Region Archives: International

Business & Politics

Australian Forest and Wood Innovations welcomes new Executive Director

Australian Forest and Wood Innovations
January 13, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Joseph Lawrence

Australian Forest and Wood Innovations (AFWI) announced the appointment of Dr Joseph Lawrence as its new Executive Director. Dr Lawrence brings extensive experience in research collaboration, innovation, and industry development. …Dr Lawrence holds a PhD in Engineering Management from the University of Canterbury, where his research focused on business models for collaborative research centres. He also holds a technical MBA and a Bachelor of Engineering. His career has been marked by numerous leadership achievements, including roles as Pro Vice-Chancellor at Federation University. …Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry Julie Collins MP said “AFWI has an important role to play in supporting research and innovation for the Australian forestry sector. Dr Lawrence will be a vital point of contact for industry and provide direction and security for both AFWI and the timber sector.

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Việt Nam’s wood industry sees chances and challenges from US new trade policies

The Việt Nam News
December 24, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

HÀ NỘI — Việt Nam’s wood industry has chances and also challenges due to the predicted new trade policies of US President-elect Donald Trump. In the first 11 months of 2024, Việt Nam’s timber and wooden product exports to the US, one of the most important export markets for the Vietnamese industry, were estimated at over US$14.6 billion. Đỗ Xuân Lập, Chairman of the Việt Nam Timber and Forest Products Association, said the total export value this year is expected to reach over $16.2 billion, including $9 billion from the US or 56 per cent of total export value. …However, the export activities of Việt Nam’s wood industry will face strong challenges from the impact of US policies in early 2025. According to Lập, the US is likely to impose new trade policies when Trump is formally sworn in as the US President. 

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Suzano officially inaugurates the world’s largest single-line pulp mill

Suzano
December 16, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

BRAZIL — Suzano, the world’s largest pulp producer, officially inaugurated the world’s largest single-line pulp mill in Ribas do Rio Pardo, Mato Grosso do Sul. The ceremony was attended by the President of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva… federal, state and municipal governments, local authorities, and executives from Suzano. With capacity to produce 2.55 million tonnes of pulp per year, the project is the result of a total investment of R$22.2 billion (~U$4.3 billion) , of which R$15.9 billion (~U$3.1 billion) was allocated to the construction of the mill and R$6.3 billion (~U$1.2 billion). This marks the largest investment in Suzano’s 100-year history, and represents one of the largest private investments in Brazil in recent years. …With the start of operations at the new unit, Suzano’s installed pulp production capacity increased from 10.9 million to 13.5 million tonnes per year.

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Finance & Economics

Dollar drops over report Donald Trump considering scaling back tariff plans

By George Steer and Ian Smith
The Financial Times
January 6, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

The US dollar fell on Monday after reports that president-elect Donald Trump’s administration is considering watering down a campaign pledge to apply sweeping tariffs on imported goods. The dollar index, which tracks the currency against a basket of six peers, initially fell more than 1% after The Washington Post reported that potential tariffs might be confined to critical imports. …However, the greenback pared its losses to 0.7% later in the day, after Trump denied the report, describing it as “fake news”. …The report that tariffs would be scaled back had sparked a “relief rally” in the euro, with hopes that the region’s carmakers could be spared levies. The tariffs might also “be less inflationary than first expected”, he added. …Analysts and economists expect Trump’s pro-growth, potentially inflationary policies to limit the number of times that the US Federal Reserve will cut interest rates this year, boosting demand for the dollar relative to other major currencies. 

Related coverage in Reuters: Canadian dollar jumps on Trudeau and tariff reports

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Sappi’s strategic moves for 2025 in sustainable packaging and speciality papers

By Edward West
MSN
December 18, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Sappi’s completion of the Gratkorn PM9 mill conversion in Austria, to label papers, coupled with good progress on the Somerset PM2 conversion to paperboard in the US, set for commissioning in 2025, positioned the group to meet growing demand for sustainable packaging and speciality papers solutions, the group CEO Steve Binnie said. Its management said the group had exceeded their expectations in the 2024 financial year. Adjusted earnings a share came to 41 US cents versus 53 US cents in 2023, while the dividend was slightly lower at 14 US cents per share versus 15 US cents in 2023. The executive directors total remuneration increased sharply. Binnie’s increased to $2.02 million in 2024, from $835 819 in 2023, while that of chief financial officer Glen Pearce increased to $1.08m from $476 438 previously, the annual report showed.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

