in Business Insider
March 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

BEIJING – China suspended on Tuesday the soybean import licenses of three U.S. firms and halted imports of U.S. lumber, stepping up retaliatory action after the United States imposed additional tariffs on Chinese goods. Earlier in the day, China also imposed import levies covering $21 billion worth of U.S. agricultural and food products… Customs said it detected ergot and seed coating agent in imported U.S. soybeans while the suspension of U.S. lumber imports was due to the detection of small worms, aspergillus and other pests. …Beijing’s retaliatory measures were in response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to impose an extra 10% duty on China, effective Tuesday, resulting in a cumulative 20% tariff in response to what the White House considers Chinese inaction over drug flows. …The suspension of U.S. lumber was a direct response to Trump’s move on March 1 to order a trade investigation on imported lumber. 

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US Lumber Coalition Applauds President Trump’s Additional Measures to Investigate Unfair Trade Practices

By The US Lumber Coalition
PR Newswire
March 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

WASHINGTON — President Trump has ordered an investigation under section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 to determine the “impact of foreign government subsidies and predatory trade practices.” “We know that foreign governments such as Canadian federal and provincial governments subsidize the Canadian lumber industry to promote employment and disruptive excess Canadian lumber production that is then dumped into the U.S. market to the detriment of U.S. companies and workers,” stated Andrew Miller, Chair/Owner of Stimson Lumber Company. “President Trump is absolutely correct in saying that we do not need any unfairly traded Canadian lumber imports,” stated Miller, adding that “the combination of fully enforcing our antidumping and countervailing duty trade laws and this additional enforcement step against unfair trade taken by President Trump will accelerate addressing the harmful effects of foreign unfair trade practices in lumber. Thank you President Trump!

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Finance & Economics

How Trump’s tariffs on Mexico and Canada will sweep across the U.S., state by state

By Lori Ann LaRocco
CNBC
February 25, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, International

If the Trump administration follows through, the impact on economies across the U.S. will be extensive, and it will vary greatly from state to state. …CNBC looked at the exposure of all 50 states on a country-by-country basis. …The 10 states that have the highest percentage of imports from Canada are: Montana (92%), Maine (69.4%), Vermont (68%), North Dakota (64%), Wyoming (55%), Oklahoma (51%), West Virginia (44%), South Dakota (41%), Minnesota (38%), and Colorado (31%). Energy was the top-dollar import from Canada for all states. The amount of oil imported from Canada is staggering. For example, the value of the oil that Montana imports from Canada — $4.9 billion — is more than 10 times the value of the state’s next biggest import. U.S. states facing exports retaliatory risk. …Looking at the top 10 states that export to Canada, North Dakota topped the list (82%), followed by Maine (49%), Montana (46%), South Dakota (44%), Michigan (43%), Ohio (39%), West Virginia (38%), Idaho (37%), Missouri (37%), and Vermont (34%).

In related coverage: Voters might like tariffs, but not on Canada and Mexico, poll finds

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Mercer International reports Q4, 2024 net income of $16.7 million

By Mercer International Inc.
GlobeNewswire
February 20, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, International

NEW YORK — Mercer International reported fourth quarter 2024 net income of $16.7 million compared to a net loss of $87.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2023 and a net loss of $17.6 million in the third quarter of 2024. Q4 revenues were $488 million, down from $502 million in Q3, 2024 but up from $470 million in Q4, 2023. Mr. Juan Carlos Bueno, CEO, stated: “In the fourth quarter of 2024, softwood pulp prices remained strong, decreasing slightly from recent record prices.” …Hardwood pulp prices in China and North America decreased in the fourth quarter of 2024 as the market absorbed capacity increases from earlier in the year. …Lumber sales realizations increased, driven by modestly higher prices in the U.S. market, while in Europe, prices remained stable. 

