Region Archives: International

Business & Politics

Wood Pulp Imported to U.S. Added to Duty-Free List Under New Executive Order

PaperAge
September 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The American Forest and Paper Association (AF&PA) announced that on September 5, President Trump signed an Executive Order (EO) making changes to EO 14257 from April. The new EO outlines what products and materials can enter the U.S. duty-free (zero percent tariffs). Three wood pulp tariff codes were added to the list. Pursuant to this new EO, imported wood pulp will come into the U.S. duty-free — an important development in the long-term trade and tariff policy discussion. This new list is meant to capture products and materials that are not produced in the U.S. — or not produced at scale. AF&PA has continuously made this argument for specific kinds of wood pulp, such as bleached eucalyptus kraft or BEK. … Importantly, this new EO also delegates authority to add items to the duty-free list to USTR and Commerce.

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Trump lobbies EU for 100% tariffs on China and India

By Peter Hoskins
BBC News
September 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

Donald Trump has called on the European Union to hit China and India with tariffs of up to 100% to force Russian president Vladimir Putin to end the war in Ukraine. The US president made the demand during a meeting between US and EU officials discussing options to increase economic pressure on Russia. …Last month, the US imposed a 50% tariff on goods from India, which included a 25% penalty for its transactions with Russia. Although the EU has said it would end its dependency on Russian energy, around 19% of its natural gas imports still come from there. If the EU does impose the tariffs on China and India it would mark a change to its approach of attempting to isolate Russia with sanctions rather than levies.

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UPM extends Kaukas pulp mill shutdown to October 11 and plans Pietarsaari closure in November

UPM Fibres
September 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

HELSINKI, Finland – The maintenance shutdown of the UPM Kaukas pulp mill, which began in August, will be extended for two weeks until October 11, 2025. In addition, the UPM Pietarsaari pulp mill will be temporarily shut down for approximately two weeks in November. “We are focused on ensuring the profitability of our business. By curtailing our production, we adapt to the pulp market situation and high wood cost level”, says Petri Hakanen, Senior Vice President, UPM Fibres Finland Operations.

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Tokoroa Plywood Plant Closure Looms, Union Says Decision ‘Fait Accompli’

Scoop New Zealand
September 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

New Zealand — Up to 119 jobs could go at Carter Holt Harvey’s Tokoroa factory, with locals calling the move devastating for the town. A union representing workers at Carter Holt Harvey’s Tokoroa plywood manufacturing plant says its closure will be devastating for the town. The company has begun consultation with staff on closing the plant and importing ply from overseas, with the loss of up to 119 full-time jobs. The proposed closure follows OJI Fibre Solutions cutting 130 jobs and closing the country’s last paper-making machine at nearby Kinleith in June this year. Red Middlemiss has been a union spokesperson at the ply plant for 23 years. He said Carter Holt Harvey can now make and import plywood from overseas for around 60 percent of what it costs to manufacture it locally.

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Think Timber calls for stricter sourcing controls after Russian timber enters UK housing supply chain

By Hollie Tye
Housing Today UK
September 14, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Timber illegally sourced from Russia has been found in the UK housing supply chain, according to an investigation by Australian forensic supply chain specialist Source Certain. Imports of Russian timber were prohibited in 2022 following the invasion of Ukraine. However, the investigation identified a smuggling operation that concealed the timber’s origin by relabelling it as material from the Baltic States, including Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. The findings raise concerns for the housing and construction sectors, where suppliers investing in certified and responsibly sourced timber face higher operational costs. Industry voices warn that without effective monitoring, compliant businesses are being undercut and the credibility of the wider supply chain is being damaged. In response, UK-based Think Timber has introduced a packaging system designed to provide traceability from forest to building site. Each pack incorporates a unique QR code that, when scanned, verifies the chain of custody and origin of the material.

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Segezha Group to cut 350 jobs at Novoeniseysk sawmill in Russia

Lesprom Network
September 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

RUSSIA — Segezha Group is reducing the workforce at the Novoeniseysky Wood-Chemical Complex in Lesosibirsk, Krasnoyarsk Krai, affecting 350 out of 1,000 employees. …Novoeniseysky is one of three city-forming enterprises in Lesosibirsk and ranks second in the region’s forest industry after Lesosibirsk LDK No. 1, also owned by Segezha Group. Both plants historically focused on exports, and the loss of European markets has dealt a significant blow to operations. …Attempts to redirect exports to Asia have faced challenges, including price pressure from Chinese buyers and severe congestion on the Russian Railways’ Eastern route. Rising logistics costs and transport delays continue to erode profitability, as reported by Russian site Dela. …Segezha Group’s revenue fell by 8% year-on-year. …The group reported an adjusted net loss of 15.9 billion rubles ($182 million), up 68% from the same period last year. Lumber sales declined by 6% to 1.0 million m3, with China accounting for 78% of the total volume. 