TORY, not tiny—a new approach to modular homes

By Forestry Innovation Investment
LinkedIn
December 18, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

Historically, the vast majority of wood-frame buildings in South Korea have been constructed on-site. For several reasons, including labour shortage, quality control, a desire to cut waste, and a need to reduce transportation costs, many developers are now looking to industrialized construction as a solution. This includes modular homes where the building is completed in a factory and then shipped, in whole, to its final location. Prefabrication of building components, such as wall panels, is another approach that is growing in popularity. …Developed with input from Canada Wood Group , the TORY home cuts costs by using a 2×6 framework rather than the heavy timber typically used for modular homes. Cladding is premium B.C. cedar, with high-quality doors, windows and interior finishing rounding out the homes. The result is a product that cuts costs, but not quality.

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Recent Innovations in Sustainable Practices in the Pulp and Paper Industry

ResourceWise Forest Products Blog
January 14, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, International

In today’s rapidly evolving world, the pulp and paper industry is at the forefront of sustainability efforts, playing a crucial role in the transition towards a circular economy. …Below, we’ve highlighted the latest developments announced over the past month, showcasing significant strides made by companies and organizations in their commitment to sustainable practices and eco-friendly solutions:

  • Toy Manufacturer Lego Starts Using Paper-Based Bags
  • Minnestoa Discusses Ways to Implement Recyclable Packaging by 2032
  • Amazon Moves to Recyclable Delivery Packaging in Australia
  • Stora Enso Develops Sustainable Packaging for Wilfa’s ProBaker Product
  • Climate-Focused Frontier Coalition to Buy US$80 Million of Carbon Credits
  • Smurfit Westrock Provides Recyclable Packaging to Mindful Chef
  • Dobis Brings Out Lightweight Shopping Bags with Mondi’s Recycled Papers
  • 39% of People Are Inclined to Recycle Paper and Cardboard Products – PAMSA
  • Termotécnica Brings out DaColheita Bio Packaging to Export Fruits

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‘Some homes weren’t designed with fire in mind’: Is timber to blame for LA wildfires?

By Michael Koziol
The Sydney Morning Herald
January 14, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, International

Architect Greg Chasen posted a solitary home still standing in the ruins of the burnt-out Pacific Palisades. “Some of the design choices we made here helped,” he wrote. “But we were also very lucky.” Many Australians seeing images of the devastating blazes in Los Angeles might wonder whether these homes are being built in a way that makes them especially susceptible to fire. The answer is complex. …the US is heavily reliant on timber framing for residential construction …at least 90 per cent of new single-family homes are timber. …in Australia, about 80 per cent of detached homes use timber. Timber is popular in earthquake-plagued California because of its flexibility. Most LA houses are timber-framed with an exterior made of stucco – a fire-resistant, cement and sand-based render and one of the most common building materials in the US. …it’s ultimately the location of these properties … that make them susceptible to fire.

Additional coverage in The Australian Financial Review, by Kriston Capps: Why did these homes survive the LA fires?

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Local Architecture Network “deliberately exposes” mass-timber structure of Paris apartment block

By Jon Astbury
Dezeen Magazine
January 13, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Chunky columns wrap the exterior of Wood Up, an apartment block in Paris by French studio Local Architecture Network (LAN) with a glued-laminated and cross-laminated timber structure. Created for developers Semapa and REI Habitat, the 14-storey building in the city’s 13th arrondissement provides 132 timber-framed apartments raised on a concrete base containing commercial units. Paris-based LAN created the fifty-metre-tall block with timber sourced entirely from France and transported via the river Seine. It is left exposed both externally and internally. “Wood Up is one of the first buildings in France to surpass the typical height limits for timber constructions,” said the studio. “…the wooden structure is deliberately exposed. It is entirely encapsulated in glass to make it visible. Usually matte, the wood becomes reflective thanks to its protective layer.” The glued-laminated timber and cross-laminated timber structure is formed of Douglas fir on the exterior and beech and spruce on the interior…

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Smurfit Westrock’s paper pallet wrap set to drive down supply chain emissions

By Smurfit Westrock
January 9, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Smurfit Westrock’s innovative new paper pallet wrap is helping companies to make their supply chains significantly more sustainable. Smurfit Westrock has produced a 100% paper-based alternative to the polyethylene stretch wrap which is commonly used to stabilise pallet loads in transportation. The global stretch wrap market was valued at USD 4.27 billion in 2023 and is projected to grow significantly. The innovative new solution is made from Nertop® Stretch Kraft paper which is fully recyclable. Its capabilities also include high energy absorption and strong performance in humid conditions. …Encirc, a leading glass supplier which manufactures over three billion containers annually, was the first company in the UK to use the new paper wrap. …The Better Planet Packaging paper pallet wrap is manufactured in Smurfit Westrock’s Nervión paper mill in Spain.

