Region Archives: International

Business & Politics

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

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

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

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TAPPI announces new president and CEO as longtime leader plans 2025 retirement

By Simon Matthis
PulpPaperNews.com
October 29, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Lawton Roberts

TAPPI, the premier association for the global pulp, paper, tissue, packaging, and converting industries, announced the appointment of Lawton C. Roberts as its new President and CEO, effective November 3, 2025. Roberts will succeed Larry N. Montague, who is retiring at the end of 2025 after 19 years of leadership, according to Pulp & Paper Chronicle. “I’m confident Lawton is the right person to lead TAPPI into its next chapter”, as quoted by PaperAge. Roberts, currently TAPPI’s Chief Operating Officer, has been with TAPPI since 2017 and has worked alongside Montague since 2006 in various capacities. TAPPI is a non-profit, volunteer-led association that is built around “a community comprised of thousands of member engineers, managers, scientists, academics, suppliers and others from around the world”. TAPPI is headquartered right outside of Atlanta, Georgia.

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The Society of Plastics Engineers and the Plastics Industry Association are merging

By Don Loepp, Editor
Plastics News
October 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

For decades, we’ve said that the plastics industry needs to speak with a unified voice. …But let’s be honest: It hasn’t always been easy to achieve. Different sectors of the industry have different priorities. …But when cooperation is possible it can elevate the entire industry. That’s why I believe the planned merger of the Society of Plastics Engineers and the Plastics Industry Association is a smart, strategic move. …This isn’t just about cost savings or operational efficiency, although those benefits will come. It’s about mission alignment. The plastics industry is under intense public and political scrutiny, and frankly, it can’t afford fragmented messaging or siloed outreach efforts. By bringing together the technical expertise and global reach of SPE with the advocacy and policy influence of the Plastics Industry Association, the merged organization has a chance to advance shared goals.

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Finance & Economics

Mercer reports Q3, 2025 net loss of $81 million

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

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

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Tylenol, Kleenex, Band-Aid and more put under one roof in $48.7 billion consumer brands deal

By Michelle Chapman
The Associated Press
November 3, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

Kimberly-Clark is buying Tylenol maker Kenvue in a cash and stock deal worth about $48.7 billion, creating a massive consumer health goods company. Shareholders of Kimberly-Clark will own about 54% of the combined company. Kenvue shareholders will own about 46%. The combined company will have a large stable of household brands under one roof, putting Kenvue’s Listerine mouthwash and Band-Aid side-by-side with Kimberly-Clark’s Cottonelle toilet paper, Huggies and Kleenex tissues. It will also generate about $32 billion in annual revenue. Kenvue has spent a relatively brief period as an independent company, having been spun off by Johnson & Johnson two years ago. The deal announced Monday is among the largest corporate takeovers of the year. …The deal is expected to close in the second half of next year. It still needs approval from shareholders of both both companies. …Shares of Kimberly-Clark slipped more than 15% before the market open, while Kenvue’s stock jumped more than 20%.

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Billerud reports positive Q3, 2025 earnings

Investing.com
October 23, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

Swedish paper and packaging company Billerud reported Q3, 2025 earnings of SEK1,058 million, exceeding consensus estimates by 27% and showing improvement from the SEK912 million in the first quarter of 2025. The European segment delivered EBITDA of SEK652 million, surpassing analyst expectations of SEK481 million despite challenging market conditions, downtime, and oversupply issues. Third-quarter shipments totaled 624,000 tons, which represents a 9% decrease compared to the five-year average.North American operations contributed SEK467 million to EBITDA, beating consensus of SEK434 million, supported by solid conditions in graphic and label paper markets. U.S. tariffs have provided additional support for domestic producers.

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

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

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

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Japan Housing Starts Fall Less than Estimated

Trading View
October 30, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Japan’s housing starts dropped 7.3% year-on-year in September 2025, below market consensus of a 7.9% decline and slower than a 9.8% fall in the previous month. This marked the sixth consecutive monthly decrease but the mildest in the sequence. New dwelling starts fell at a slower rate for owned homes (-5.6% vs -10.6% in August) and prefabricated housing (-0.4% vs -13.3%). Meanwhile, new construction starts remained weak for rented (-8.2% vs -8.1%) and built-for-sale (-8.3% vs -8.2%). At the same time, housing starts rebounded for issued units (53.7% vs -67.5%), and two-by-four homes (2.1% vs -6.3%). [END]