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Vietnam Imposes Provisional Anti-Dumping Duties on Fiberboard Products from Thailand and China

ASL Law Firm Vietnam
September 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

On September 5, 2025, the Ministry of Industry and Trade issued Decision No. 2491/QD-BCT on the application of provisional anti-dumping duties on certain fiberboard products originating from Thailand and China. Under this decision, the provisional duty rates applied to the investigated goods range from 2.59% to 39.88%. During the course of the investigation, pursuant to the Law on Foreign Trade Management, the Ministry of Industry and Trade, in coordination with relevant authorities, conducted a comprehensive review and assessment of the dumping practices of imported goods from Thailand and China, as well as their impact on the domestic industry. The preliminary findings indicate that the dumped imports from the two countries have posed a significant threat of material injury to the domestic fiberboard industry.

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City boss calls for Drax chief to be sacked and brands ‘renewable’ power station as ‘toxic as working for tobacco’

By Emily Hawkins
This is Money UK
September 9, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Louis Bacon

A City billionaire has urged Britain’s biggest ‘renewable’ power station to sack its boss, claiming the business is now as ‘toxic as working for tobacco’. Louis Bacon, the American founder of hedge fund Moore Capital, lambasted energy company Drax’s ‘egregious’ failings in a scathing letter published on Tuesday, calling it an ‘environmental and ethical calamity’. He called for chief executive Will Gardiner to be sacked just days after the City watchdog said it would investigate the company regarding the sourcing of wood pellets used in its biomass plant in North Yorkshire. It is another embarrassment for Energy Secretary Ed Miliband after he agreed to extend subsidies for the company, which has long drawn fire from environmental groups. Biomass power stations – which create electricity by burning resources such as wood – have long drawn criticism from campaigners, who say their claims of producing ‘renewable’ energy from imported pellets are exaggerated.

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German equipment makers demand 2-year delay to EU deforestation law, call it ‘bureaucratic madness’

By Mechanical Engineering Industry
EURACTIV
September 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Bertram Kawlath

German equipment manufacturers are calling for an urgent revision and a two-year postponement of the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), warning that the law’s complexity could severely disrupt supply chains and harm European industry. Describing the regulation as “bureaucratic madness,” the German Mechanical Engineering Industry Association, or VDMA, argues that its implementation would overload companies with impractical documentation requirements. The EUDR is scheduled to apply to large companies from December 30, 2025, and to SMEs from June 30, 2026. The VDMA warns that ensuring such full traceability is technically and logistically impossible for many firms, especially small and mid-sized ones operating in global supply chains. …The association states that the EUDR, in its current form, risks triggering delivery disruptions and weakening the international competitiveness of European firms. It also criticizes the regulation for requiring not only importers but also all downstream companies in the supply chain to meet full due diligence and declaration requirements.

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US trade policy uncertainty prompts Vietnam to recalibrate export strategy

The Voice of Vietnam
September 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Wood production, processing, and export is one of Vietnam’s key industries, but it is currently facing a direct impact from trade competition and tariff barriers. …In early August 2025, the US imposed reciprocal duties of 20% on Vietnamese imports, and the figure could rise to 40% if illegal transshipment is detected. …“These moves are creating prolonged uncertainty for the wood processing industry,” Phuong says. “Although Vietnam’s wood exports grew by 8% in the first seven months of 2025, the risks remain high. The ability to control domestic raw material supply will be a decisive factor in maintaining Vietnam’s status as a sustainable source in the global market.” …Nguyen Chanh Phuong emphasises that despite the shifting policies, the US is the top market and is more stable than others. To mitigate risks, he stresses the need to expand into new export markets, diversify raw material sources, and produce more value-added products.