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Is Paris’s Wood Up a template for future timber housing projects?

By John Jervis
The RIBA Journal
January 3, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

As well as providing Parisians with housing, LAN Architecture’s 16-storey tower has also served as an experimental research project for the development of timber as a building material, with each of its elements requiring laboratory testing from scratch. Is timber a functional proposition for housing in Europe’s densest city? …With their proposal for a 16-storey tower on the banks of the Seine, competition winners LAN Architecture and REI Habitat undertook to achieve the necessary density. …Wood Up is a hybrid structure, with a three-storey concrete base tackling the complexity of the site’s 7m drop to the Seine and creating new connections between river and neigbourhood. …The glulam timber structure above is braced by the concrete of circulation areas, while floors are fabricated with a wood-concrete composite. But the principal material is beech. Wood Up is the first building constructed from France’s most plentiful timber, transported to the site by barge from Normandy.

 

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Renewable packaging innovation accelerates amid growing planetary health concerns

By Natalie Schwertheim
Packaging Insights
January 3, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

We explore the latest advancements in renewable packaging, guided by insights from industry experts at Stora Enso, Borealis and BASF. From alternatives to fossil-based materials to biopolymer developments, we examine how companies are shaping a more sustainable future for packaging. Seven out of ten European consumers prefer renewable materials over fossil-based plastic in packaging, according to Stora Enso. The packaging materials supplier finds that younger consumers, in particular, generally prefer paper bag applications. …This year, BASF expanded its biopolymers portfolio by introducing biomass-balanced (BMB) ecoflex, a polybutylene adipate terephthalate (PBAT) that is frequently used in the compounding of biopolymers. …“Our ecoflex BMB, an industry-first on the global biopolymers market, advances the sustainability efforts in the packaging industry by reducing the use of fossil resources, decreasing GHG emissions and driving the use of renewable feedstock derived from organic waste and residual biomass.”

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Production and properties of particleboard and paper from waste poppy straw

By Kateřina Hájková et al.
Nature – International Journal of Science
January 2, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

This research concerned the possible use of waste poppy straw as an alternative source for producing lignocellulosic materials. The suitability of the materials for paper products and particleboard was determined based on the selected properties measured. While poppy-based particleboards need further optimization to match wood fibres, they show comparable properties to agricultural residues. Future research should focus on improving resin types and pressing conditions to enhance performance. From the point of view of paper products, poppy pulp produced by the pulping process has better properties than nitrate-alkaline pulp. …Therefore, both applications of waste poppy appear to be alternative raw materials in the future, especially in the case of wood scarcity, which can ensure the continuity of production and composite materials in an economically advantageous and more environmentally friendly way. Using poppy straw has environmental benefits such as reducing deforestation and the carbon footprint…

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Top Fire-Resistant and Durable Materials for Modern Safety

By Jenna AL-Saggat
ArchUp, a space for Arabic architectural content
December 27, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Fire-resistant and durable materials play a critical role in ensuring safety and longevity in modern construction, manufacturing, and design. These materials are engineered to withstand extreme conditions, including high temperatures, mechanical stress, and environmental exposure. By effectively resisting fire, they can prevent structural failures and significantly reduce the risk of property damage or personal injury. Advancements in technology have enabled innovative material development, combining strength with enhanced thermal insulation. Common examples range from treated wood composites to high-performance alloys. …Fire-resistant materials, such as concrete, gypsum, and fire-rated glass, provide critical protection in high-risk environments by mitigating fire spread. Durable options like reinforced steel and engineered wood combine strength with resilience to withstand prolonged exposure to harsh conditions. Innovative solutions, like intumescent coatings and advanced composites, offer additional layers of safety while optimizing performance. 

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True or false: Wood as a construction material is good for health?