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Finnish forestry firm UPM’s earnings nearly halve in third quarter

Reuters in Trading View
October 29, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Finnish forestry group UPM-Kymmene’s operating profit slumped 47% in the third quarter, hurt by low pulp prices, high wood costs and subdued consumer demand amid global trade tensions. The company reported comparable operating earnings of 153 million euros ($178.4 million) on Wednesday, slightly below the average forecast of 157.7 million euros from analysts polled by LSEG. Its shares fell around 2% in early trading in Helsinki. Nordic forestry companies’ profits have been squeezed by stubbornly high timber prices and low pulp prices in recent quarters. In the UPM Fibres division, low prices of the key paper-making ingredient resulted in significantly lower operating profit compared to last year, CEO Massimo Reynaudo said. “Wood costs reached their highest levels, even though wood market prices started to show the first signs of decline,” he added.

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International Softwood Conference charts performance of European softwood markets

By Stephen Powney
The Timber Trades Journal
October 27, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

European softwood markets have endured another challenging year but there is renewed hope for 2026, delegates at the International Softwood Conference (ISC) have heard in Norway. The October 22/23 event in Oslo was the 73rd edition of the ISC and was hosted by the Treindustrien, which co-organized the event with the two usual partners: the European Organization of the Sawmill Industry (EOS) and the European Timber Trade Federation (ETTF). The event drew over 260 participants from around the world. An economic overview of the sector was delivered by Johan Freij, who stressed the exceptional uncertainty facing the world today, with many trends pointing to structural inflation affecting economies for the years to come. On the brighter side, he said injections of cash into the European economy could revive the European outlook. Key points mentioned by speakers included challenges in terms of log supply, but promising signs, including the potential to improve log yields.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

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

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

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

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Timber Development UK publishes new guidance on the Construction Products Regulation

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

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

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

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

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

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Lyocell vs cotton: which fabric wins for sustainability in 2025?

World Day
October 29, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Understanding the differences between lyocell vs cotton becomes crucial when choosing sustainable, comfortable fabrics for your wardrobe and home. Over 68% of US consumers now prioritize eco-friendly textiles in their purchasing decisions, yet many remain confused about lyocell’s advantages over traditional cotton. This comprehensive guide reveals the exact properties, environmental impact, and performance characteristics that distinguish these two popular fabrics in 2025. …Lyocell is a regenerated cellulose fiber made from wood pulp through an innovative closed-loop manufacturing process that recovers over 99% of solvents used in production. …The choice between lyocell vs cotton depends on your priorities: sustainability goals, budget constraints, specific use applications, and care preferences. Neither fiber is universally superior—each excels in different scenarios. Choose lyocell if you prioritize: environmental sustainability, moisture-wicking performance, luxury feel, and durability. …Our sustainability analysis shows lyocell winning decisively with 78% less water usage, no pesticide requirements, and complete biodegradability. 

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Forestry

Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) to vote on new traceability rules amid fraud allegations

By Philip Jacobson
Mongabay.com
October 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, International

The world’s largest green timber label will vote next week on whether to begin work on new traceability rules, amid renewed scrutiny and accusations over whether the body is doing enough to prevent fraud within its supply chains. The Bonn-based Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) bills itself as “the world’s most trusted mark for sustainable forestry.” …But forestry experts and whistleblowers have alleged for years that the FSC lacks a proper control system, allowing bad actors to fraudulently pass off timber that was illegally or unsustainably logged as FSC-certified. Phil Guillery, who was the FSC’s integrity director from 2011-21, said in early October said that he believed “20-30% of claims in the system were false” during his tenure.” The FSC issued a swift rebuttal, calling them unsubstantiated and “based on outdated information that does not reflect the system today.” …However, a senior FSC official said that they believed the figure was actually an underestimate.

From FSC’s Statement on Recent Criticism: “References to widespread false FSC claims are based on outdated information that does not reflect the system today. …The article relies on a broad estimate of false claims without providing verified evidence to substantiate it.”

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Forest Stewardship Council General Assembly opens with a call for shared responsibility

Forest Stewardship Council International
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, International

The 2025 FSC General Assembly opened on 26 October in Panama City, uniting members from around the world for joint decision-making on the future of forest stewardship. …Panama’s Minister of Environment, His Excellency Mr. Juan Carlos Navarro, announced the country’s plan to formalize FSC certification across Indigenous territories, a milestone in national environmental policy. 174,000 hectares are in process of being certified today in Panama. “Stop blaming the FSC,” he stated. “Each of us must in our own countries guarantee sustainable development and guarantee with our actions, our strength and our passion, the survival of life around us.” FSC Board Chair Stuart Valentine provided a business report from the Board, reflecting on FSC’s new leadership, governance and strategic priorities, and what is coming in the future – including a new Global Strategy, revision of FSC’s Principles and Criteria, incorporation of risk-based approaches, and increased demonstration of FSC’s impact.  