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Kingspan Timber Solutions announces closure

By Stephen Powney
The Timber Trades Journal
September 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

©Kingspan

Timber sector representatives have been reacting to the news that one of the pioneers in UK timber construction- Kingspan Timber Solutions – is to close by the end of the year. The company, whose roots extend to over 60 years, manufactures timber frame and Structurally Insulated Panel (SIPs) build systems, the latter being the TEK branded system. Kingspan Timber Solutions, based in Great Gransden in Cambridgeshire, has been described as a gold standard in timber construction, building innovative homes, Passivhaus developments and new schools. …The company released a short statement this week. “It is with a heavy heart that we have made the difficult decision announce the closure of Kingspan Timber Solutions Ltd, and the cessation of all business operations. We are currently working hard to fulfil all outstanding orders, with our final day of operations being 19th December 2025. …In the past five years, 2021 was the only year that the company posted a profit.

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Finance & Economics

EU Wood Pellets Consumption Expected To Expand In 2025

By Erin Krueger
Biomass Magazine
September 11, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

Wood pellet consumption in the European Union is expected to begin to rebound this year, reaching 23.45 million metric tons with increases for both residential and industrial use, according to a report filed with the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service’s Global Agricultural Information Network. According to report, EU consumption of wood pellets declined in 2023 and 2024 due to a mild winter, high stocks, lower power prices and power plant outages. Increased consumption in 2025 is also expected to push imports higher. The EU is expected to produce 20.5 million metric tons of wood pellets in 2025, up from 19.9 million in 2024 and 19.97 million in 2023. Imports are expected to reach 4.68 million metric tons this year, up from 4.48 million metric tons last year and 4.9 million metric tons in 2023. Exports are expected to reach 1.7 million metric tons in 2025, up from 1.66 million metric tons in 2024 and 1.17 million metric tons in 2023. 

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China’s Engineered Wood Shift and Its Impact on Sawlog Demand

By Audrey Dixon
ResourceWise Forest Products Blog
September 15, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

A 56% decline in China’s softwood sawlog imports between 2021 and 2024 was driven in large part by its weakened economy, compounded by supply-side constraints including Russia’s 2022 log export ban and Central Europe’s spruce bark beetle infestation. With a high dependence on New Zealand logs making it vulnerable to future shortages, China is also shifting towards sustainable, engineered wood construction practices while exploring the construction potential of its domestic timber resource. …China’s domestic timber resource is not close to meeting the country’s substantial demand for wood. There are also challenges in dispelling some negative perceptions about wood construction among the Chinese public and some builders. …However, with continued investment in timber plantations and research under way on the use of engineered wood in large buildings as well as finding practical, low-cost solutions for rural housing, domestic timber likely has the potential to play a bigger role in the Chinese construction sector in future.

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US Job Growth Slowed in August, unemployment rate rose to 4.3%

By Jing Fu
NAHB Eye on Housing
September 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Job growth slowed sharply in August, and the unemployment rate rose to its highest level in nearly four years. The latest jobs report, along with downward revisions to previous months’ data, indicates a continued cooling in the US labor market. This softening trend is likely to increase pressure on the Federal Reserve to consider an interest rate cut at its upcoming September meeting. In August, wage growth slowed. Year-over-year, wages grew at a 3.7% rate, down 0.2 percentage points from the previous month. Despite the deceleration, wage growth has been outpacing inflation for nearly two years, which typically occurs as productivity increases. …So far in 2025, monthly job growth has averaged 75,000, a significant slowdown compared to the 168,000 monthly average gain for 2024. The unemployment rate rose to 4.3% in August, its highest level in nearly four years. 

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Russian lumber consumption rises 16% in July despite 14% construction drop

Lesprom Network
September 3, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Despite the ongoing decline in construction activity in Russia, domestic demand for lumber increased in July. The volume of apparent lumber consumption in the country rose by 16% in July compared to the same period last year, while construction decreased by 14%. Prices for key lumber categories in July remained at the previous month’s level. …On export markets, Russian exporters faced mixed dynamics. In July, the volume of lumber exports from Russia increased by 18% compared to June, but shipments were 13% lower than a year earlier. China remains a key destination for Russian suppliers, but Russian exporters are facing growing competition from Belarusian companies offering lower prices. The situation for Russian exporters is further complicated by a general decrease in China’s lumber purchases due to the ongoing crisis in its construction sector. Lumber exports from Russia to Japan remain weak: shipment volumes dropped by 19% year-over-year.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Why Builders Are Swapping Lumber for Rice Husk Boards

By Sara Kitnick
The Los Angeles Times
September 2, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, International

The construction industry accounts for nearly 40% of global carbon emissions, which has builders rethinking the materials they use. One unlikely source keeps coming up in those conversations: rice husks. What used to be burned or buried is now pressed into a wood alternative that looks the part and often outlasts traditional lumber. Husks are milled into composite boards that resist water, release very low VOCs, and can be recycled. The manufacturing is lighter on energy, turns a waste stream into something useful, and gives homeowners a material that behaves like wood without the constant upkeep. …Globally, rice husk composites are gaining ground in regions where rice is grown, and research is exploring structural uses such as engineered members. Certification programs, including LEED, are recognizing the category, and analysts expect it to claim a meaningful share of certain wood product markets over the next decade.

