Region Archives: International

Opinion / EdiTOADial

For Most Forest Products The First Half Of 2026 Will Look A Lot Like 2025: ERA Forest Products Research

By Kevin Mason, Managing Director
ERA Forest Products Research
January 1, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States, International

Kevin Mason

Economic Outlook: Risks abound for 2026 and beyond but we see little chance of upside surprises for global GDP growth next year. Instead, we forecast modest declines in both US and Chinese GDP in 2026, with the Eurozone growth rate nudging up slightly from depressed levels. US-driven tariffs will stabilize but remain a drag and may become the norm for the next three years. As we’ve noted before, demand won’t be driving upside for the forest sector. Interest rate relief in the US continues to lag earlier expectations (with two further, 25bps cuts expected next year), and a US housing recovery will likely be pushed out to the second half of 2026 at the earliest (potentially 2027). A further weakening of the USD relative to other major currencies will create additional headwinds for US-based producers focused on exports but should also put downward pressure on US imports. 

Forest Products Outlook: For most markets, the first half of 2026 will look a lot like 2025, with oversupply resulting in weak prices and lacklustre earnings. Highlights include:

  • Housing starts will slip next year to 1.33MM as mortgage rates are expected to move only moderately lower. Affordability issues persist.
  • Log prices should trend sideways, with some markets up and others down. Demand from China could rise as its US log ban has ended.
  • Lumber prices will move up in 2026 as supply reductions related to high costs (duties, tariffs, etc.) begin to bite harder.
  • Panel prices are likely to remain rather low in 2026 due to OSB (particularly) facing oversupply issues as a couple of mills ramp up.
  • Pulp prices hinge on supply dynamics; the situation has changed as China has boosted its internal supply. Although prices are moving off their lows, shuts are needed to maintain upward momentum.
  • Newsprint demand will drop by double digits next year, but, with some mills currently offline, prices should hold until supply restarts.
  • Paper prices will be mixed, with expectations for an increase in uncoated woodfrees; most other grades should hold at/near year-end levels. The removal of tariffs would push prices lower.
  • Containerboard producers are expected to drive a price hike in Q1 given the massive capacity shuts this year. Demand will remain sluggish, but rising box shipments aren’t needed to support hikes.

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Froggy Foibles

This Adorable New Species of Pumpkin Toadlet Can Fit on the Tip of a Pencil

By Rosie McCall
Discover Magazine
December 15, 2025
Category: Froggy Foibles
Region: International

©Luiz Fernando Ribeiro, CC-BY 4.0

Biologists have discovered a new species of pumpkin toadlet, an adorable, carrot-hued amphibian that fits on the tip of a pencil and inhabits the cloud forests of the Serra do Quiriri mountain range in southern Brazil. Researchers identified the toadlet after observing the unique advertising calls produced by males to attract members of the opposite sex. The species — named Brachycephalus lulai after the Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva — has now been described for the first time in the journal Plos One. …And yet, despite having a skin color that resembles a high-vis jacket, these toadlets are surprisingly hard to spot. It was their impressive vocal performance, not their looks, that led to their discovery.

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Frog gut bacterium eliminates cancer tumors in mice with a single dose

By Bronwyn Thompson
The New Atlas
December 16, 2025
Category: Froggy Foibles
Region: International

©Wikipedia

[A Fabulous Frog Feature in our Foibles] A bacterium from the intestines of Japanese tree frogs has “exhibited remarkably potent” tumor-killing abilities when administered intravenously, outperforming current standard therapies and paving the way for an entirely new approach to treating cancer. Researchers at the Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (JAIST) had taken a keen interest in amphibian and reptile gut microbes for several reasons – spontaneous tumors are very rare in these wild animal types, and when they do appear they’re generally linked to pollutants or lab conditions. …In addition to this, these animals have long lifespans relative to size, and naturally endure extreme cellular stress … and live in pathogen-rich habitats, which would normally be considered things to elevate cancer risk, not lower it. …The team isolated 45 bacterial strains from the tree frogs … and found that giving a single shot of E. americana intravenously to mice with colorectal cancer, completely eliminated tumors in every treated animal.

