Region Archives: International

Opinion / EdiTOADial

Supply chain pressures surge to four-year high — weak demand continues to test forest product markets

By Kevin Mason, Managing Director
ERA Forest Products Research
June 2, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States, International

Kevin Mason

The Global Supply Chain Pressure Index, which provides a gauge of global supply chain conditions, spiked in April and currently sits at its highest level in almost four years. Several other measures, including the World Bank’s Supply Chain Stress Index are hovering around all-time highs as well. The conflict in the Middle East and resultant spike in energy prices has clearly driven some of the recent increase in supply chain pressure, and the logjam in the Strait of Hormuz, along with some ongoing challenges in the Red Sea, have forced many vessels to take longer routes, adding travel time, increasing fuel costs, and stretching capacity. 

However, the situation in Iran is not the sole driver of recent supply chain pressure: In the US we are seeing an acute shortage of truck drivers following a government crackdown on driver qualifications and after a wave of trucking-firm bankruptcies. As a result, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis’ long-distance trucking price index has recently jumped from a reading of 181 in January to 210 in April (also approaching all-time highs last seen during the pandemic). Similarly, overland freight pricing data from DAT Freight and Analytics shows that flatbed truck rates have surged since the onset of the Iran war—the national average spot rate for flatbed trucks was $2.72 per mile in February and has rocketed to $3.64 by May. DAT’s national load-to-truck ratio (the number of loads posted for every available truck posted on the DAT load board) sat at an eye-watering 72 in April, up from 35 in April 2025 and just 19 in April 2024. 

A deal with Iran may be in the works, but as we learned after the COVID pandemic, it can take months (if not years) for supply chains to normalize. Buckle up. 

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Business & Politics

Trump administration proposes 10% tariff on Canada, Mexico and the EU over forced labor

By Daniel Desrochers
Politico
June 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, International

The Trump administration wants to reimpose a 10% tariff on top trading partners including the EU and Canada, while hitting others with a higher rate, citing concerns about forced labor. The US Trade Representative’s Office made those proposals as part of a report with the results of its investigation into 60 trading partners over their failure to impose and enforce laws to prohibit goods made with forced labor. It’s one of two sprawling trade investigations the administration launched earlier this spring in an effort to restore President Donald Trump’s global tariffs that were struck down by the Supreme Court in February. …The USTR probe, conducted under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, found that six countries have failed to effectively enforce existing laws prohibiting goods made with forced labor: Canada, Ecuador, the European Union, Indonesia, Mexico and Pakistan. The report recommended a 10% duty. It recommended the same duty for another nine countries.

Related coverage by:

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US, Mexico set three rounds of trade deal talks without Canada

By David Lawder
Reuters in Yahoo! Finance
May 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, International

MEXICO CITY – The Trump administration’s trade agency said on Wednesday it will kick off the first of three negotiating rounds with Mexico this week to revamp the North American trade agreement, but made no mention of any talks with Canada. The U.S. Trade Representative’s office ‌said in a statement that Deputy U.S. Trade Representative Jeffrey Goettman will lead bilateral talks in Mexico City on Thursday and Friday focused on “economic security and ‌rules of origin for key industrial goods.” USTR Jamieson Greer stayed in Washington to attend a White House cabinet meeting on Thursday. USTR said the U.S. and Mexico will hold a second round of negotiations in Washington June ​16 to 17, focused on agriculture and “a level playing field,” with a third set of talks in Mexico City scheduled for the week of July 20. …But USTR’s statement made no mention of bilateral talks with Canada.

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US proposes 25% Brazil-wide tariffs, links deforestation to wood prices

Lesprom Network
June 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The US Trade Representative has determined that several Brazilian acts, policies, and practices are actionable under Section 301 and has proposed tariffs of 25% on all goods of Brazil, with specified exemptions and an annex of excluded products. …The determination covers multiple areas, including illegal deforestation, and states that timber and agricultural production linked to illegal deforestation can burden U.S. commerce by lowering costs for competing products and distorting prices. The notice describes timber-sector fraud risks, including the laundering of illegally harvested timber through supply chains, and states that illegally sourced timber products can devalue legally sourced timber prices by an estimated 7% to 16%. On wood-related findings, the notice references concerns that Brazilian products may be made with timber harvested illegally. It also describes limits in auditing and verification under Brazil’s Forest Code registration system. …The notice sets a public comment schedule that opens June 1, 2026.