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Tool for wood traceability management debuts

Vietnam+
September 14, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Vietnam – The Vn-WoodID application has been officially launched, becoming a key tool contributing to wood traceability. The application, launched within the framework of the “Ensuring Timber Legality for Sustainable Forestry Development in Vietnam” forum on September 12, integrates artificial intelligence (AI) and is capable of analysing images of wood cross-sections, providing identification results with an accuracy of up to 98.6% in less than one second. A prominent feature of Vn-WoodID is its ability to operate directly on a phone without an internet connection. This allows customs officials, forest rangers, or businesses to use it immediately on-site to look up information about wood species, rather than taking days to send samples for identification as was previously required. The application was built using nearly 3,000 wood samples collected from various high-risk areas for origin, such as Africa, South America, and Asia. …expanding the database is crucial to enhancing the application’s effectiveness. 

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How the UK government’s green paper will transform timber specification

Building Design Online UK
September 14, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International
Andrew Orriss

Andrew Orriss

Andrew Oriss, CEO of the Structural Timber Association, explains how the UK government’s 2025 Construction Products Reform Green Paper will reshape timber specification – from risk-based regulation and strengthened certification to digital product data and sustainability reporting – and what architects and specifiers need to know to stay compliant and competitive. The UK government’s 2025 Construction Products Reform Green Paper represents a pivotal moment for architects and specifiers working with timber and timber frame systems. …The proposed shift towards risk-based regulation offers architects greater clarity when specifying timber systems. Rather than applying blanket restrictions, the new framework will recognise that different timber applications carry different risk profiles. When specifying timber frame for low-rise residential projects, architects will have clearer guidance on what is appropriate compared to specifying mass timber systems for larger commercial buildings. This nuanced approach will enable evidence-based design decisions, moving beyond outdated perceptions to focus on actual performance data.

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New timber stadium in Fukushima designed as a symbol of recovery

By Ada Wein
Travel Tomorrow
September 9, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

@Fukushima United FC

While Fukushima is sadly more widely associated with nuclear tragedy … this may soon change as Japan prepares to unveil a new landmark: a circular timber stadium. Designed by Japanese architecture studio Vuild, the venue, which has 5,000 seats, will be the new home of Fukushima United FC. The 16-metre-tall, two-tiered structure was designed … to be a ‘symbol of hope and recovery’ for a region that has been profoundly affected by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, which resulted in a nuclear disaster. The architects have framed the project as a gesture of resilience … drawing on circular principles of reuse and regeneration … with each component designed for disassembly and reuse. …The extensive use of laminated timber rather than concrete or steel is possible because each of the stadium’s four sections covers less than 3,000 square metres. According to Japanese regulations, this exempts the structure from being classified as a fireproof building, thus enabling the pioneering all-wood design.

Additional coverage (in Japanese!): 日本初の完全木造&世界初の循環型木造スタジアム構想-

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From forestry schools to wood physics as a scientific discipline: a review of historical milestones and future directions of wood science

By Dick Sandberg and Peter Niemz
Researchgate.net
August 30, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

This overview traces the modern history of wood science and technology, particularly from the European perspective. It begins with the early forestry schools in 18th-century Germany, which influenced the founding of similar institutions worldwide. These schools introduced technical subjects, including wood physics, to meet industrial demand, especially from the mining sector. Before formal studies began, early research on wood properties, including moisture relations and strength, appeared in encyclopaedias. With the Industrial Revolution, interest in wood as a construction material grew, linking wood research to engineering and materials science. In the early 20th century, dedicated wood technology institutes marked the birth of wood science as a distinct discipline. …The future of wood science lies in sustainability and the efficient use of resources. As interest in renewable, bio-based alternatives to steel and concrete grows, further research on wood functionalisation and modification will be vital. 