UPM Biofore
December 20, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Answer: Yes, at least for well-being. Wood has many qualities that are impossible to replicate. There are many academically approved studies highlighting the positive impact of forests and trees on humans. Recently, there has also been high-quality research on the benefits of using wood as a construction material. Wood is a restorative material that supports well-being. A Slovakian study found that wooden materials with brownish colours are ideal for relaxation. Another study highlighted that the use of wooden materials positively impacts the human nervous system due to their appealing aesthetics. Seeing or smelling wood in a building boosts positive feelings and reduces negative perceptions of the environment. And this – a positive feeling about the environment – is not a minor thing, says Riina Muilu-Mäkelä, Research Manager and Senior Scientist at the Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke).

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Wood Awards Ireland 2024 Winners Announced

The Royal Institute of Architects of Ireland
December 12, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Celebrating their 10th anniversary in 2024, Wood Awards Ireland (WAI) recognise and award excellence in wood construction and design. Common to all awarded projects is that wood is the inherent sustainable medium. The Royal Institute of Architects of Ireland has been a founding partner of the Wood Awards Ireland, which are organised by Forest Industries Ireland (FII) and Rotary Ireland with support from the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine and Enterprise Ireland. Speaking on the 10-year partnership, RIAI President Sean Mahon FRIAI said, “Over the last 10 years, we have seen an evolution in how Architects are using wood as an inherent material in the design of buildings, including in a structural capacity in form of Cross Laminated Timber (CLT).  Architects have developed great knowledge and skills in designing, detailing and delivering timber buildings, and these awards are a great platform to share this expertise.”

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Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation formally adopted by EU Council

Packaging Europe
December 16, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The European Council has formally adopted the Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation, meaning it will now enter into force in EU law. As the final step in the ordinary legislative procedure, the Council’s approval of the Regulation allows it to be published in the EU’s Official Journal; in turn, its rules will apply eighteen months after its entry into force. It is hoped that the rules will cut down on the generation of new waste by encompassing the full life cycle of packaging. Among the Regulation’s targets are minimum recycled content thresholds, ranging from 10% for contact-sensitive packaging made of non-PET plastic by 2030 to 65% for single-use plastic bottles by 2040. The amount of recycled content in a pack, its material make-up, and other sustainability-related information must be provided to consumers through on-pack labelling, marking, and information. …Reuse targets have also been set for 2030, alongside indicative targets for 2040. 

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Nordic Bioproducts Group expands plant-based cosmetic ingredient distribution in Europe

By Alexandra Branscombe
Personal Care Insights
December 18, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Finnish company Nordic Bioproducts Group (NBG) has partnered with southern European distributors to make its microcrystalline cellulose offerings available to cosmetics manufacturers across the continent. …NBG is marketing microcrystalline cellulose as a sustainably sourced cosmetic ingredient that can serve as an alternative to talc and titanium dioxide. “We’re excited to work with C.Q. Massó and others who share our commitment to advancing a safer and more sustainable beauty industry,” says Olli Kähkönen, CEO of NBG. “Our collaborations go beyond distribution. Together, we’re exploring microcrystalline cellulose’s potential to replace fossil-based and other harmful ingredients in innovative new formulations.” Microcrystalline cellulose is refined wood pulp that is purified and partially depolymerized. It is a fine, whitish powder and is used as a gentle exfoliator, emulsifier, stabilizer and dispersing agent in personal care products.

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Forestry

Perth homeowners could be paid to plant trees in bid to thicken canopy coverage

By Holly Thompson
The Sydney Mornng Herald
January 14, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — A new green policy offering cash to plant more natives aims to thicken Perth’s ailing tree canopy. In a bid to turn around Perth’s tree coverage – the worst of all Australian capitals – Labor announced on Tuesday it would plant one million trees across the metropolitan region by 2035 if re-elected in March. The $16.9 million commitment includes a Western Australia-first “treebate”, allowing 10,000 households a year to receive $150 to plant native trees on their property. The “treebates” would be available to all WA residents 18 and over, redeemable via the ServiceWA app, and would help fund the purchase of native trees from WA nurseries and other retailers. …Environment Minister Reece Whitby said the “treebate” would help the state government get Perth’s canopy coverage to 30 per cent by 2040, bringing the city in line with Melbourne’s current coverage and above Adelaide’s.