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EU trade lawmakers back compromise on trade deal with Trump

By Camille Gijs and Carlo Martuscelli
Politico EU
June 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

BRUSSELS — The European Parliament’s trade committee approved by a wide majority a compromise struck with EU governments and the Commission on legislation to implement a trade deal with the United States. Lawmakers backed, by 31 votes to six, with three abstentions, changes to legislation under which the EU agreed to eliminate tariffs on US industrial goods and some agricultural products — a key pillar of the agreement struck last summer. European institutions are now racing to complete the legislative process before July 4, when Trump has threatened to impose higher tariffs. Tuesday’s vote follows months of internal EU wrangling, as lawmakers slowed their deliberations after Trump threatened to seize Greenland in January and the U.S. Supreme Court struck down much of his tariff agenda in February. Overall, the European Parliament pushed to secure more guardrails against the risk that Trump again threatens the EU.

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EU Parliament approves implementation of US tariff deal under pressure from Trump

By Peggy Corlin
Euronews
May 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

European negotiators agreed late on Tuesday to implement the controversial trade agreement concluded last summer with the US. However, the deal — signed in the Scottish city of Turnberry — remains fragile as long as US President Donald Trump continues to use tariffs as a tool of political pressure. Diplomats and MEPs reached an agreement late on Tuesday to implement the contentious EU-US agreement, which eliminates duties on most US industrial goods imported into Europe. …The so-called “Turnberry Agreement,” criticised by MEPs as unbalanced, raises US tariffs on EU goods to as much as 15%. …In the final compromise text, the Commission would be able to suspend the trade agreement — at the request of either Parliament or a member state — if the US fails to lift tariffs on European steel and aluminium products by the end of 2026.

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Smurfit Westrock announces €600 million investment ahead of Choose France summit

Smurfit Westrock
June 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Smurfit Westrock announced plans to invest approximately €600 million across its operations in France, reinforcing its long-term commitment to French manufacturing, innovation, and sustainability ahead of the Choose France initiative. Smurfit Westrock’s investment will take place over the next three to five years and will support the modernisation and decarbonisation of its operations; enhancing manufacturing efficiency, customer innovation, and sustainable packaging capabilities. Established in France for over 40 years, Smurfit Westrock employs approximately 6,000 people at 50 sites across the country.

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In the absence of a candidate, Fibre Excellence submits its own takeover offer

By Faustine Loison
Paper Industry Magazine
June 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

©FibreExcellence

In the absence of an identified buyer, Fibre Excellence is attempting to take over its activities itself. The pulp producer, which operates two sites in Tarascon (Bouches-du-Rhône) and Saint-Gaudens (Haute-Garonne), submitted an offer to the Commercial Court on June 1 to ensure the continuity of its industrial and forestry sites, which have been in receivership since last April. The project concerns all the group’s assets, including Chapelle Darblay in Seine-Maritime closed since 2019 by UPM and all its 700-strong workforce. Jean-François Guillot, Chairman and CEO of Fibre Excellence, defends an approach driven by the company’s teams: “Management and I are backing this takeover offer because we firmly believe in the future of our sites.” …Management is conditioning its project on three decisions expected from the French government before June 17. The first concerns …the feed-in tariff for electricity generated at Fibre Excellence sites. …The second concerns wood supply. …Finally, [integration] into the European CO2 quota system.

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EU clears Suzano’s acquisition of Kimberly-Clark’s tissue business

By Markku Björkman
PulpPaperNews.com
June 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

The European Commission has granted unconditional approval for Brazilian pulp and paper producer Suzano’s planned acquisition of Kimberly-Clark’s international tissue business, clearing the transaction without requiring any remedies or additional competition measures within the European Economic Area. The decision paves the way for Suzano to complete the takeover of Kimberly-Clark IFP NewCo B.V., a newly established entity that consolidates Kimberly-Clark’s International Family Care & Professional operations across Europe as well as several markets in Africa, Latin America, the Middle East, Asia and Oceania. The acquisition will significantly expand Suzano’s presence further down the value chain by combining its position as one of the world’s largest producers of bleached eucalyptus kraft pulp (BEKP) with Kimberly-Clark’s tissue operations, which include toilet paper, facial tissues, paper towels and professional hygiene products.