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Increase of domestic timber to boost UK economy and housebuilding

Department for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs
GOV.UK
February 27, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

A new roadmap to get Britain building with the use of sustainable and low carbon building materials, will help solve the housing crisis and achieve 2050 net zero targets. New, ambitious plans to increase the use of timber in construction to boost the domestic timber industry, economic growth, rural jobs and housebuilding targets, have been announced today at the Timber in Construction Summit in London. The government has outlined new methods to deliver on its Plan for Change that will help to build 1.5million sustainable and affordable homes, create a low-waste circular construction sector and drive further investment into domestic timber and wood-processing supply chains. Speaking at the Summit, Minister Creagh confirmed the government will recommit to the Timber in Construction Roadmap, which outlines measures to increase the use of timber in the construction sector.

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Japan’s Timber Import Trends Show Changes

Global Wood Markets in Forestry.com
February 24, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Japan’s timber industry is seeing notable changes, with predictions of a drop in log imports and varying trends in lumber imports. These shifts are influenced by economic factors, environmental concerns, and policy decisions affecting how Japan uses timber. The Japan Lumber Importers Association has shared its predictions for wood imports, expecting a 13% decrease in log imports for 2024. …While log imports are expected to decline, the situation with lumber imports is more complex. In 2024, lumber imports are projected to increase by 17.2%. However, in the first half of 2025, a 12.5% decrease is expected compared to the same period the previous year. Several factors influence these mixed trends… Japan’s housing starts decreased by 4.6% year-over-year in 2023, with owner-occupied housing falling by 11.4%. These changes directly impact the demand for lumber, influencing import volumes.

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Vietnam’s wood industry concerned about Trump tax policy risks

By Lan Do
The Investor, Vafie Magazine
February 22, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Chanh Phuong

HO CHI MINH, Vietnam — One of the major concerns of Vietnam’s wood industry is the reaction of the U.S. market to the Trump administration’s possible tax policy after a year of strong growth, said Nguyen Chanh Phuong, of the Handicraft and Wood Industry Association of Ho Chi Minh City. …In 2024, the wood industry achieved impressive growth with sales of $16.3 billion, an increase of nearly 21% compared to 2023. …The US market accounted for about 55% of total export turnover, while Europe reached about $1.2 billion, accounting for 7.3%. …Since Trump became President of the U.S. for the second time, the US has not imposed tariffs on any Vietnamese wood products. However, President Trump said he is considering a plan to expand the scope of tariffs on lumber and forest products. The tax rate he is considering is 25%.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canadian Wood renews sponsorship with international furniture designers

By Dakota Smith
Woodworking Network
February 20, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

High Point, N.C. After a successful first year, British Columbia wood expert Canadian Wood has renewed its Corporate Partner sponsorship with the International Society of Furniture Designers (ISFD). During the Spring Market, furniture designers are invited to discover the potential of B.C.’s softwoods at the Canadian Wood Showroom & Information Center on the sixth floor of the historic Radio Building on the corner of Commerce and Main. Canadian Wood uses environmentally friendly forest products from British Columbia. They are a preferred resource for furniture designers and manufacturers seeking information and support for using sustainable wood products from B.C. forests. Canadian Wood will share with ISFD members the benefits of using beautiful, resilient, and versatile Western Hemlock and Douglas-Fir in their work. These woods are popular because of their natural beauty, durability, and strong environmental reputation. They are affordable alternatives over traditional hardwood species and are ideal for traditional and contemporary home furnishings.

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UK Government commits to increase the use of timber in construction

Builders’ Merchants News
February 28, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

LONDON – Ambitious new plans to increase the use of timber in construction were announced by Environment Minister Mary Creagh at the Timber in Construction Summit in London. The new Timber in Construction (TiC) Roadmap is being introduced to help get Britain building using timber – creating economic growth, rural jobs and helping meet housebuilding targets in a sustainable way. The TiC Roadmap was first published at the end of 2023. This new and improved version goes even further, highlighting the Government’s ambition to boost the domestic timber industry and kickstart the construction sector without compromising on quality, safety or carbon emissions. …Alex Goodfellow, Chair of the Confederation of Timber Industries, and CEO of Donaldson Offsite, represented the timber industry when he said: “The Minister’s support for the Timber in Construction Roadmap shows the Government’s firm commitment to a growth agenda: growth for forestry, for housing, for low-carbon skills and for the economy.