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War of words erupts over Western Australia’s prescribed burning program

By Sarah Brookes
The Sydney Morning Herald
January 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — A war of words – and glossy brochures – has flared up in the scientific world over whether Western Australia’s major prescribed-burning program across the forests of its south-west is doing more harm than good. The South-West Forests Defence Foundation launched its publication Prescribed Burning Fact Sheets – August 2024 outlining scientific research arguing current prescribed burning practices in the south-west forest regions does not give effective protection from wildfires, is hazardous to people’s health and is causing irreversible loss of biodiversity. The foundation favours a rapid detection and suppression response to bushfires. …In response, the Bushfire Front advocacy group has released its own pamphlet critiquing the foundation’s “flawed” proposal, saying it’s not based on sound science and would have disastrous outcomes in the event of a major bushfire. It states… that the response-only method was trialled and failed in the early 1900s.

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Global deforestation is declining, but forests are still under extreme pressure

By Xhoi Zajmi
EURACTIV
January 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Global deforestation rates have declined, but forests remain under significant pressure. Rising demands for forest products and climate-related challenges have led to calls for better conservation measures. The European Union had 160 million hectares of forest in 2022, covering 39 per cent of its land, an increase of 8.3 million hectares since 2000. The largest forest areas are in Sweden, Finland, and Spain. According to the European Environment Agency (EEA), the EU’s average forest connectivity, a crucial indicator for supporting biodiversity, was 80.6 per cent in 2021, a slight decline of 0.8 per cent compared to 2018. Larger forest areas, such as those in Slovenia, Romania, Finland, and Sweden, contribute significantly to higher connectivity, while smaller fragmented forests rely on forest strips to maintain connectivity. …Initiatives such as the Nature Restoration regulation, forest and biodiversity strategies for 2030, and a pledge to plant three billion trees by 2030, aim to enhance connectivity.

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Universitas Airlangga student shares academic journey at University of British Columbia

By Hana Mufidatuz Zuhrah
Universitas Airlangga
January 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Nicholas Winston Ong

The Indonesian International Student Mobility Awards (IISMA) program has served as a gateway for Nicholas Winston Ong, a student from Universitas Airlangga’s (UNAIR) Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, to expand his academic horizons. This prestigious initiative enabled him to study at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Canada. Known as Winston, he chose UBC to further his commitment to enhancing Indonesia’s natural ecosystems by specializing in forestry at one of the world’s premier institutions in the field. “I selected the University of British Columbia because I am deeply committed to advancing Indonesia’s natural ecosystems. UBC, with its globally renowned forestry research, aligns perfectly with this vision,” Winston explained. …Winston acknowledged the rigorous academic environment at UBC, noting the university’s reputation as Canada’s largest research institution. He described UBC students as highly competitive, with coursework often centered on critical reasoning and case studies.

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How premodern energy shaped Britain

The Economist
December 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Before the Industrial Revolution, coppicing, a method of harvesting wood on a multi-year cycle by cutting trees back to a stump, helped meet Britain’s energy needs. After the tree, usually hazel, hornbeam or oak, is cut, new shoots spring to life. …Shadow Woods, a coppice in West Sussex, England, was largely abandoned after the second world war and many of the trees are now “overstood” … shading the ground and preventing the growth of any new saplings. …Since early humans first kindled firewood until Britain’s Industrial Revolution, energy typically came from renewable sources like wind, water and the sun, not from fossil fuels like coal, oil and natural gas. Vertical windmills were used to grind flour in ancient Persia. Chinese water power pulped paper and hammered iron. The Romans combined their aqueducts with complexes of watermills. All of this was renewable. [A subscription to the Economist is required to access the full story]

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Japan government promotes laser forest terrain surveys

The Japan Times
January 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Forestry Agency is calling on local governments to conduct 3D forest surveys employing aircraft laser to get terrain information. Data obtained by such surveys can be used for disaster responses by analyzing terrain changes after earthquakes or heavy rain, in addition to forest and road management. The agency worked with the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan to conduct a laser survey for a terrain analysis of the Noto Peninsula in Ishikawa Prefecture after a powerful earthquake caused landslides in a wide swath of the area in January last year. A laser survey provides information about collapsed roads and ground fissures in places covered with woods, which are hard to observe visually. Such a survey “allows us to detect possible locations of secondary disasters and take preventive measures,” a Forestry Agency official said.