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Forestry

Palm Oil sector expresses concerns over EU-US trade deal’s impact on landmark EU Deforestation Regulation laws

Confectionery Production
August 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

Industry concerns have been raised over a freshly-struck agreement between the EU and the US over future trading arrangements, which observers have asserted could lead to America being offered exceptions from complying with EUDR environmental laws, reports Neill Barston. As the Palm Oil Monitor non-governmental organisation noted, if America is to be permitted exemptions from data monitoring underpinning the entire basis of the much-anticipated deforestation laws following intense lobbying from its paper industry, then other trading partners including Malaysia and Indonesia – which have core interests in the supply of palm oils for the confectionery and snacks sector, should be allowed similar treatment. …Moreover, as the palm oil industry organisation stated, unveiling the broader US-EU Trade Framework Agreement presents an immediate major hurdle for the EU Commission. In seemingly offering preferential treatment for America, this could, in its view, lead to challenges from the World Trade Organisation over equal trading between nationalities.

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EU announces dates for virtual training on EU Deforestation Regulation

Wood Pellet Association of Canada
LinkedIn
September 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The European Commission has announced dates for virtual training sessions on the EUDR Information System, open to all interested parties. These sessions provide guidance on submitting due diligence statements under the European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR). While these sessions are available to all, WPAC anticipates that most of our members will meet their EUDR obligations through the Sustainable Biomass Program (SBP) system, which we helped to develop. EUDR establishes robust requirements for traceability, due diligence, and risk mitigation. SBP has developed a voluntary EUDR module integrated into its Data Transfer System (DTS), helping Certificate Holders prepare now for compliance ahead of the December 2025 implementation deadline. …Learn more about EC’s training sessions here. Learn more about SBP’s EUDR module here.

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EU Deforestation Regulation may cut Austrian softwood production by up to 10%

The Lesprom Network
September 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Austria’s softwood sector may face a production decline of up to 10% if the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) takes effect in its current form at the end of the year. The regulation requires full traceability of wood products across the entire supply chain, which industry representatives say is unworkable according to Markus Schmölzer of the Austrian Sawmill Association. Although the sector expects a 2% production increase in 2025, the EUDR poses a direct threat to the entire wood value chain. A decline in softwood production would affect manufacturers of building components, furniture, panel boards, paper, and pellet products, especially during winter months. …The Austrian industry urges the EU to either suspend the regulation entirely or revise it through an “Omnibus” legislative package aimed at reducing bureaucracy. …While supporting the goal of halting global deforestation, the sector proposes targeted monitoring for high-risk regions and exemptions for low-risk countries such as Austria.

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Compliance with the EU Deforestation Regulation Is Feasible, Underway — and Must Go On

By Bo Li, Tina Schneider, Sophie Labaste, Olivia Campbell & Janneke de Vries
World Resources Institute
September 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), one of the world’s most comprehensive legislations to curb tropical deforestation, will take effect at the end of December 2025. Since its adoption in 2023, debates over its implementation and effectiveness have been loud and persistent. Some claim the requirements are unclear or impossible to meet, especially for smallholders, while others fear the regulation will disrupt trade or place heavy burdens on businesses. …Despite the challenges, governments, companies and smallholders worldwide are showing that EUDR compliance is not only possible — it is already underway. Building on our previous analysis of why the EUDR is a necessary regulation to tackle deforestation linked to commodity supply chains, this article focuses on the practicality of compliance and highlights concrete steps being taken to prepare. …Guidance from EU national enforcement authorities, such as the Netherlands’ report, show that compliance with the EUDR is not rocket science. 

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Future of British forests rests in new seed bank

By Paul Burnell
BBC News
September 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The UK’s largest and most advanced seed centre has opened in Cheshire. The store near Delamere Forest will process four tonnes of seeds every year, which Forestry England said was enough to grow millions of trees for decades to come. It added the centre was “a significant milestone in protecting the future resilience of our forests”. Forestry Minister Mary Creagh said the building was “nationally significant” because it was “part of our climate resilience”.  Creagh added: “We are the largest wood importer in the world, and in a climate-constrained future we are going to have to grow more of our own.” The centre, funded through the Nature for Climate Fund and Forestry England, aims to provide seeds to grow climate-adapted trees. …Tristram Hilborn, chief operating officer of Forestry England, said: “What we need to consider for 100 a years’ time is the sort of trees that will thrive in that sort of climate.”