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Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and The Roundtable on Sustainable Biomaterials (RSB) in support of biobased supply chains

Forest Stewardship Council
October 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

In a decisive step toward advancing the transition to a biobased economy, based on a more credible, interconnected, and efficient certification landscape, the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and The Roundtable on Sustainable Biomaterials (RSB) are joining forces in a new collaboration, supported by the ISEAL Innovations Fund. The project — “Frameworks for Recognition: Unlocking Certified Flows Across Sustainability Systems” — will develop and pilot robust, scalable methodologies that allow materials certified under one credible system, such as RSB’s bio-based inputs, to be recognised within another, such as FSC’s forest-based certification. If successful, this cross recognition certification model could represent a breakthrough for circular sourcing, improving  supply chain efficiency, and the scaling of biobased supply chains .Key outcomes from the partnership between FSC and RSB include: a scalable model for  mutual recognition between certification schemes,AI-Enhanced monitoring,  interoperable data sharing, Industrial trials.

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

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

©Michele Menegon

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

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

TanahAir
November 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

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

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United Nations says forests should form key plank of COP30

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

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

Related coverage:

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Interpol announces a new global fight against illegal deforestation

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

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

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

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

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

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Experts highlight Türkiye’s advanced, growing forest fire capacity

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

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

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Our law to ‘save’ nature is a rubber stamp for species extinction

By Natalie Kyriacou
Sydney Morning Herald
November 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Australian governments have perfected the art of watching things die, then approving more things to keep the dead things company. For example, many people assume that Australia’s federal nature law does something to protect the environment. But no. This law is known as the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999, and in practical terms, it’s mostly good at extincting things. The EPBC Act, at present, performs two key functions: it irritates business and destroys nature. …The results have been spectacular. Australia now has one of the highest rates of deforestation in the developed world and more than 2000 species teeter on the edge of extinction, all under the watchful eye of a law specifically designed to prevent exactly that. …In 2021, the Coalition government’s own independent review concluded that the act is not only ineffective, but that it actively harms nature.

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EU ambassadors rebel against Commission’s deforestation plans

By Sofia Sanchez Manzanaro
EURACTIV
October 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

A majority of EU ambassadors is advocating that the European Commission delay the enforcement of new anti-deforestation laws for everyone, not just small companies, three diplomatic sources told Euractiv on Wednesday. The news comes amid a new push in Brussels to delay and simplify the implementation of the EU’s new deforestation rules, approved in 2023. …Last week, the Commission unveiled plans to simplify reporting requirements by reducing the amount of data companies must upload to the IT system. The changes include a de facto exemption for small farmers and foresters who need only provide the postal code of their land. …However, as part of the same proposal, the Commission proposed only to delay enforcement for small companies and suspend non-compliance penalties for all operators for six months. Member states remain unconvinced. Most EU ambassadors said the rules should not take effect on 30 December 2025, and that any delay should cover all affected operators.

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Plantation forests are key for koalas’ survival: Researchers say urgent rethink on logging is needed

By Griffith University
Phys.Org
October 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

A new study has shown areas of state forest in Northern New South Wales, currently zoned as hardwood eucalypt plantation and slated for logging in 2025–2026, are in fact vital koala habitat. Tuckers Nob State Forest, southwest of Coffs Harbor, was analyzed in the collaborative research project between Griffith University, CQUniversity, conservation organizations and citizen scientists. Published in the journal Wild, the study combined drone technology, historical mapping, and ground surveys to track koala populations in the forest. The team’s findings challenged current assumptions that timber plantations lacked conservation value. “Instead, we’ve shown many plantation areas still contained original, high-quality eucalypt forest that supported our endangered koala populations,” said co-author Dr. Timothy Cadman, from Griffith University. …These findings suggested excluding areas such as the Tuckers Nob study site from the proposed Great Koala National Park footprint for the sake of logging was both “short-sighted and inconsistent with current conservation strategies.”