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IRELAND: 60% think of forestry as attractive career

By Ray Ryan
The Irish Examiner
January 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

IRELAND — More young people are looking towards the forestry and wood sector as a career, according to the findings of a new Coillte commissioned survey, which revealed that 60% of respondents believed it to be an attractive option. Coillte said this growing interest aligns with the industry’s pivotal role in addressing Ireland’s climate and housing challenges while meeting the increasing demand for sustainable timber. Public sentiment also strongly supports forestry’s role in addressing these challenges: Nearly 70% of the survey respondents favoured increased timber frame housing, while 80% believed Ireland should be self-sufficient in timber production. The forestry sector is recognised as a key driver of Ireland’s climate action objectives, requiring more than 1,700 skilled professionals by 2030 to meet the ambitions of the forest strategy. Coillte released the findings at the launch of its 2025 Forestry Scholarship Programme, which offers up to €20,000 per recipient across their degree, alongside paid summer placements and career opportunities with the company.

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Forest Stewardship Council International welcomes Sarah Kutulakos as the first Regional Director of North America

Forest Stewardship Council
December 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Sarah Kutulakos

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) International is pleased to announce the appointment of Sarah Kutulakos as FSC’s first Regional Director of North America, effective 1 January 2025. This strategic appointment marks a key moment in FSC’s ongoing expansion and reinforces its mission to promote responsible forest management across the United States and Canada. Kutulakos, a seasoned executive with extensive experience in multinational business operations and strategic growth, will lead FSC’s efforts to meet the growing demand for responsibly sourced forest products in North America. Her leadership will strengthen FSC’s presence on the ground and foster deeper connections within North America and between the regions. With the appointment of Sarah Kutulakos as our Regional Director, we are establishing a dedicated presence to better support our members and partner organizations in the U.S. and Canada who have worked hard to safeguard forests and promote sustainable forestry,” said Lieske van Santen, FSC International Global Network Director.

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New Zealand Government Seeks Partnerships To Plant Trees On Crown-owned-land

By New Zealand Minister of Forestry
Scoop Independent News
December 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Government today released a request for information (RFI) to seeking interest in partnerships to plant trees on Crown-owned land with low farming and conservation value (excluding National Parks) Forestry Minister Todd McClay announced. “Planting trees on Crown-owned land will drive economic growth by creating more forestry jobs in our regions, providing more wood for domestic processing and over time, boost the value of exports,” Mr McClay says “It will also provide nature-based solutions which are a key part to our climate strategy.” Through the RFI, the Government wants to understand what would make this an attractive and viable opportunity for potential partners.

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Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) celebrates 30 years of championing sustainable forest management

Forest Stewardship Council
December 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Since its founding in 1994, FSC has championed sustainable forest management, spanning economic, social and environmental aspects of sustainability. With its rigorous and trusted forest certification system, FSC is contributing to healthy and resilient forests, upholding the rights of Indigenous Peoples and forest sector workers, promoting gender equality, and safeguarding biodiversity. …As of 2024, FSC’s impact across the globe includes: 160+ million hectares of forest certified worldwide and 1,150+ members from 89 countries offering environmental, economic and social perspectives… Today, FSC’s Forest Management and Chain of Custody standards, as well as other solutions like Verified Impact stand at the forefront of global environmental stewardship, addressing the most critical planetary challenges of our time. …FSC is celebrating with valued members, allies and network partners, reflecting on three decades of collective effort and achievement, as well as reaffirming our commitment to promote sustainable forestry.

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A year of hope and hardship for the world’s forests

By Robert Nasi, Director General, Center for International Forestry Research
Center for International Forestry Research
December 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Robert Nasi

The picture painted by the 2024 Forest Declaration Assessment, albeit relying mostly on 2023 figures, is not a pretty one. As 2024 is coming to an end, here is a reflection of the year for forests. 2024 has been marked by both positive strides and persistent challenges for the world’s forests. …In the international and national agenda, the role of forests in mitigating and adapting to climate change is reaffirmed. …To address the complex challenges facing the world’s forests, a comprehensive and multi-faceted approach is necessary. International cooperation is essential to coordinate efforts, share best practices, and provide financial support to countries with significant forest resources. Strong governance and effective law enforcement are crucial to combat illegal logging and ensure sustainable forest management. …Additionally, empowering Indigenous Peoples and local communities to play a role in forest conservation is essential, as they often have deep knowledge and strong ties to the land.