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Giant pine scale threatens South Australia forestry industry as pest spreads in Adelaide

ABC News, Australia
September 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

South Australia’s $3 billion forestry industry says a pest that kills pine trees and is spread by humans needs to be eradicated. Giant pine scale was found in pine trees in the north-eastern Adelaide suburbs of Hope Valley and Highbury in 2023. The pest sucks the sap of pine trees, causing branch dieback and eventually killing the tree. … The state government said nearly 1,400 trees had been cleared, with more trees set to be felled this year after further outbreaks at the reservoir and the Highbury Aqueduct Reserve. Primary Industries Minister Clare Scriven said so far, the outbreak had been contained to the north-eastern suburbs. …South Australia’s forestry industry includes estates around the outskirts of Adelaide and in the state’s south-east. The state produces 35 per cent of Australia’s structural timber for housing.

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Timber industry counts cost of ban from 176,000 hectares of Great Koala National Park

By Cathy Adams, Lauren Bohane and Claire Simmonds
ABC News Australia
September 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

@facebook

Timber mills fear they will be unable to fill orders after the New South Wales government confirmed logging would end in forests gazetted as part of the Great Koala National Park. The state government announced an immediate temporary moratorium on logging in 176,000 hectares of state forest. The government said the decision would impact six out of 25 mills operating in the region and about 300 jobs. Details of which mills will close and where jobs will be lost are yet to be announced as the government negotiates assistance deals with owners and workers. …The state government announced a worker and industry support package for those affected, as well as $6 million in community and business support. For workers, that included Job Seeker-style payments equivalent to their wage and free access to health, legal, and financial services, as well as training support. Tony Callinan from the Australian Workers’ Union said the offer fell short.

Related content in The Advertiser Australia, by Nathan Schmidt: Great Koala National Park could make $300m in carbon credits over 15 years

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‘Conservation outcomes don’t get much bigger than this’: Great Koala National Park announced

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons
The Sydney Mornng Herald
September 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Minns government will announce the proposed boundaries of its signature Great Koala National Park on Sunday, and call an immediate halt to logging in 176,000 hectares of state forest near Coffs Harbour. The creation of the Great Koala National Park will fulfil a promise made by former Labor leader Luke Foley 10 years ago and taken to every election since. The announcement comes 2½ years after the March 2023 election, and logging has continued throughout the lengthy assessment and consultation process. NSW Premier Chris Minns said the government would provide an additional $60 million for the National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) to establish the park, on top of $80 million allocated in 2023, as well as $6 million to boost tourism in the region. “Koalas are at risk of extinction in the wild in NSW – that’s unthinkable,” Minns said in a statement.

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Global forestry companies not ready for EUDR, analysis finds

By Joshua Neil
The Edie Network
September 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

UK — The majority of leading tropical forestry companies do not disclose where their materials come from, meaning they will fail to comply with the EU’s forthcoming Regulation on Deforestation-free Products (EUDR). The Zoological Society of London’s (ZSL) latest assessment found that only 18% of the world’s largest 100 tropical forestry companies disclose the countries from which they source. Additionally, only 4% state the percentage of their supply that is traceable to the forest management unit level. The assessment additionally found that none of the companies studied have published georeferenced maps for third-party FMUs, with only 3% reporting on how much of their supply is verified deforestation-free. Without clarity around sourcing and supply, companies are unable to prove responsible sourcing to stakeholders. Given that the timber and pulp industry is worth $480bn a year, ZSL said, small traceability failures can put billions of market value at risk.

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Ireland’s next forestry programme must ensure that planting is ‘economically viable’

By Kathleen O’Sullivan
AgriLand Ireland
September 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

IRELAND — The next forestry programme must “ensure that forestry as a land use option is economically viable and competitive, while satisfying environmental requirements”, according to the Irish Farmers’ Association (IFA). IFA president Francie Gorman has said that forestry is a “strategically important sector that has a key role to play in achieving climate change targets”. …Ireland’s largest forestry and timber body, Forest Industries Ireland (FII) has highlighted the “huge opportunity” for farmers “to take advantage of afforestation grant schemes” during a meeting with the IFA this week. FII highlighted the need for more farmers to consider planting forestry on their land amid rapid growth in global demand for timber products, driving up the value of future forestry harvests. “The Irish timber industry has the potential to significantly grow as many countries move towards net zero carbon targets and focus on sustainable building materials such as timber.”