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UPM and Sappi Create Paper Giant in €1.42 Billion European Deal

By Markku Björkman
PulpPaperNews.com
May 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Finnish forest industry group UPM and South African paper producer Sappi have signed a definitive agreement to combine their European graphic paper operations into a new joint venture valued at approximately €1.42 billion. The transaction, announced in a stock exchange release by UPM, marks one of the most significant consolidation moves in Europe’s graphic paper sector in recent years. The new company will combine UPM Communication Papers with Sappi’s European graphic paper business. The partners will each hold a 50% stake and operate the venture as an independent company under an agreed shareholder framework. The deal comes as the graphic paper industry continues to struggle with long-term structural decline. Digitalisation, falling newspaper circulation and reduced demand for printed publications have forced producers across Europe to close mills, reduce capacity and pursue efficiency improvements. The companies estimate annual synergies of around €100 million through the combination.

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Stora Enso Plans to Close Softwood Pulp Line 3 at Skutskär Mill in Sweden

Stora Enso OYJ
May 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

SWEDEN — Stora Enso announced plans to permanently close softwood pulp production on fiberline 3 (L3) at its Skutskär pulp mill in Sweden. The company also said that it will restructure the mill to focus on fluff. Change negotiations with union representatives at the Skutskär mill are starting. According to Stora Enso, softwood pulp demand in Europe has declined since 2023 and price levels have been dropping while wood costs have increased. Currently, Skutskär’s fiberline L3 softwood pulp operates at negative margins. …The planned L3 closure and the reorganization would impact a maximum of 80 employees at Skutskär. Stora Enso said the plan is to stop production during Q3-Q4 2026, subject to the completion of the change negotiations and fulfillment of customer orders. Fluff pulp production will continue operating as usual, while potential further expansion is being investigated.

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Paracel has begun infrastructure works for the industrial development hub and Paraguay’s first pulp mill

Paracel S.A.
May 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

PARAGUAY — Paracel has begun construction on the industrial development hub and infrastructure for the pulp mill, with the groundbreaking ceremony held at the plant site in the Paso Horqueta district, marking a national milestone and solidifying the largest private investment in Paraguay’s history. …The project was financed by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) with an investment of USD 165 million. The project includes the construction of key assets such as a port and river terminal, electricity transmission lines, access roads, and logistical infrastructure for the company’s pulp mill. ‍…Flavio Deganutti, CEO, stated: “Paraguay’s first pulp mill… will transform the eucalyptus we have already planted into the raw material of the future.” …Grupo Sudati is making a significant investment in expanding the region’s forest base… over 30,000 additional hectares will be planted, further strengthening the region’s productive base. Sudati is Brazil’s largest manufacturer and exporter of plywood.

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Valmet will deliver a new ash crystallization plant for Mercer Stendal mill in Arneburg, Germany

By Valmet Automation Inc.
Automation.com
May 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

ARNEBURG, Germany — Valmet will deliver a new ash crystallization plant for Mercer Stendal mill in Arneburg, Germany. This investment is part of Mercer’s long-term vision to further reduce the mill’s emissions and improve its performance. Ash crystallization plant contributes to this target by helping to close the mill’s chemical circulation, reducing the need for make-up chemicals, and by helping to extend the recovery boiler maintenance intervals to 24 months and beyond. …Martin Zenker, mill manager, said “The new ash crystallization plant will help us to further improve both operational and environmental performance.” …Mercer Stendal mill in Arneburg, Germany was started up in 2004 and today has a capacity of 740,000 tonnes per year of bleached softwood kraft pulp. The biomass power plant at the site is one of the largest of its kind in Germany with an output of 148 megawatts.

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Finance & Economics

U.S. softwood lumber imports fall by nearly 2 million m3 in the first quarter

The Lesprom Network
May 28, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

Global softwood lumber imports in the 10 largest import markets by volume contract from a year earlier in January to March 2026, led by a 1.94 million m3 decline in the US, a 1.19 million m3 decline in Germany, and a 775 thousand m3 decline in China. Total imports across the 10 largest softwood lumber import markets by volume fall by 3.9 million m3 to 12.6 million m3 over the quarter. In the US, the decline comes as high import duties on Canadian softwood lumber restrain shipments and homebuilding stays weak as home sales remain soft and home prices stay elevated. Canada records the largest supplier volume decline in the quarter at 1.52 million m3. …Across suppliers in the period, volumes fall most for Canada at 1,516 thousand m3, Russia at 743 thousand m3, and Austria at 680 thousand m3, while Belarus records the largest increase at 15.7 thousand m3.