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Business & Politics

Will Trump Torpedo North American Trade?

By Stephania Taladrid
The New Yorker
December 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, International

The negotiations that remade the North American Free Trade Agreement were, as one participant put it, a series of “near-death” experiences. …In the years since the U.S.M.C.A was signed, Mexico and Canada have become America’s top trading partners. Millions of jobs depend on this economic alliance, which exceeds $1.8 trillion in trade. …Last week, Trump suggested that he would exit the U.S.M.C.A.: “We’ll either let it expire or, well, maybe work out another deal with Mexico and Canada.” Some observers discount Trump’s bluster as mere gamesmanship. …He returned to the White House on a promise to create jobs and lower prices—to make the country “boom like we’ve never boomed before.” Instead, tariffs are fuelling inflation, and many experts believe that it is only a matter of time before the economy starts hemorrhaging jobs. …As in the previous round of negotiations, time does not appear to be on Trump’s side.

In related coverage:

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US plywood importer says ‘manifest injustice’ would result from US Court of International Trade refusal to reconsider evasion ruling

By Kathryn Nucci
Trade Law Daily
January 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

Plywood importer InterGlobal Forest, which is seeking a rehearing of its case challenging CBP’s finding that it evaded antidumping and countervailing duties on plywood from China, said Jan. 2 that the government’s response to its motion for reconsideration (see 2512150042) “ignores” its “substantive arguments that the Government is required to complete the administrative record” and “fails to refute IGF’s argument that there has been a manifest injustice in this case” (American Pacific Plywood v. United States, CIT Consol. # 20-03914). …“The main problem with the Government and Court depicting the confession of judgment as a ‘settlement’ is that Richmond never wanted to settle and never agreed to the confession of judgment. …The importer also disagreed that it had failed to exhaust any argument that its products were out-of-scope because LB Wood never used three-ply plywood from China in its production processes.” [to access the full story a Trade Law Daily subscription is required]

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Drax Pauses Plans For Pellet Capacity Expansion, Considers Plans For Data Center

By Erin Krueger
Biomass Magazine
December 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

Drax Group on Dec. 11 released a trading update, reporting the company has no near-term or medium-term plans to expand wood pellet production capacity. Work on the proposed 450,000-metric-ton-per-year pellet plant in Longview, Washington, will remain paused, according to the company.  In the medium term, Drax said its US wood pellet business is “well underpinned by sales into the U.K.” Drax’s Canadian business, primarily sells wood pellets into the Asian market, is expected to be more challenged, contributing to the company’s recent decision to close its facility in Williams Lake, British Columbia. “Against this backdrop the group does not currently expect to invest in additional capacity in the short to medium term,” Drax said. …The company also confirmed it is continuing to assess options for own-use and third-party sales, from existing and new markets, including sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), which could represent a major market opportunity from 2030 onwards. 

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Premier Forest Acquires National Timber Systems enhancing capability across the UK

Premier Forest Products
December 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Newport, United Kingdom — National Timber Systems was previously part of National Timber Group UK, which entered administration in late November. We have acquired the business from the administrators, securing continuity for NTS’s operations, customers and manufacturing footprint. This acquisition safeguards 160 jobs at NTS, with plans to grow this number to 250. National Timber Systems supplies national and regional housebuilders, as well as the construction and modular sectors, with a range of engineered timber products and services. These include the BBA-accredited NTSROOF® panelised roof system, roof trusses, engineered joists and specialist roof and floor cassette solutions. …The transaction sees Premier Forest acquiring NTS operations in Bristol, Catterick and Newcastle, plus the assets of the Sheffield site, with the aim to return to full production capacity to meet customer demand.