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New report: five buildings which ‘make the case’ for mass timber

Architects’ Journal UK
February 28, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

A new study led by dRMM in collaboration with Edinburgh Napier University and the Quality of Life Foundation has highlighted the low-carbon and wellbeing benefits of five mass timber buildings in the UK. The study demonstrates that mass timber buildings not only significantly reduce carbon emissions but also provide healthier and more comfortable environments for occupants, its authors claim. The research, titled Measuring Mass Timber, found that these structures produce, on average, 50 per cent less embodied and operational carbon than conventional buildings. Additionally, they foster a strong sense of comfort and connection to nature among users. The findings were released as Government plans to increase the use of timber in construction were announced yesterday by Environment Minister Mary Creagh at the Timber in Construction Summit, coinciding with the launch of an updated Timber in Construction Roadmap.

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Sawdust superpower: Wood waste battery retains 60% capacity after 10,000 cycles

By Jijo Malayil
Interesting Engineering
March 3, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

SPAIN — Researchers at the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) have developed a hybrid supercapacitor using carbon derived from Pinus radiata waste. The lithium-ion capacitor features electrodes made from discarded wood particles, offering a sustainable and cost-effective energy storage solution. With abundant biomass resources in the Basque Country in Spain, the team utilized environmentally friendly and inexpensive processes to create high-performance electrodes. Their findings highlight the potential of biomass-based materials in producing efficient, eco-friendly energy storage systems. …The UPV/EHU team developed a cost-effective lithium-ion capacitors using carbon from Pinus radiata waste, an abundant and sustainable resource in Biscay, Spain. They produced high-performance electrodes using carbon sourced from biomass instead of costly chemicals or energy-intensive procedures. …Not all biomass provides suitable carbon for energy storage applications, but results demonstrated the effectiveness of carbon derived from insignis pine.

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Ligna Exhibition to celebrate 50th anniversary

By Stephen Powney
The Timber Trades Journal
February 27, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The global woodworking press gathered in Hanover for the media launch of this year’s Ligna exhibition – the world’s largest woodworking technology fair. The official Ligna Press Preview event, held at Hannover Messe on February 20 and attended by TTJ, saw Ligna organiser Deutsche Messe reveal that more than 1,200 exhibitors from all over the world will occupy around 112,000m2 of exhibition space in May, sending a strong signal in a challenging industry situation. The event on May 26-30 will be the 50th anniversary of Ligna. Ligna, which attracts around 100,000 people every two years, showcases technologies from across the woodworking spectrum – from forestry to sawmilling, timber product processing, panel production equipment, furniture machinery and surfacing.

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Trial turns leftover forestry wood into roads for logging trucks: ‘It could be a viable alternative’

New Zealand Herald
February 24, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

A Hawke’s Bay trial to convert leftover forestry wood into roading material for logging trucks to travel over is showing promising results. Managing woody debris left after harvesting is a common challenge in forestry. …Transporting it out of the forest is costly, while leaving it piled on landings poses environmental risks during severe weather events. With funding from Forest Growers Research (FGR), Pan Pac and FGR have been trialling a promising solution – using it as roading material. …Compared to metal roads, shredded wood roads offer the environmental advantage of repurposing waste wood while reducing traditional roading material transport distances, thereby lowering the carbon footprint. …The results so far indicate that shred wood roads could be a viable alternative to metal roads, where the grade is not too steep in wet conditions.

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Is it time to normalise mass timber in construction?

By Nick Hewson
Architecture Australia
February 25, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Humans have been building with wood for thousands of years, but the last few decades have seen a renaissance in timber construction with the rise of mass timber. Products like cross-laminated timber (CLT) and glue-laminated timber (GLT) have exploded in popularity recently with ever larger and more elaborate buildings completed. Australia has been punching above its weight on a global stage with several landmark examples attracting worldwide acclaim… Many projects delivered so far have been relatively “purist” buildings with most components made from mass timber but products are becoming normalised to a point where we can pick the right material for the right job. Timber is an incredibly capable material, but can be limited in some applications, so often a hybrid approach is a better way to get timber into more projects.