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Europe and Russia: A region of contrasts shaping global softwood markets

By Håkan Ekström and Glen O’Kelly
The American Journal of Transportation
June 3, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Europe and Russia account for roughly 43% of global industrial roundwood supply. However, the outlook differs significantly between Russia, the Nordics, the Baltics, and Central Europe, reflecting differences in forest resources, harvest intensity, industry structure, and exposure to forest damage. …Sweden and Finland dominate regional supply, supported by advanced forest management, high mechanization, and efficient supply chains. …The Baltic countries have experienced rapid harvest growth over the past decade, supported by strong log demand and elevated salvage logging. However, utilization levels have reached unsustainable levels, with harvests exceeding net forest growth in some areas. …Central Europe is still adjusting after the major bark beetle outbreak that drove exceptionally high salvage harvesting between 2018 and 2022. …Russia continues to hold the largest long-term supply potential but harvest levels remain far below biological growth, particularly in Siberia and the Russian Far East.

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Russian lumber output rises as deteriorating sales drive inventories higher

The Lesprom Network
June 1, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Russian lumber production is rising despite deteriorating sales and falling exports, driving inventories higher as weak household purchasing power limits the domestic market’s ability to absorb excess supply, according to the monthly Russian Lumber Industry Insights report. Companies are trying to maintain production volumes, the report said, but warehouse stocks are rising because domestic demand is weakening. The ministry in May sharply reduced its growth outlook, revising GDP growth for the current year to 0.4% and to 1.4% in 2027, and reported that the economy contracted by 0.3% in the first quarter. …At the same time, the crisis in China’s construction sector has reduced import demand and intensified price competition. …Logistics costs for Russian suppliers continue to rise, the report said, further reducing the profitability of shipments. Taken together, weakening domestic demand, lost market share in China and higher transport costs are creating pressure on exporters and contributing to a buildup of stocks.

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German timber industry outlook darkens despite housing rebound

Interior Daily
May 20, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Sentiment within Germany’s timber industry remained under pressure in April, with businesses increasingly pessimistic about the months ahead despite a slight improvement in current trading conditions. …Compared with Germany’s wider manufacturing sector, the timber industry continues to underperform, with the ifo Institute’s broader manufacturing index remaining significantly stronger. The picture across the wood sector remains uneven. Companies involved in prefabricated timber construction were the only group to report positive current business conditions, while sawmills, furniture manufacturers and timber packaging businesses continued to report weak trading environments. HDH linked the relatively stronger outlook in timber construction to improving housing activity. …However, the furniture sector continues to struggle with weak consumer confidence and declining construction completions. …Despite isolated signs of recovery in construction-related segments, HDH said overall business confidence remains at a persistently low level.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canada Wood Japan Secures Recognition of New Hem-fir(N) Design Values

By Canada Wood Group
LinkedIn
May 25, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

Canada Wood Japan has helped secure an important market-access outcome for Canadian Hem-Fir (N) dimension lumber in Japan. In collaboration with the National Lumber Grades Authority and the Canadian Lumber Standards Accreditation Board, Canada Wood Japan worked with Japan’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism to obtain recognition of the revised standard design values for Hem-Fir (N) dimension lumber graded under NLGA standards. For builders, designers and structural engineers in Japan, design values are essential. They provide the basis for structural calculations and help determine where and how lumber can be used in code-compliant buildings. When grading rules or design values are revised in Canada, those changes must also be properly understood and accepted by Japanese regulatory authorities to ensure continued market access. …Canada Wood Japan demonstrated that the revised Hem-Fir (N) design values would continue to meet Japan’s structural safety requirements and would not compromise the performance of conventional wooden buildings. 

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A novel wood bark-based packaging coating material was pilot-produced in a Finnish research project

University of Oulu, Finland
June 1, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

©wiki

In the COCOBIN project, coordinated by the University of Oulu, coating materials are being developed from suberin, a natural compound found for example in birch bark. In plants, suberin acts as a protective layer and prevents the loss of water. Up to 1500 meters of a bio-based coating material prototype have been produced at semi-pilot scale. The material can be applied especially in fiber-based packaging materials such as paper or paperboard as a moisture barrier, as well as in other products requiring durable and functional surfaces. One key application area is food packaging, where the role of the coating is to prevent moisture from passing through the packaging material and to protect the product. …Suberin is extracted from birch outer bark, which has traditionally been used for energy production. …COCOBIN is a two-year research project co-funded by Business Finland and coordinated by the University of Oulu.