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To save the world’s tropical forests, learn from Brazil

The Economist
October 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Chopping down rainforests is daft. The social costs of clearing a typical patch of Brazilian Amazon are perhaps 30 times the benefits of rearing cows on it, by one estimate from 2023. The problem is, those costs, which include aggravating climate change, are spread across the entire world’s population, whereas the profits from cutting down the trees go to the men commanding the chainsaws. Somehow, the world has to find a way to make conservation pay. …Yet there is hope. Though Brazil lost more rainforest than any other country last year, due to to wildfires, it also shows how better policy can make a difference. …The pace of deforestation fell by 80% during Lula’s first terms (2003-11), and fell again when he returned in 2023, before the wildfires set things back. …Since preserving rainforests is a global public good, the world should help pay for it. [to access the full story an Economist subscription is required]

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‘Stronger Leadership’ Needed for Future of Forestry

By Charlie King
Sustainability Magazine
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Mikhail Tarasov

Mikhail Tarasov, IKEA Head of Forestry, on why unity, transparency & stronger FSC leadership is needed. …Responsible forest management lies at the heart of the fight against climate change and biodiversity loss. …To safeguard this capacity, responsible governance, transparent certification and collaboration across industries are more critical than ever. From from 26 to 31 October, FSC comes together for its General Assembly “to discuss a responsible future for the world’s forests and the people and animals who inhabit them”. …The system faces criticism from both ends of the spectrum. Some industry voices regard FSC’s standards as overly demanding; others argue they could be stricter. …“We see this tension as a sign of FSC’s strength — proof that it continues to navigate the complex realities of responsible forest management. “By engaging in tough conversations and seeking common ground, FSC is forging a path few others dare to take.”

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European wood, pulp and energy sectors urge delay to EU deforestation law

The European Organization of the Sawmill Industry
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

A coalition of 19 European associations say the recent amendments proposed by the European Commission to the EU Deforestation Regulation prolong a situation of costly uncertainty and unrealistic implementation timelines. The new proposal, and the very challenging timeline to have it approved, risks undermining both the credibility and the practical enforcement of the Regulation, while placing European operators in an untenable position of legal and operational uncertainty. …The signatories state that the newly revised regulation, still pending final approval, leaves little time for companies to adapt. …The group highlights that different enforcement dates across company sizes are unfeasible, since small firms must align immediately to avoid disrupting business relations. The statement urges the Commission to implement a “stop-the-clock” mechanism to allow more time for assessing the regulation’s practical impact and simplifying its obligations, while reaffirming support for the EUDR’s environmental objective of halting deforestation.

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Massive wildfires are forcing governments worldwide to budget more for disaster

By Mark Mann
Corporate Knights
October 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

…The World Resources Institute calculates that forests are burning at twice the rate they were two decades ago. In Canada … the frequency and severity of forest fires have quadrupled over the last half century. …the global wildfire defence market is projecting annual growth rates that range from 8.4% to 12.6%, much of it driven by public funding. For example, the United States’ budget for wildland fire management was $1.9 billion in 2025, a 10% increase from the previous year. …On October 22, a consortium of national organizations in Canada published an open letter to the federal government asking for a five-year investment of $4.1 billion in wildfire defence. …Coupled with U.S. auto tariffs, the wildfires prompted South Korea’s government to quickly assemble a US$8.6-billion supplementary budget, of which nearly a billion was earmarked for wildfire recovery. …The bushfire crisis of 2019/2020 in Australia caused AUD$2.4 billion of insured loss. …in 2025, Brazil allocated the equivalent of USD$95 million for firefighting efforts.

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From Forest to Fashion: Textile Exchange Conference delegates explore sustainable forestry in Portugal

The Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC)
October 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

As part of the official Textile Exchange Conference 2025 programme in Lisbon, over 20 sustainability professionals from leading global fashion brands stepped out of the city and into the forests of Talhadas, in Sever do Vouga, to experience first-hand how sustainably managed forests support responsible sourcing for the fashion and textile sectors. …The field visit also highlighted how collaboration between the forestry and fashion sectors can drive meaningful change. The project in Talhadas was made possible through industry support from the Inditex Group, whose investment is contributing to reforestation and biodiversity restoration in the region. This partnership demonstrates how brand commitments to sustainability and ESG goals can translate into real, on-the-ground impact. …For many attendees, the visit underscored a vital message: that sustainability in fashion begins with the forest. 