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Biobased lignin gels offer sustainable alternative for hair conditioning

Stockholm University
February 21, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Mika Sipponen

Researchers at Stockholm University have developed a fully biobased hair conditioner using lignin gel emulsions, offering a sustainable and environmentally friendly alternative to conventional haircare products. Hair conditioners typically contain 20–30 ingredients, many derived from petroleum and oleochemicals, raising concerns about sustainability and environmental impact. A new study published in Science Advances, demonstrates that micellar lignin gels can effectively stabilize emulsions with natural oils, reducing the need for synthetic surfactants and complex stabilizers commonly used in commercial formulations. The research team, led by Mika Sipponen at Stockholm University, sought to explore lignin, a common and renewable component in wood biomass, as a multifunctional component for hair conditioning. “By using wood-derived lignin directly without any chemical modification, we not only simplify the ingredient list but also eliminate the need for organic solvents, making the process more eco-friendly,” said Sipponen.

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Forestry

Countries reach a $200-billion deal to protect nature. The US was not involved

By Inayat Singh
Thomson Reuters in CBC News
February 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

Steven Guilbeault

A gathering of countries in Rome this week agreed on a plan to generate $200 billion US in finance a year by 2030 to halt and begin to reverse the destruction of the natural world. The United Nations’ COP16 talks on biodiversity began last October in Colombia but failed to reach an agreement on who would contribute, how the money would be gathered and who would oversee it. …Led by negotiators from the so-called BRICS countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. …The finance deal is a result of a landmark agreement in Montreal in 2022, when countries agreed to protect 30 per cent of the world’s lands and oceans. Canadian negotiators, led by federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault, got that deal through complex and fraught negotiations involving 196 countries. Since then, the Canadian government has pushed funding into conservation efforts, including $200 million for Inuit-led conservation in the Arctic.

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Bayer may halt U.S. Roundup sales without legal Bayer tells US it could halt Roundup weedkiller sales over legal risks

By Patricia Weiss and Ludwig Burger
Reuters
March 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

FRANKFURT – Bayer has told U.S. lawmakers it could stop selling Roundup weedkiller unless they can strengthen legal protection against product liability litigation, according to a financial analyst and a person close to the matter. Bayer has paid about $10 billion to settle disputed claims that Roundup, based on the herbicide glyphosate, causes cancer. About 67,000 further cases are pending for which the group has set aside $5.9 billion in legal provisions. The German company has said plaintiffs should not be able to take Bayer to court by invoking U.S. state rules given the federal U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has repeatedly labelled the product as safe to use, as have regulators in other parts of the world. “Without regulatory clarity (Bayer) will need to exit the business. Bayer have been clear with legislators and farmer groups on this,” analysts at brokerage Jefferies said in a note on Thursday, citing guidance Bayer’s leadership provided in a meeting.

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Agriculture Commissioner Simpson leads push to exempt US forests from EU deforestation plan

By Michelle Vecerina
Florida’s Voice News
February 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

Wilton Simpson

TALLAHASSEE, Florida – Florida Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson released a letter urging U.S. senators and members of the Trump administration to exempt American forests from effects of the European Union’s proposed deforestation regulation. The letter was signed by 18 state agriculture commissioners across the U.S. According to Simpson’s office, the rule, if enacted as currently written, could severely impact the U.S. timber industry, which is a global leader in forest management and sustainability. …The 18 commissioners requested the country’s leaders address the potential “negative implications” the European Union Deforestation Regulation rule will place on the country’s agricultural forestry industries. The European Union’s deforestation regulation, set to take effect on Dec. 30, aims to ensure that the products it imports do not contribute to global deforestation or forest degradation. …The commissioners urged the U.S. senators and members of the Trump administration to express opposition to the rule.

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Bob Brown Foundation activists scale front of Parliament House in Hobart

Pulse Tasmania
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Environmental activists from the Bob Brown Foundation have scaled the front of Parliament House in Hobart in protest of logging activities in Tasmania’s forests. The activists suspended themselves from the nearly 200-year-old sandstone building for the first official sitting day of the year. Speaker of the House Michelle O’Byrne condemned the actions, saying the protesters have put the right to safely allow protests at Parliament House In jeopardy. “The actions that were taken outside the parliament today caused potential damage to a heritage building that is already on the fragile side,” she said. …The Bob Brown Foundation said the action was necessary to send a “strong message” to parliamentarians.