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Canada Wood Market Insights – June 2026

Canada Wood Group
June 2, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

In this edition of Market Insights, you’ll find:

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Finnish Sawmill Industry Association urges government to boost public wood building

The Lesprom Network
May 25, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The Finnish Sawmill Industry Association is urging the government to accelerate wood construction and broaden the use of domestic wood in building, saying Finland is not using wood construction enough to raise value added for domestic wood, support investment and strengthen regional vitality. It calls for the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment to lead a national wood-construction program and appoint a high-level cross-government steering group, the Finnish Sawmill Industry Association reported. The association links wood construction to Finland’s competitiveness and industrial policy and says the market’s development should be treated as part of efforts to cut emissions from the built environment. It also calls for increasing the use of domestic wood more broadly in construction, beyond wood construction in a narrow sense. …It calls for regulation and permitting processes to be developed in a direction it says enables investments and links wood construction to Finland’s clean-transition investment goals. 

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The journey of a 17th-century shipwreck continues as a unique knitted dress

By Minna Hölttä
Aalto University
May 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

©Esa Kapila/Aalto University

Researchers at Aalto University transformed surplus wood from the Hahtiperä shipwreck into textile fibre, spun it into yarn, and knitted it into a dress using new AI-assisted technology. The dress will be exhibited at the Tomorrow’s Wardrobe exhibition opening 22 May at Oulu Art Museum, and its twin piece will be shown at Aalto University’s Designs for a Cooler Planet exhibition opening 1 September. In 2019, a rare discovery was made during the renovation of a hotel in Oulu: remains of a 17th-century cargo ship were uncovered beneath a parking lot. The vessel was named the Hahtiperä wreck after Oulu’s first harbour. After years of conservation work, some leftover pieces of wood remained and were at risk of ending up in the trash. …Inge Schlapp-Hackl, a researcher at Aalto, along with her colleagues supervised by Professor Michael Hummel, converted over 300-year-old wood from Oulu into textile fiber.

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Forestry

Canadian Forest Fires Are Losing Their Climate Cooling Power

Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

The natural cooling effect of snow in northern forests following forest fires is rapidly diminishing. As a result, a fragile climate equilibrium threatens to disappear, potentially leading to additional warming in one of the most climate-sensitive regions on Earth. This is the conclusion of new research by Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. …After a forest fire, the landscape in northern regions often remains open and covered with snow for a long time. This snow reflects a great deal of sunlight and makes the Earth’s surface brighter—an effect known as snow albedo. For years, this compensated for part of the warming caused by CO2 emissions from forest fires. [The study found] that the cooling effect of snow has decreased by nearly 30 percent since the 1960s. Whereas in the past almost half of Canadian forest fires eventually reached natural climate equilibrium …this now applies to only about one in four or five fires.

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Globally, fires in 2025 burned the second-lowest area on record since 2002

By Matthew Jones
Nature Reviews
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

Globally, fires in 2025 burned the second-lowest area on record since 2002 and emitted the third-lowest CO2 total. Yet, a third successive year of extreme wildfire emissions prevailed in Canada, and catastrophic fires in Los Angeles, South Korea and Europe killed over 90 people and forced over 300,000 evacuations. At the global scale, land area burned by wildfire has declined in since 2002, mainly owing to reduced savannah burning in Africa. However, wildfires are expanding in extratropical forests, and show increasing intensity combined with extreme socioeconomic and environmental impacts1–3. In these areas, wildfire disasters are exacerbated by human land use and the wildland–urban interface4. Many regions are experiencing episodes of extreme wildfires with high rates of spread and intensity associated with substantial loss of life, infrastructure, or carbon stores, even in years with below-average burned area. These hallmarks define an era of declining global burned area but also of rising prominence of extreme and deadly wildfires.

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New Zealand’s new forestry rules promise consistency. Will they also increase environmental risk?

By Steve Urlich, Lincoln University, New Zealand
The Conversation
June 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

One of the most important changes to New Zealand’s environmental regulations in recent years came into force this week. Yet outside policy circles, the forestry sector and a handful of councils, few people are likely to have noticed. The government’s freshly-amended National Environmental Standards for Commercial Forestry set bottom-line rules for activities ranging from afforestation and harvesting to slash management and erosion control. There is a clear need for such safeguards. Commercial forestry is one of New Zealand’s most valuable industries, generating billions of dollars in export earnings and supporting thousands of jobs. So, it needs a regulatory framework that provides certainty for long-term investment and operational decisions. But it can also have significant impacts on waterways, infrastructure, ecosystems and downstream communities if activities are not carefully managed, with recent years having provided some stark examples.