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Bill Gates makes a stunning claim about climate change

By David Goldman
CNN Business
October 28, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

Bill Gates

In a stunning and significant pushback to the “doomsday” climate activist community, Bill Gates, a leading proponent for carbon emissions reductions… argued resources must be shifted away from the battle against climate change. Instead, Gates argues, the world’s philanthropists must increase their investment in other efforts aimed at preventing disease and hunger. Climate change is not going to wipe out humanity, he argued, and past efforts that strive for achieving zero carbon emissions have made real progress. But Gates said that past investments fighting climate change have been misplaced, and too much good money has been put into expensive and questionable efforts. Although Gates said investment to battle climate change must continue, he argued that… a more urgent problem, inflicting potentially lasting global damage to the fight against famine and life-threatening preventable sickness. …“We should deal with problems in proportion to the suffering they cause.”

In related coverage by David Gelles, NY Times: The Two Big Questions Surrounding Bill Gates’s Climate Memo

  • Is this going to change the way people talk about climate change?
  • Will this change how climate efforts are funded?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Climate change falls over 20% behind top global concern in 2025 new Ipsos survey reveals 

Forest Stewardship Council
October 28, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Panama – Unveiled today at its General Assembly, the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) reports a sharp slide in public concern for climate change, even after the hottest year on record. The 2025 Global Consumer Awareness Survey – conducted with Ipsos across 50 countries and 40,000+ respondents – find war and conflict (52%) now dominate public worries while climate change trails at 31%. That is a 21-point gap in the 2025 snapshot. Looking only at the 32 countries surveyed in both 2022 and 2025, the concern gap has widened from 12 points in 2022 – where economic hardship was on top position – to 16 points in 2025. …While ‘climate change’ may rank lower as an abstract global issue in the 50-country snapshot, across the forestry module markets, the impacts felt through forests –wildfires, droughts, floods, and biodiversity loss – rank among the top concerns within the forestry sector.

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EU considers ‘brake clause’ in race to agree on 2040 climate goals

Yahoo! News
November 3, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

EU ministers are closing in on a deal for the bloc’s 2040 climate target, with a proposed ‘brake clause’ offering flexibility if Europe’s forests fail to absorb enough carbon. The “brake clause” could allow the European Union soften its 2040 climate target in future years – a move aimed at giving countries breathing room if Europe’s forests fail to soak up enough carbon dioxide to meet the goal. According to a draft proposal, EU countries are considering allowing an adjustment to the target if forest and land-use activities – which play a vital role in absorbing emissions – fall short. The idea is to build in some flexibility, without derailing the bloc’s overall climate ambitions. The EU’s environment ministers are expected to meet on 4 November in a bid to finalise the new 2040 target – in time for EC President Ursula von der Leyen to take a fresh commitment to the Cop30 climate summit on 6 November.

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Forests And Soil Reaching Critical Limits To Store Carbon, Study Finds

By Jamie Hailstone
Forbes Magazine
October 30, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The Earth’s forests, soil and oceans are reaching their critical limits to naturally store carbon, as decades of climate change take their toll, according to a new analysis. The annual 10 New Insights in Climate Science report warns weaker land carbon sinks, threaten to derail emissions projections and accelerating global warming at the same time. The study highlights how forests and soils in the Northern hemisphere are reaching critical limits and are increasingly affected by wildfires and permafrost thawing. The new report is a joint initiative of Future Earth, The Earth League, and the World Climate Research Programme. “The possibility that natural sinks are weakening at the current level of warming underscores the urgent need to accelerate both emissions reductions and carbon removal,” the report states. It also adds even the oceans are soaking up less carbon dioxide, while more frequent and intense marine heatwaves take their toll.

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Foresta welcomes Government support for wood energy as Kawerau plant planned

By Diane McCarthy
New Zealand Herald
October 28, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

A $9 million government boost to wood energy production has been welcomed by a company with its sights set on building a torrefied wood-pellet plant in Kawerau. …In line with the plan, the Government is offering $3m in co-funding via the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority and $6m in repayable grants to businesses looking at building wood-energy supply manufacturing facilities. Foresta, an Australian company planning to build a $410m wood-pellet plant in Kawerau, told Local Democracy Reporting that it had already applied for funding under the new facility. …Foresta said the planned Kawerau plant on Putauaki Trust industrial-zoned land could employ more than 75 people. …Foresta has proposed that a consistent supply of wood pellets to Huntly Power Station could be a viable option to offset issues around coal supply and reliance, while maintaining necessary power generation levels.

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