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Australian Forest Products Association welcomes Albanese Government’s support for the establishment of new timber plantations

The Australian Forest Products Association
February 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Australian Forest Products Association (AFPA) welcomes and thanks the Australian Government for its latest round of funding announced for the Support Plantation Establishment Program (SPEP) that will bolster our national stocks of local timber and wood-fibre for the decades ahead, Chief Executive Officer of AFPA, Diana Hallam said today. Federal Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry the Hon Julie Collins MP has today announced $10.4 million for 14 new softwood and hardwood plantation projects through Round 3 of the SPEP. The projects range from 21 to 1,928 hectares – the total area around 5,500 hectares across NSW, Victoria, WA, SA and Tasmania.

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Airbus-built Biomass forest measuring satellite shipped to Kourou

SatNews
February 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Biomass, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Airbus-built satellite, has left Toulouse for its journey by ship to Kourou, French Guiana, ready for launch. Biomass, an Earth Explorer satellite, is ESA’s flagship mission to measure forest biomass to assess terrestrial carbon stocks and fluxes from an altitude of 666 km above the Earth. The spacecraft will carry the first space-borne P-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR), delivering exceptionally accurate maps of tropical, temperate and boreal forest biomass. The spacecraft … will be used to provide accurate global maps of tropical, temperate, and boreal forest biomass. Data on changes in biomass due to forest loss (for example from logging/burning) and regrowth is unattainable by ground measurement techniques. …The Biomass satellite’s development and testing have involved more than 50 companies across 20 countries. Biomass is scheduled to launch in April 2025 on a Vega-C rocket from Kourou and will operate on-orbit for five years.

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Unpredictable and unstoppable: extreme fires take over Europe

Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso Transeuropa
February 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

With the climate crisis, the threat of forest fires is getting worse every year. And from the Mediterranean, a global hotspot, it is spreading to unexpected latitudes, forcing society to deeply rethink its relationship with the territory. …Fires with extreme behaviour …are becoming more intense and frequent. In Europe, the Mediterranean regions are confirmed among the most vulnerable on a global level, while other areas much further north on the continent, with the climate crisis advancing, are finding themselves exposed to the risks of fire. …To frame the phenomenon, scholars have coined another specific term: Extreme wildfire event—those that are technically impossible to contain… even with the best technologies. …In a rapidly changing planet, proceeding with the tools of the past – simply trying to put out the fire at all costs – is no longer enough. A deeper paradigm shift is needed, which begins with a thorough rethinking of our relationship with the territory.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Middle ground is collapsing on climate action, Canada concedes in submission to UN

The National Observer
February 26, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

Polarization is gripping the country and the centre isn’t holding, Environment and Climate Change Canada found when setting the country’s latest emissions reduction target. The department solicited feedback… to determine what Canada’s internationally binding 2035 pollution reduction obligations should be. …The results found that overcoming polarization is a major hurdle to implementing aggressive emissions reductions that climate scientists say is required to avoid catastrophic warming. About two-thirds of Canadians who participated support stronger measures to address climate change. “There was little middle ground, and very few people were satisfied with the status quo,” according to the findings. …When asked if the federal government is doing enough to fight climate change, 47% believe Canada needs to do more, compared to 36% that feel existing measures go too far. …Polarization is gripping the country and the centre isn’t holding, Environment and Climate Change Canada found when setting the country’s latest emissions reduction target.

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Forest biomass growth to soar through 2030, impacting tropical forests

By Justin Catanoso
Mongabay
March 6, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The harvesting and burning of forest biomass to produce energy continues to surge, according to a new report entitled Burning Up the Biosphere on near-term global production and demand for wood pellets. This growth comes despite scientists’ warnings of the industry’s harm to the climate and its contribution to deforestation — increasingly in the tropics. …By 2030, the supply of forest biomass for energy is projected to triple compared to 2021, after expanding by 50% between 2010 and 2021. That jump in wood pellet production to meet global demand will require a 13-fold increase in monoculture biomass plantations from current levels, especially in Southeast Asia. The ongoing conversion of native tropical forests to short-rotation plantations for crops, timber and wood pellets will continue being a significant driver of global deforestation. The report was produced by the Biomass Action Network of the Environmental Paper Network (EPN), an international forest advocacy group.