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World’s forests in a race against time, warns UN global forest report

By Sandra Cordon
Forests News – Center for International Forestry Research
June 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The world is losing its forests faster than it can save them, with severe consequences for the climate, biodiversity and over one billion people who depend on forests for their livelihoods, according to the United Nations’ latest Global Forest Goals Report 2026. Although many countries have expanded forest restoration efforts, strengthened governance frameworks, and improved monitoring systems, progress remains critically insufficient to halt deforestation, lift forest-dependent communities out of poverty, and meet the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.  “We know what to do. We need to act on the information and knowledge we have. But do we have the will to act?” said Éliane Ubalijoro, chief executive officer of Landscape Alliance, the new operating name of the Center for International Forestry Research and World Agroforestry (CIFOR & ICRAF). That question runs through the report, which finds that existing tools, policies and institutions have yet to deliver change at the scale required.  

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New UK–EU sanitary and phytosanitary agreement: what it means for nurseries and forestry kit

Forestry Journal UK
June 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The UK Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) has published detailed guidance setting out how a planned UK‑EU sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) deal will reshape forestry-related trade – and is urging businesses to start preparing now. In a wide‑ranging update, the department set out how the agreement would operate in practice, including the removal of most routine border checks and certification requirements for goods moving between Great Britain and the EU. But the guidance also makes clear the scale of regulatory change required, with the UK set to align dynamically with EU rules across a wide set of areas, including pesticides and plant imports. Among the most significant operational shifts set out for horticultural businesses (which includes forestry-related activities). …Further detail on transition periods and exceptions is expected later in 2026, with full implementation targeted for mid‑2027. Read the full government guidance here.

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Ex-Top Scientists Reject the Science Behind Australia’s Native Forest Ban

By Jason Ross
Wood Central Australia
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — The bans that have closed native forestry in Victoria and Western Australia, along with the campaign to extend them across NSW and Tasmania, rest on misinformation and a flawed promotion of science that cannot be squared with the published evidence. That is according to lead author John Raison, a former Chief Research Scientist at the CSIRO (Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization) with nearly five decades studying native forest ecology, writing in the journal Australian Forestry alongside fellow former CSIRO scientists Sadanandan Nambiar and Glen Kile and University of Melbourne hydrologist Leon Bren. As it stands, just 0.05% of Australia’s 132 million hectares of native forest is harvested in any year, the authors point out, a figure equal to about 1.5% of the net harvestable area and one that sits awkwardly beside anti-forestry campaigners’ claims of wholesale destruction. The harvested coupes are scattered and non-contiguous, and the law requires each to be regenerated and monitored.

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How carbon finance could give a boost to Japan’s ailing forestry industry

By Annelise Giseburt
The Japan Times
May 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Japan’s forestry sector is at a crossroads. Population decline and cheap imported timber are driving down prices. Forest ownership is fragmented and small-scale, further limiting profitability. The workforce is aging and shrinking. As a result, many forests — planted decades ago, when timber profits seemed surer — are now under-managed, abandoned, or not replanted after being clear-cut. “Especially over the past few years, we have seen a lot of forest owners decide to give up their land,” says Akio Abe, associate director of the Ishinomaki District Forestry Association in Miyagi Prefecture. …Carbon credits, Abe hopes, can provide the financial backing needed to turn the Ishinomaki District woods into a boon, not a burden, for both local landowners and the environment. Together with corporate partners, the foresters are applying for credits certified by an international body, a rarity among forest carbon projects in Japan.

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Coalition makes last urgent call for changes to EU Deforestation Regulation

By Stephen Powney
The Timber Trades Journal
May 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

European timber organisations have made a last, united call for changes to be made to the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) before it comes into force this December. Eighteen organisations from various sectors, including timber, panels and packaging groups, called for an EUDR Information System “without flaws and technical constraints, aligned with business practice”. The coalition underlines that the Information System must be operationally workable and aligned with real business practices. The EUDR Information System, which represents the backbone of the traceability feature of the EU regulation, is aimed to prevent products linked to deforestation from entering the EU market. Particular coalition concerns relate to DDS aggregation, technical limitations of the TRACES-based system, the usability of simplified declarations for SMEs and micro-enterprises and the lack of clear procedures in the event of system disruptions or outages.