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How climate change and deforestation interact in the transformation of the Amazon rainforest

By Marco Franco, Luciana Rizzo, et al
Nature Communications
September 2, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Amazon rainforest is one of Earth’s most diverse ecosystems, playing a key role in maintaining regional and global climate stability. However, recent changes in land use, vegetation, and the climate have disrupted biosphere-atmosphere interactions, leading to significant alterations in the water, energy, and carbon cycles. …Here, we quantify the relative contributions of deforestation and global climate change to observed shifts in key Amazonian climate parameters. We analyzed long-term atmospheric and land cover change data across 29 areas in the Brazilian Legal Amazon from 1985 to 2020. …While the rise in atmospheric methane (CH4) and carbon dioxide (CO2) mixing ratios is primarily driven by global emissions, deforestation has significantly increased surface air temperatures and reduced precipitation during the Amazonian dry season. Over the past 35 years, deforestation has accounted for approximately 74% of the ~ 21 mm dry season decline and 16.5% of the 2°C rise in maximum surface air temperature. 

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Forestry Corporation of New South Wales accused of logging breaches in Tallaganda State Forest

By Alasdair McDonald & Joshua Becker
ABC News, Australia
August 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — Conservationists are calling for native forest logging to be abolished in New South Wales (NSW), after the state’s environment regulator launched a court action against the Forestry Corporation of NSW for allegedly breaching laws designed to protect an endangered species on the south coast. …The alleged offences include failing to properly search for and identify glider den trees before logging, failing to replace hollow-bearing and other retaining trees that were damaged or felled, and damaging the habitat of a threatened species. …In 2022, the company was fined for logging hollow-bearing trees in the Brooman State Forest near Ulladulla, and in 2023 it was fined for committing the same offence in a part of Mogo State Forest that was badly burnt during the Black Summer bushfires.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

How much have fossil-fuel giants contributed to heat waves such as B.C.’s heat dome?

By Jordan Omstead
Canadian Press in the Vancouver Sun
September 10, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

Planet-warming emissions from a group of the world’s largest fossil fuel producers have significantly ramped up the intensity of heat waves, a new study suggests, one of the first peer-reviewed papers to link dozens of climate-fuelled weather events to specific companies. The study led by a group of Swiss-based climate scientists says about one-quarter of the 213 recent heat waves they studied, including the 2021 B.C. heat dome, would have been virtually impossible without human-caused climate change. It says emissions from some individual companies, including relatively smaller ones and some of Canada’s oil-and-gas producers, would have been enough to make otherwise impossible heat waves statistically possible. …The researchers linked emissions from the group of cement and fossil-fuel producers to about half the increase in heat wave intensity connected to human-caused climate change.

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Heads up Ontario: Sweden thinks its found a green energy solution by ramping up forest harvesting. But forests are not factories

By Emil Siekkinen, Swedish-based environmental writer
Toronto Star
September 8, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

…Sweden, like Canada, sits atop vast boreal forests — part of the same great green belt circling the Northern Hemisphere. These forests act as planetary lungs, storing more carbon than even the Amazon. But the Swedish government’s latest forestry inquiry, En robust skogspolitik för aktivt skogsbruk, is heading in a troubling direction: grow more trees, cut them faster, and burn or export more biomass in the name of “green energy.” It sounds like a climate solution. But here’s the problem: forests are not factories. Most of the carbon in a boreal forest isn’t stored in the trees at all. It’s locked underground — in roots, fungi, humus, and delicate microbial networks built up over thousands of years. When forestry is intensified — shorter harvest cycles, heavier machines, wider clear-cuts — that underground bank of carbon is steadily drained. The trees grow back, yes, but the soil can take centuries to recover, if it recovers at all.

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Sweden and Finland urge revision of EU’s forestry climate targets

By Simon Johnson
Reuters in Yahoo! News
September 16, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

STOCKHOLM — Sweden and Finland could suffer “dire” economic consequences if they are forced to harvest less forest in order to meet their EU-mandated climate targets, the two countries said this week. As part of the European Union’s plans to reach net zero emissions by 2050, Sweden and Finland have been tasked with increasing the amount of CO2 bound up by forests. But both countries say they are on track to miss the EU’s Land Use, Land-Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF) targets for the period 2021-2025 and 2026-30, blaming climate change for slower tree growth and the war in Ukraine for increased demand. ” …Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said “To severely restrict large parts of Nordic forestry is the wrong path to take.” Industry and environmental groups both see forests as a key part in fighting climate change. Forestry firms stress sustainable management and the role of biofuels and wood in replacing fossil fuels, plastic and concrete.