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Biomaterials: Industry will benefit from Scion fibre expertise

Innovatek
March 5, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

John Stulen

“News of recent paper mill closures and a log export slump may soon be replaced with more positive news logs and other forest resources”, says Rotorua-based forest technology specialist, John Stulen. “Scion has some excellent work streams completely focused on high value export products from across forest and fibre sector.” …Local scientists at Scion, are strongly represented in key biomaterial research focused on developing new sustainable products. For example a new effort – an international research programme, UPWEARS, aims to develop a sustainable e-textile (electrically-conductive textile) using cork, hemp, flax and paper byproducts, and develop ways to recycle and reuse textile waste. The overall aim is to contribute to a sustainable economy by unlocking the potential of bio-based and hybrid fabrics. …Another is a key technology startup collaboration between Scion and the New Zealand Product Accelerator. This will see a new forestry biofactory built in Rotorua soon.

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EU to keep climate goals but loosen rules for companies, says green chief

By Barbara Moens, Henry Foy and Paola Tamma
The Financial Times
February 25, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Teresa Ribera

The EU will stick to its world-leading climate goals, the bloc’s economic competitiveness tsar has vowed, even as it prepares to water down some of the green policies to placate the bloc’s ailing industry. The EU’s Green Deal was launched in 2019 but has since come under assault from European companies complaining of high energy prices and stifling overregulation. Capitals are also concerned about moribund economic growth, while Donald Trump’s bonfire of US climate goals has increased calls for the bloc to rethink its entire approach. …European Commission VP Teresa Ribera set out the Commission’s plan for how to find that balance between sticking to climate goals and improving the continent’s flagging competitiveness. She promised to mobilise more than €100bn to support clean manufacturing. Another area of action will be to drastically cut the number of small and medium companies affected by existing environmental regulations.

Additional coverage:

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Forest fires drive up Ukraine war emissions

By Ros Davidson
bne IntelliNews
February 26, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The war in Ukraine has generated nearly 230mn tonnes of CO2-equivalent (CO2e) emissions since Russia’s full-scale invasion began, with forest fires significantly contributing to the increase, according to an analysis published on the third anniversary of the conflict. The study, conducted by the Initiative on Greenhouse Gas Accounting of War, found that in the past year alone emissions linked to the war had reached 55mn tonnes. Researchers attributed much of this increase to widespread fires caused mostly by warfare, exacerbated by extreme heat and dry conditions. “What stands out in the third year is that we’ve seen landscape fires, particularly forest fires, escalating,” said Lennard de Klerk, lead researcher at the non-profit group, in an interview with The Guardian. “They are double compared to the average of the previous two years and 20-25 times more than in peacetime.” Wildfires …burned through 92,100 hectares in 2024, more than twice the annual average of the preceding two years. 

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In Chile, a Declining Forest Worries Scientists

By Andres Muedano
Inside Climate News
February 8, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Over the last 15 years, Chile has faced a devastating drought. Higher temperatures and lower rainfall have severely affected the country’s sclerophyllous forests—one of only five Mediterranean ecosystems in the world, best known for its hardy, evergreen vegetation. In the last few years, tree canopies have also browned at unprecedented levels, losing their green color and ability to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Additionally, deforestation—driven by urban expansion and the introduction of non-native tree species—has fragmented the forests into multiple, smaller patches… A study published Feb. 10 in the journal Science of the Total Environment estimates the level of risk faced by all individual sclerophyll forest stands, in the central and coastal zones of Chile, often at altitudes from 4,500 to 7,200 feet.