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Biomass’ first year of mapping Earth’s vegetation

Spatial Source
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

After its first year in orbit, ESA’s Biomass satellite is offering new views of Earth’s vegetation cover. Launched in April 2025, the satellite — one of the European Space Agency’s Earth Explorer missions — has been busily mapping forests and other vegetation, with the primary aim of determining the extent of stored carbon and how it changes globally with time. The spacecraft is equipped with a fully polarimetric P-band synthetic aperture radar and 12m-wide mesh antenna, used for interferometric imaging. The radar’s 70cm wavelength is optimised for penetrating forest canopies and measuring ‘biomass,’ the woody trunks, branches and stems where trees store most of their carbon. “With Biomass, we are poised to gain vital new data on how much carbon is stored in the world’s forests, helping to fill key gaps in our knowledge of the carbon cycle and, ultimately, Earth’s climate system,” said ESA’s Director of Earth Observation Programmes, Simonetta Cheli.

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In Ukraine, damages from forest fires since the start of the full-scale war have exceeded UAH 1 trillion (about CAD $33–35 billion)

UNN.ua/en
May 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

KYIV — Since the beginning of the war, fire has destroyed 165,000 hectares of forest, and damages have exceeded 1 trillion hryvnias (about CAD $33–35 billion). Enemy shelling remains the main cause of the fires. Damages from forest fires in Ukraine since the beginning of the full-scale war have exceeded UAH 1 trillion. In the last week alone, the amount of environmental losses increased by tens of billions of hryvnias, a significant portion of which is attributed to the destruction of forest stands. This was reported by “Forests of Ukraine,” according to UNN. …Since the beginning of the Great War, approximately 165,000 hectares of forests have already been destroyed by fire the report states. Most fires occur due to Russian shelling and combat operations in frontline and border regions. The highest number of fires last week was recorded in the Kharkiv and Chernihiv regions.

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EU delays chemical crackdown while forestry still relies on pesticides

By Markku Björkman
PulpaperNews.com
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The European Union’s ambition to sharply reduce the use of hazardous chemicals is losing momentum. Several planned restrictions have been delayed or frozen as industrial competitiveness gains increasing political weight in Brussels. The shift is also affecting forestry and forest management, where chemical pesticides are still widely used to protect seedlings, control competing vegetation and reduce damage from insects and fungal diseases. Environmental organisations now warn that the European Commission’s efforts to restrict several groups of hazardous substances have slowed significantly in recent years. …Across Europe’s forestry sector, chemical plant protection products remain an important part of forest management practices. …Many of these substances are regulated under the EU’s extensive REACH chemicals legislation and pesticide rules governing plant protection products. At the same time, large parts of the EU’s ambitious chemical strategy — launched in 2022. …The slowdown comes amid growing pressure from Europe’s chemical industry, which is struggling with high energy prices and weak demand.

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International Day for Biological Diversity

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
PR Newswire
May 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

GATINEAU, QC – The Honourable Julie Dabrusin, Minister of the Environment, Climate Change and Nature, issued the following statement today: The world celebrates the International Day for Biological Diversity. This year’s theme is Acting Locally for Global Impact. In Canada this begins with recognizing that biological diversity is not only part of our identity, but also one of our greatest responsibilities. From forests and fresh water to coastlines and tundra, Canada holds a significant share of the planet’s remaining intact ecosystems. With 20% of the world’s fresh water, nearly a quarter of the boreal forest, and the longest coastline on Earth, what Canada does at home matters far beyond our borders. Protecting nature locally is not just an environmental choice; it is a global contribution. That is why on March 31, 2026, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature with an investment of $3.8 billion. 

United Nations: International Day for Biological Diversity

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Spain to launch biggest forest fire campaign after record losses last year, Sánchez says

By Lucia Blasco & Gavin Blackburn
Euronews
May 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Spain is one of the southern European countries on the front line of climate change as higher average temperatures stoke heatwaves, droughts and forest fires. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez presented what he called Spain’s biggest-ever campaign against forest fires on Thursday after deadly blazes devoured a record amount of land last year. Spain is one of the southern European countries on the front line of climate change as higher average temperatures stoke heatwaves, droughts and forest fires. The country sweltered through its hottest summer on record in 2025, when almost 4,000 square kilometres of land went up in smoke, the highest figure registered by the European Forest Fire Information System. “We will put in place all the resources” available to the government “to mitigate this emergency situation as much as possible and to prevent it happening again on this scale,” Sánchez said at the Torrejón airbase outside Madrid.