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China’s Huatai Group launches 16-billion-yuan forest-pulp-paper project

By Simon Matthis
Pulp and Paper News
December 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

China’s pulp and paper sector is witnessing transformative growth with Huatai Group’s announcement of its monumental 16-billion-yuan investment in a fully integrated forest-pulp-paper project located in Yulin, Guangxi.  This state-of-the-art facility is designed to produce 400,000 tons of dissolving pulp, 600,000 tons of chemical wood pulp, and 900,000 tons of eco-friendly industrial paper each year. Supported by a vast 1.5-million-mu raw material forest base—equivalent to approximately 100,000 hectares—the project exemplifies the industry’s shift toward vertical integration, securing supply chains against volatile raw material prices and enhancing operational resilience. The initiative aligns with broader trends in China’s paper industry, where capacity expansions in coastal provinces like Shandong and Guangxi are reshaping global pulp dynamics. According to industry reports, new large-scale projects from leaders such as Sun Paper and Huatai are set to commence operations from the fourth quarter of 2025 through 2026, amplifying China’s dominance in paper production.

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Suzano Starts Up New Production Line, Boosting Its Fluff Pulp Capacity by 400%

By Suzano
Businesswire
December 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

SÃO PAULO, Brazil — Suzano has commenced operations this week at its new fluff pulp production line located in its Limeira unit in Brazil’s São Paulo state. This R$490 million investment increases Suzano’s total fluff pulp production capacity by more than 400%, from 100,000 to 440,000 tonnes per year. The project involved converting the existing pulp line at the Limeira unit into a flexible machine, capable of producing both Eucafluff® and market pulp. Eucafluff® is used in the production of absorbent and personal hygiene products, such as baby and adult diapers, sanitary pads and pet pads. Then market pulp is supplied for making products including toilet paper, printing and writing papers, and paper packaging. Launched in 2015, Eucafluff® is the world’s first fluff pulp made from eucalyptus.

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Forestry Leader Honored for Outstanding Service

Mirage News
December 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Australian forestry pioneer, innovator and long-serving AFPA Board member James Malone has been honoured today for his outstanding service and leadership of the industry. As a well-known leader of the forestry sector, Mr Malone – a co-founder of Wesbeam – recently announced his retirement, and has stepped down from AFPA’s Board after serving for almost a decade. AFPA Chief Executive Officer Diana Hallam said: “James is a true pioneer, entrepreneur and highly respected leader of our industry, who has led the way with distinction and foresight over many years. “I sincerely congratulate James on his remarkable forestry and business career, and his innovative and valuable contributions to o

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Finance & Economics

The US, Canada, and Europe face diverging paths in softwood lumber

By Håkan Ekström and Glen O’Kelly
Global Wood Trends in American Journal of Transportation
December 16, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

A new outlook report, Softwood Lumber – Tariffs, Turbulence and New Trade Flows to 2030… points to a decade defined by structural supply constraints, shifting trade routes, and rising pressure on producers, policymakers, and downstream users. The US has never produced enough softwood lumber to meet its own consumption needs, and that deficit is expected to persist through 2030. …In 2025, foreign producers are projected to meet nearly 30% of US softwood needs, close to the highest level in almost 20 years. Market realities do not support claims that the US can achieve self-sufficiency. …Even if capital were available, expansion would be limited by regional timber availability, workforce shortages, permitting delays, and delivered-cost disadvantages versus imported wood. Near-term US demand remains uncertain but long-term housing needs point to renewed growth late in the decade. New US tariffs taking effect in October 2025 are expected to reduce Canadian shipments and increase price volatility.

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Weak global demand hits China’s timber industry

The Sarawak Tribune
January 7, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

KUCHING, Malasia — Chinese timber companies are struggling in their businesses due to insufficient orders for their products amid a weak global market. They have complained about poor demand in the timber market and intense competition in terms of product prices. Adding to their woes are rising raw material costs, according to the key challenges reported in the Global Timber Index-China Index report in November 2025. …To mitigate the challenges, Chinese enterprises suggested the need to expand into international markets to increase the volume of orders for their products, and called for government policy support for their operations. …Back home, China reported strong domestic retail sales of furniture, reaching 17.9 billion yuan in October, a 9.6 per cent increase from a year ago. …In a related development, China reported a robust export market for its particleboard, which surged by 67 per cent in volume.