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A First for Forestry: Norway’s Timber Industry Moves to Zero-Emission Vessels

By Marybeth Collins
E+E Leader
February 21, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Norwegian forestry companies are making history by revolutionizing how timber is transported. Beginning in 2027, Viken AT Market and AT Skog will be the first in the forestry industry to ship timber on zero-emission vessels—a game-changing move that signals a dramatic shift toward sustainable maritime logistics. This breakthrough is made possible through a partnership with Skarv Shipping, which will provide vessels powered by ammonia and electricity, significantly reducing emissions compared to conventional diesel-powered ships. Norway’s timber industry plays a crucial role in the country’s economy, exporting approximately 1 million tons of timber annually to European markets. However, most of this transport has relied on traditional diesel-powered vessels, which contribute to greenhouse gas emissions. In an effort to push the industry forward, Viken AT Market is committing to zero-emission transport, securing a long-term shipping agreement with Skarv Shipping and Arriva Shipping.

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From Pellets to Carbon-Negative Sustainable Aviation Fuel

By Anna Simet
Biomass Magazine
February 23, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

In December 2024, Drax and Pathway Energy announced a multiyear deal that could see Drax supplying upward of 1 million metric tons of wood pellets to Pathway’s currently proposed sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) plant on the U.S. Gulf Coast. In the months leading up to the announcement, Drax had hinted at such prospects, indicating plans to develop a pipeline of biomass sales opportunities in North America, including in the SAF market. Drax CEO Will Gardiner confirmed as much during a November quarterly earnings call. Currently, Drax has 17 operational wood pellet production plants across North America and a 450,000-metric-ton facility under construction in Longview, Washington. While Drax is well known in the industrial wood pellet industry, Pathway Energy is a new and unique market participant.  Pellet Mill Magazine interviewed Pathway Energy CEO Steve Roberts to introduce the company, technology and plans.

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Malaysia develops carbon credit system for forestry sector

By Iylia Marsya Iskandar and Qistina Sallehuddin
The New Straits Times
February 24, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia is developing a national carbon credit system for the forestry sector, termed the Forest Carbon Offset (FCO) mechanism, to promote transparent carbon trading and prevent greenwashing. Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability Minister Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad said: “The ministry has introduced the REDD+ financial framework. This initiative offers financial support to state governments for activities focused on forest conservation and ecosystem sustainability, particularly to mitigate climate change. A key component … is the FCO mechanism. It serves as the primary mechanism for generating carbon credits in the forestry sector for domestic and international markets. Our aim is to create a domestic carbon credit system aligned with international standards, including Verra and the Gold Standard, while ensuring competitive fees. This system is being developed with input from stakeholders”. 

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Turkey’s biofuel sector gets fired up on overseas demand

By William Sellars
Arabian Gulf Business Insight
February 24, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Turkey is poor in oil and gas while its renewable energy sector is heavily reliant on a mix of hydro, wind and solar. But another element is heating up: biofuel – fuel derived directly from biomass, such as wood or plant matter – is gaining interest domestically and creating an export market not available to other renewables. Demand for and output of biomass pellets used in stoves, furnaces and heaters as an alternative to coal or wood to cope with Turkey’s often freezing winters have increased in recent years. Produced by crushing and compressing wood waste, the pellets have a higher per-kilo energy output than gas, coal or oil, and far lower emission levels, according to promoters. Studies estimate Turkey has the raw material to produce up to 1.8 million tonnes of pellets annually, although installed processing capacity has yet to reach this level.

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Health & Safety

New research uses natural tree sap to extend shelf life of fresh produce

By Bree Caggiati
FruitNet
February 27, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: International

A series of University of Queensland studies have found the use of natural tree sap gum and light extend the shelf life of fresh fruit and vegetables. The Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation (QAAFI) research used edible coatings made from gum Arabic or acacia gum enriched with extracts from native Australian plants to stop the growth of spoilage causing microorganisms. The research team also used light and curcumin, a compound extracted from turmeric, to deactivate fungal spores on food. QAAFI’s Maral Seididamyeh said both methods were effective in keeping food fresh for longer. “Using our edible coating, we were able to prevent the growth of spoilage microorganisms in freshly cut capsicum for around 10 days in the fridge,”  Seididamyeh said. “This was mostly due to the organic acids and phenolic compounds found in the aqueous extracts of plants like Cape York lillypilly, boonjee tamarind, and Tasmanian pepper leaves.” 