Related coverage in Bloomberg: Sweden, Finland Urge EU to Rethink Climate Targets for Forests

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The weak land carbon sink hypothesis

By James Anderson, Yue Li, Weiwei Fu, et al
Science Advances
September 10, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

In the Northern Hemisphere, the more than twofold difference between the atmospheric inversion and remote sensing–derived estimate of the net land carbon sink is an unresolved puzzle that challenges our fundamental understanding of the global carbon cycle. We provide several lines of evidence that much of this discrepancy can be resolved by a weak net land carbon sink that is distributed mainly in the Northern Hemisphere, together with a relatively small reduction in the magnitude of fossil fuel emissions and a small increase in ocean uptake. …A strong land carbon sink, as identified in past research, has often been used to support the potential of nature-based climate solutions in meeting climate stabilization targets. However, if the weak land sink hypothesis is correct, then the role of CO2 fertilization in enhancing forest carbon stocks might be overestimated. At the same time, projections of carbon accumulation in reforestation and afforestation projects may be optimistic too. 

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Climate crisis will increase frequency of lightning-sparked wildfires, study finds

By Eric Holthaus
The Guardian
September 6, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The climate crisis will continue making lightning-sparked wildfires more frequent for decades to come, which could produce cascading effects and worsen public safety and public health, new research suggest. Lightning-caused fires tend to burn in more remote areas and therefore usually grow into larger fires than human-caused fires. That means a trend toward more lightning-caused fires is also probably making wildfires more deadly by producing more wildfire smoke. …Over the last 40 years, thunderstorms and other weather conditions favoring lightning have been happening more often across many parts of the US west, including western Washington, western Oregon, the California Central valley, and higher elevations throughout the Rocky Mountains….Dmitri Kalashnikov, at the Sierra Nevada Research Institute and the study’s lead author… found future increases in the number of lightning-caused wildfires across a robust 98% of the western US “due to more lightning, or more fire weather, or both”, he said.

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Metsä Group’s carbon capture pilot underway

Metsä Group
September 4, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

FINLAND — In June, a carbon capture pilot plant came online at Metsä Group’s Rauma mill, where the company is testing the capture of pulp mill flue gases in cooperation with the technology company Andritz, the supplier of the pilot plant. Carbon capture is an existing technology, but it has not previously been used for pulp mill flue gases. During the autumn of 2025, various operating models will be tested concerning aspects such as energy consumption and the amount of carbon captured. The pilot period will also provide information about the need for flue gas treatment and the quality of the end product. …As part of the piloting, Metsä Group will also investigate possibilities for a larger-scale demo plant for carbon capture at the Rauma mill site. …State aid is expected to be crucial in scaling projects beyond pilot stage.

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Climate change fuelled wildfires of ‘unprecedented intensity’ in Spain and Portugal, experts say

By Rosie Frost
Euronews
September 4, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Researchers warn that simultaneous fires across Europe are overwhelming firefighting resources. Climate change made weather that fuelled Portugal and Spain’s deadly wildfires this summer around 40 times more likely, new research has found. Blazes in the Iberian Peninsula broke out at the end of July. Fuelled by temperatures above 40°C and strong winds, the flames spread extremely rapidly. The area burned by these wildfires has now broken records across Spain and Portugal. A new super rapid scientific analysis by World Weather Attribution (WWA) has found that these hot, dry and windy conditions were made more likely and more intense by human-caused climate change. Dr Clair Barnes, researcher for the Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College London, warns that the “astonishing” size of these fires is a “sign of what is to come” with hotter, drier, more flammable conditions becoming more severe with climate change.

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Drax juggles two problems: pellets and unpopularity

By Camilla Palladino
The Financial Times
September 3, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Investors in Drax have a problem. Shares in the company that produces 10% of the UK’s renewable power plunged last week after the Financial Conduct Authority launched a probe into its financial reports. The investigation centres on whether the company had misrepresented the origin of the biomass pellets it burns to create electricity. …But even assuming Drax does what it says it does, it has a second problem. Its business model, reliant on burning imported sustainable biomass to generate power, is inherently controversial. Net zero supporters don’t think Drax is sustainable enough, fearing that forestry companies might classify more wood as rubbish if selling waste pellets became lucrative. …Drax may not be easy to like, but it does make up an important part of the UK energy system. …So far, politicians have walked a line, extending support but cutting its size.

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