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Södra Foundation grants SEK 12.5 million for research

Södra
December 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Södra Foundation for Research, Development and Education is granting a total of SEK 12.5 million to 11 different research projects. The research in the projects will pave the way for both tomorrow’s forestry and new climate-smart products, sustainable production and, eventually, jobs. “The Foundation is a key component of a larger innovation system to promote research into both forestry and the forest industry for a green transition. By investing in research, we are building the foundation for a sustainable future where forests contribute both solutions to climate change and economic growth, while ensuring that forests remain an important resource for society,” said Henric Brage, Head of Innovation at Södra… The successful projects cover the areas of forestry, wood, pulp and chemicals. They include a climate research project that uses a scientific radar monitoring station to observe forest health, with a focus on CO₂ and water dynamics in birch and pine forests.

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Brazil paper and pulp industry invests in blockchain to comply with EUDR

By Karla Mendes
Mongabay
December 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The European Union’s deforestation-free products regulation (EUDR) won’t affect the operations of Brazil’s paper and pulp industry, which has already traced its supply chains “from farm to factory” for more than two decades and doesn’t source from illegal deforested areas, the country’s industry association says. However, the fulfillment of some specific EUDR requirements compel companies to invest in blockchain and other technologies, which could increase the cost per ton of pulp by up to $230, according to the Brazilian Tree Industry (Ibá)… The EUDR, initially planned to come into effect this month and recently postponed for another year, will require suppliers to prove that their products exported to the EU aren’t sourced from illegally deforested areas… In Brazil, experts say the EUDR will help halt illegal deforestation in the Amazon.

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Report says New South Wales government should review ‘long-term feasibility’ of native logging industry

By Michael Slezak
ABC News
December 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

New South Wales’s native logging industry is not “economically viable” and the state government should consider shutting it down after 2028 if its prospects do not improve, an independent economic regulator has recommended. If that happened, it would be the third state to stop logging native forests after Victoria and Western Australia, leaving Tasmania the only state with a large native logging industry. The recommendation was made by the NSW Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal (IPART) in its triennial analysis of the government-owned logging company Forestry Corporation of NSW. It found Forestry Corporation’s native timber operation had been steadily losing money over the past decade, in part due to delivering timber to sawmills for less than the cost of providing it.

Additional coverage in The Guardian: ‘Bad deal for taxpayers’: huge losses from NSW forest logging, reports reveal

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

New building materials could lock away billions of tons of CO2

By Joshua Shavit
The Brighter Side of News
January 13, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The quest to limit global warming and stabilize Earth’s climate hinges on achieving net-zero emissions of greenhouse gases. This goal requires balancing anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions with greenhouse gas removal. While traditional carbon capture and storage methods have been proposed, they often involve significant challenges and risks. A promising alternative lies in the materials we already use extensively: building materials such as concrete, asphalt, wood, and bricks. Civil engineers and earth systems scientists from institutions like UC Davis and Stanford University have explored the ability of construction materials to act as carbon sinks. Their findings, published in the journal Science, indicate that these materials could lock away billions of tons of carbon dioxide.

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Shell and Microsoft top list of 10 biggest carbon credit buyers in 2024

By Jim Giles
GreenBiz
January 13, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The two companies at the top of credit leaderboard paid vastly different amounts and backed very different projects to achieve their ranking… Microsoft focused almost exclusively on carbon removal credits. Close to 80 percent of the credits it retired were from projects that generate energy by burning biomass and then capturing and storing the associated emissions. Because the biomass captures carbon dioxide as it grows, the process, known as bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), can be carbon negative. Shell focused on projects that avoided greenhouse gas emissions. The company retires credits to offset its emissions and, unlike Microsoft, also helps clients acquire credits. It used more established credit types, retiring 9.4 million forestry and land use credits and 2.4 million renewable energy credits.