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Timber imports nudged upwards during Q3, Timber Development UK stats show

By Stephen Powney
The Timber Trades Journal
December 9, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

New timber import figures covering Q3 2025 reveal an ongoing mixed picture for the sector, with year-to-date volumes still trailing 2024 but showing some signs of improvement as the year progressed. The latest statistics from Timber Development UK (TDUK) confirm that total imports in the first nine months of 2025 reached 7.01 million m³ – some 2.1% below the 7.15 million m³ recorded in the same period of 2024. This gap has narrowed since the half-year point, however, when volumes were down by 2.9%. This slight uplift has been driven by a need to replenish stocks after the flurry of construction activity we saw in Q2. This resulted in a more positive third quarter for imports, when we saw higher volumes than in Q3 2024 across the softwood, hardwood, plywood, OSB and engineered wood product sectors. Overall imports for the quarter were only 0.2% lower than Q3 2024, with a marked drop in MDF imports preventing combined volumes from moving into year-on-year growth. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

TreeFree Diaper Core — The Region’s First 0% Tree-Fiber Baby Diapers

By GreenCore Solutions Corp.
Cision Newswire
December 16, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West, International

VANCOUVER, BC and PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico – GreenCore Solutions Corp. today announced ecoVerificado.com, a new industrial standard that enables Latin American OEM baby diaper manufacturers (OEM-Cs) to produce premium ecological private-label diapers using TreeFree Diaper Core at the same cost–or lower–than standard branded diapers. For the first time, producers in Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, and Chile can offer retailers Zero-Tree product with major environmental gains–without imposing a European-style “Green Premium” on local families. …By adopting TreeFree Diaper® Core, manufacturers eliminate wood fiber entirely-removing the regulatory trigger for foreign audits and fees while lowering COGS. “We’re giving domestic producers the ability to say no to the German ‘Tree Tax’,” said Matthew Keddy, CEO of GreenCore Solutions.

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“The Timber Truth” published to dispel timber construction misconceptions

By Stephen Powney
The Timber Trades Journal
January 8, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

UK — Forestry and timber certification body PEFC has released The Timber Truth, a new publication that provides fact-based insights into some of the most persistent misconceptions surrounding timber construction. Written by Dr Pablo van der Lugt, a civil engineer and international advocate of biobased building — the book offers a concise, technically grounded overview of topics central to today’s timber debate: fire safety, structural performance, material availability, CO storage, sustainable forest management, and circular use of wood. …The Timber Truth aims to equip architects, engineers, developers, and policymakers with accurate information for decision-making in low-carbon and circular construction. The foreword is authored by UK architect Andrew Waugh, a pioneer in large-scale timber architecture. The publication draws on insights from thousands of participants in PEFC’s Tomorrows Timber Talks… to address knowledge gaps in timber construction and update them on the latest developments in wood and wood products.

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Deforestation: Council signs off targeted revision to simplify and postpone the regulation

Council of the European Union
December 18, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The Council formally adopted a targeted revision of the EU regulation on deforestation-free products (EUDR), aimed at simplifying its implementation and ensuring that operators, traders and authorities are adequately prepared for its application. The revision streamlines the due diligence requirements and postpones the application of the regulation for all operators until 30 December 2026, with an extra six-month cushion for micro and small operators. This responds to concerns raised by member states and stakeholders regarding administrative burden and the readiness of the IT system necessary for the effective functioning of the EUDR, while fully preserving the regulation’s objectives of preventing deforestation and forest degradation linked to products placed on the EU market. To further reduce administrative burden, certain printed products (such as books, newspapers, printed pictures) were removed from the scope of the regulation, reflecting the limited deforestation risk associated with these items.

Additional coverage by Gordon Murray, Wood Pellet Association of Canada: WPAC discusses EUDR amendment

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Why old books smell so good, according to science

The Times of India
January 5, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The smell of an old book … escapes as a cover is eased open or a stiff page lifted, settling briefly in the air between hand and paper. In libraries and second-hand shops, it is a faint but persistent smell… It is often associated with comfort and habit, yet it has a material basis. Conservators and chemists treat it as evidence of physical change. Paper, ink, glue, and binding age continuously, releasing compounds that remain present long after printing. What is sensed is the slow chemistry of use and storage. …Paper accounts for much of the smell associated with old books. From the nineteenth century onwards, most paper was produced from wood pulp containing cellulose fires and lignin. Over time, these components undergo chemical change. Cellulose chains fracture and shorten. Lignin oxidises and breaks into smaller fragments. These processes release volatile organic compounds that drift from the page surface.