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Inside Portugal’s huge operation to beat wildfires with Black Hawks, bulldozers and firefighters

By João Azevedo & Ruth Wright
The Associated Free Press in Euronews
May 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

PORTUGAL — Devastating wildfires gripped Portugal in 2025, when more than a quarter of a million hectares of land burned. With fears that this year could be even worse, Portugal has mounted an intensive nationwide operation to clear fallen trees and dry leaves – the tinder that wildfires thrive on. Citizens are being asked to clear the land around their homes – known to be one of the most effective ways of saving lives – as well as flagging up blocked roads to authorities as these could prevent emergency services from getting to them. …As part of this anticipatory approach, specialist reconnaissance teams will be deployed in each of the country’s sub-regions, tasked with providing the operations commander with essential information on the risk and type of fire. …999 fires were recorded on Portuguese soil in 2025, burning 284,012 hectares. The burned area was twice that of 2024, making 2025 the second-worst year of the last decade.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Experts sound alarm as North America’s bees start swarm season unusually early

By Maya Yang
The Guardian UK
May 17, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

After a series of record-breaking US heatwaves, the 2026 bee swarm season in North America has started 17 days earlier than last year, pushing beekeepers to adapt to a rapidly shifting season while raising new questions about how honeybees are responding to the climate crisis. According to a new report published by Swarmed, a tracking network of more than 10,000 beekeepers, focused on safe and ethical honeybee relocation, this year’s unusually early swarm season follows several years of record colony declines worldwide. …The early start to this year’s swarm season follows the largest honeybee die-off in recorded US history. …Mateo Kaiser, Swarmed’s managing director, said: “We saw a very warm winter in the west this year and … this is having an impact on bees. …Kaiser pointed to the growing threat posed by the varroa mite, alongside the role the climate crisis may be playing in shifting bees’ reproductive cycles.

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Forest Stewardship Council and Verra Announce Partnership to Label Carbon Credits from Responsible Forests

Forest Stewardship Council
May 20, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and Verra are pleased to announce a collaboration that will bring greater transparency and credibility to the voluntary carbon market. Under this new arrangement, Verified Carbon Units (VCUs) issued through Verra’s Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) Program can now carry an FSC label when they are generated from forests that hold valid FSC Forest Management (FM) certification. This means that buyers and stakeholders can readily identify carbon credits that come from responsibly managed, FSC-certified forestlands. This means projects that are dual registered under both the VCS Program and FSC FM certification will be eligible to apply the FSC label to their VCUs in the Verra Registry. To qualify, projects must demonstrate full spatial and temporal overlap between the VCS project area and the FSC-certified forest, and must hold a valid FSC FM certificate for the entire verification period.

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Biomass Industry Set for Strong Growth Driven by Sustainable Fuel Demand by 2033

Renewable Energy Magazine
May 21, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

According to a new report from Allied Market Research, the global biomass market size was valued at $59.0 billion in 2023 and is projected to reach $121.0 billion by 2033, growing at a CAGR of 7.5% from 2024 to 2033. The rapid shift toward renewable energy sources, growing environmental concerns, and supportive government policies are significantly contributing to the expansion of the biomass market across the globe. The increasing focus on reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving energy security is encouraging governments and industries to invest heavily in biomass energy technologies. Unlike fossil fuels, biomass is considered carbon-neutral because the carbon dioxide released during energy generation is offset by the carbon absorbed during the growth of biomass feedstocks. This advantage is making the biomass market increasingly attractive for sustainable energy development. The growing demand for renewable energy is one of the major factors fueling biomass market growth. … Biomass energy provides a reliable and stable source of renewable power…

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Health & Safety

The Paper and Packaging Safety Association Announces 2026 Safety Award Winners and Finalists

Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry (TAPPI)
May 19, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, International

The Paper and Packaging Safety Association (PPSA) announced the recipients of its 2026 individual and mill safety awards, along with the finalists for the Safety Committee/Team and Innovator categories. The awards recognize outstanding leadership, innovation, and commitment to safety excellence across the paper and packaging industry. The awards will be presented during the Awards Luncheon on June 9, 2026, at noon as part of PPSA’s 82nd Annual Safety and Health Conference. 2026 PPSA Award Winners: Executive Eagle Award, Rick Parris – Smurfit Westrock; Safety Leader of the Year, Joel Mann – International Paper; Award of Safety Excellence, Smurfit Westrock – Hodge Mill, Louisiana. …The Innovator Award recognizes companies and facilities that are developing creative and impactful approaches to workplace safety. Finalists include: Smurfit Westrock – Cincinnati, Shredder Fire Mitigation, Domtar – Johnsonburg Mill, Effluent Treatment Plant: Sludge Press H2S Toxicity, International Paper – Prattville, Roll Quality Management (RQM) System, Smurfit Westrock – Huntsville, and Hogger Clamshell Improvement.

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