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CO2-capturing building material would cut emissions by 16 billion tonnes – study

By Eloise Gibson
Radio New Zealand News
January 10, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

A new study by US researchers in Science shows using new, CO2-capturing concrete and other substances instead of traditional building materials could reduce global carbon dioxide emissions by more than 16 billion tonnes. …Alternatives suggested include mixing carbon-sucking substances from the earth, such as dunite, with concrete, using wood-based materials in bricks, and swapping out asphalt bitumen for bio-oil. Experts believe New Zealand has the right raw materials – such as dunite and wood – to switch out its building materials that store CO2. …Diego Elustondo of the Crown-owned wood science company Scion said the premise of the paper was promising but it appeared to favour storing carbon in masonry materials at the expense of wood-based alternatives. He said the comparison should have considered wood-based materials which were at the same stage of development as other future materials mentioned in the paper.

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Climate change: what the latest science is telling us

By Gloria Dickie
Reuters
January 6, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International
Globally, forests appear to be struggling. Here is some of the latest climate research:
  • Global warming is drying waterways and sapping moisture from forests, creating conditions for bigger and hotter wildfires from the U.S. West and Canada to southern Europe and Russia’s Far East.
  • Between 10% and 47% of Brazil’s Amazon will face combined stresses of heat and drought from climate change, which could push the Amazon past a tipping point, with the jungle no longer able to produce enough moisture to quench its own trees.
  • Forests overall failed to absorb as much carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as in the past, due largely to wildfires in Canada. That means a record amount of CO2 entered the atmosphere.
  • While the vast Arctic tundra has been a carbon sink for thousands of years, rising wildfire emissions mean the tundra is now releasing more carbon than it stores.

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Council for Forest Research and Development sets out recommendations for forest-based biomass in Ireland

Bioenergy Insight Magazine
January 3, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The Irish government’s COFORD Council for Forest Research and Development has published a paper that recommends future policies to support an expanded role of forest-based biomass. The paper, entitled “Forest Based Biomass and Modern Bioenergy, Moving to Net Zero“, complements and rounds out an earlier series of COFORD statements on the role of forests and forest products in climate change mitigation. …It is essential to have an evidence base around supply, costs, sustainability and technical feasibility of bioenergy to inform national policies and the climate action plan processes, added the document. One recommendation was that a national bioenergy strategy be developed to set out the general aims for bioenergy use into the future, and a level of ambition for deployment in the context of climate and energy goals, security of energy supply, sustainability and balanced regional development. 

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Just four fines issued for wood-burning complaints in a year in England

By Helena Horton
The Guardian
December 19, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Only four fines out of 5,600 complaints have been issued for illegal burning of wood in smoke-control areas from September 2023 to August 2024 in England, data has revealed… A recent survey found 22% of the UK public use an open fire and/or wood-burning stove in their home. It also found that 37% of Londoners surveyed said they use an open fire and/or a wood-burning stove in their home, despite the capital being a smoke-control area. In smoke-control areas, which have higher levels of pollution, people can only burn wood and other unauthorised fuels in government-approved stoves and other appliances. This is because the approved appliances have air control mechanisms that improve combustion efficiency and reduce the amount of harmful particles released.

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From ‘tipping points’ to ‘sleeper species’: this year’s known unknowns of the climate crisis

By Ian Shine
World Economic Forum
December 17, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The phrase “carbon footprint” is understood across the world today, but this was not the case when it was first used around the start of the 21st century. The nature and climate crisis has resulted in a raft of vocabulary to explain new phenomena that we all need to learn. But more important than learning the words themselves is developing an understanding of the dynamics behind them, the impacts they could have and – crucially – the way to act now to limit the full scope of their potential future impacts. Here are five phrases that are rising in prominence, the stories behind them and ideas about how to tackle emerging threats.

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Forest Fires

Heat wave leads to warnings of potentially devastating wildfires in southern Australia

By Keiran Smith
The Associated Press
December 26, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: International

NEWCASTLE, Australia — Communities and firefighters across Australia’s second-most populous state were preparing Thursday for potentially devastating wild fires as a heat wave fanned by erratic winds presented the worst fire conditions in several years. With temperatures in Victoria state reaching 37 degrees Celsius and with wind changes expected throughout the day, fire chiefs have issued stark warnings to rural communities to delay travel or leave their homes and seek safety at shelters. Several fires are currently burning out of control across the state and Victoria deputy premier Ben Carroll said the possibility for further fires in the coming days was likely. …Parts of neighboring South Australia and New South Wales states are also on high alert due to the heat wave and elevated fire risks. The hot, dry conditions are being compared to the Black Summer fires  in 2019-20 that burned through 104 thousand square kilometers, and destroyed thousands of homes and killed 33 people.

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