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Wood company fined more than £1m after two workers injured

By Fiona Audley
The Irish Post
February 25, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: International

West Fraser (Europe) Ltd, formerly known as Norbord, manufactures wood-based products from sites across Scotland. It has been the focus of two investigations by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) after separate incidents occurred at its plant in Cowie, Stirlingshire in a six-month period. In the first, utility operator Sean Gallagher, 29, suffered serious injuries after his leg became entangled in moving parts at the bottom of a storage bunker in January 2020. In July of the same year, scaffolder David McMillan, 39, plunged more than 13 feet to the ground after a rusty plate gave way on a rooftop gantry. …The HSE launched investigations following both incidents and the firm pleaded guilty to several health and safety breaches related to them. …The court heard that the firm had been fined more than £2m in 2022 after another employee died after suffering serious burns at the same plant.

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Major initiative for emission-free workplaces in forestry

Svenska Cellulosa Aktiebolaget SCA
February 21, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: International

Creating emission-free workplaces in Sweden’s forestry is a crucial part of the forestry industry’s efforts to contribute to the climate transition. SCA, along with parts of the forestry sector, is now collaborating with Komatsu Forest, Luleå University of Technology, the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, and the Forestry Technical Cluster to tackle the challenge. Achieving zero emissions in forestry’s often remote and constantly changing workplaces is a significant challenge. It requires a holistic approach that encompasses logistics, forest machinery, and work execution. To meet these challenges, Komatsu Forest, Luleå University of Technology, the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sveaskog, Holmen, SCA, and the Forestry Technical Cluster have initiated a four-year collaborative project. “The goal is to jointly explore the technical and market possibilities for emission-free forestry workplaces,” says Magnus Bergman, Head of Technology and Digitalization at SCA Skog.

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Wood products manufacturer fined over £1M after 2 workers suffer severe injuries less than 6 months apart

By Alexis Gajewski
Plant Services
February 19, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: International

An investigation conducted by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), Britain’s national regulator for workplace health and safety, has determined that West Fraser (Europe) Ltd, formerly known as Norbord, could have prevented two safety incidents that resulted in two employees being injured. The incidents occurred within six months of each other in 2020 at the company’s Cowie facility. This is the second time in five years this company has been handed a large fine for failing to protect workers. West Fraser has a history of health and safety violations. In 2022, the company, which manufactures wood-based products, was fined more than £2million after a worker suffered serious burns and ultimately died from their injuries.

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Forest Fires

Largest wildfire in decades rages in Japan as authorities warn it could spread

By Justin McCurry
The Guardian
March 4, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: International

Authorities in Japan have warned that the country’s biggest wildfire in decades is likely to spread, after it damaged dozens of homes and forced more than 1,000 people to flee. Fires continued to rage a week after they broke out in the city of Ofunato, on the north-east coast, with weather officials speculating that this year’s unusually dry winter and strong winds were to blame. As of Monday, the fire had spread through about 2,100 hectares of land, damaged 84 homes and forced 1,200 residents to take refuge in school gymnasiums and other shelters. A further 2,000 are staying with friends or relatives. …More than 2,000 self-defence force [SDF] troops and firefighters have struggled to control the flames as they spread through heavily forested mountainous areas bordering Ofunato, which was among communities destroyed in the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

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1 dead, over 80 homes lost as wildfire spreads in northeast Japan

Kyodo News
February 27, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: International

MORIOKA, JAPAN — One person has died, and more than 80 homes appear to have burned down after a wildfire broke out in a northeastern Japan city, local authorities said Thursday, as the region faced its third fire in about a week. Since Wednesday, the blaze has scorched more than 600 hectares in Ofunato, Iwate Prefecture, the municipal government said. With the fire still spreading, about 3,300 residents have been ordered to evacuate. Firefighters battled the blaze through the night, while helicopters were deployed in the morning to contain it from the air. The Fire and Disaster Management Agency requested emergency support from firefighting departments in eight nearby prefectures, and they sent about 690 personnel combined. …Efforts to contain the blaze Wednesday were carried out at ground level as the strong winds precluded waterbombing by helicopters. When the latest fire broke out, strong wind and dry air warnings were in place in the area.

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