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UK Environment Agency launches new waste wood Regulatory Position Statement

The Timber Trades Journal
December 18, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

UK – The Wood Recyclers’ Association (WRA) welcomed the publication of a new Regulatory Position Statement (RPS) in England specifically for waste wood, following successful calls from the WRA on behalf of the waste wood industry. RPS 361 allows sites which have been impacted by unplanned downtime at biomass plants, incinerators and panel board manufacturing facilities to apply to temporarily exceed their permitted storage limits. Importantly, the RPS applies to sites storing wood destined for panel board manufacture for the first time. …The RPS comes following ongoing pressure in the waste wood market, with many sites inundated with material – something the WRA has been in regular discussions with the regulators about across the four nations. Vicki Hughes. said “This RPS gives permitted sites storing waste wood in England the opportunity to apply for additional storage and help ensure this material is not sent to landfill or incineration.”

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New plant-based plastic decomposes in seawater without forming microplastics

By Aamir Khollam
Interesting Engineering
December 16, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Japan — Plastic pollution has proven stubbornly resistant to quick fixes. Even so-called biodegradable plastics often linger in the environment, breaking down into microplastics that spread through ecosystems and bodies alike. Now, researchers in Japan say they have created a plant-based plastic that sidesteps that trap. The material stays strong during use, yet breaks down rapidly in natural settings without leaving microscopic debris behind. …Cellulose-based plastics already exist, but most do not decompose quickly in marine environments. …The new plastic builds on that earlier concept. One polymer comes from carboxymethyl cellulose, a wood-pulp derivative that is already FDA-approved and biodegradable. The second component proved harder to identify. After extensive testing, the team selected a safe crosslinking agent made from positively charged polyethylene-imine guanidinium ions.

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Forestry

EU Deforestation Rule: Creating Administrative Hurdles and Market Barriers Rather than Saving Forests

By Samantha Ayoub, Economist
The American Farm Bureau Federation
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

The EU Deforestation Rule has already caused supply chain hurdles for American farmers, ranchers and foresters, and the rule has not even begun being enforced. EU farmers themselves have raised concerns over their compliance requirements and received additional flexibilities, and member governments are still navigating how to implement the complex auditing system. With these logistical challenges clear even to EU officials, the European Commission has voted to once again delay the rule’s implementation until 2026 and 2027 for large and small businesses, respectively. However, as long as the rule stands as currently drafted, agricultural supply chains will be strained from the looming enforcement deadline. Overall, the EU fails to recognize the long-standing position of American farmers and ranchers as global leaders in agricultural production with environmental stewardship. A rule that was originally targeted to penalize bad actors in the global marketplace has now hindered some of the most productive producers in the world.

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Germany’s dying forests are losing their ability to absorb CO2. Can a new way of planting save them?

By Patrick Greenfield
The Guardian
January 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The intense green of spring cannot mask the dead trees in the Harz mountains. Standing upright across northern Germany, thousands of skeletal trunks mark the remnants of a once great spruce forest. Since 2018, the region has been ravaged by a bark beetle outbreak, made possible by successive droughts and heatwaves. …The loss has sparked a reckoning with the modern forestry methods pioneered by Germany that often rely on expanses of monoculture plantations. The ferocity of the beetle outbreak means there is no going back to the old way of doing things: replacing the dead spruce with saplings from the same species would probably guarantee catastrophe once again. Instead, foresters have been experimenting with a different approach: pockets of beech, firs and sycamore have been planted around the surviving spruce to make sure the returning forest is more biodiverse. 

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Rising tree death rates in all types of Australian forest tied to climate change

By Peter de Kruijff
ABC News, Australia
January 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Australia’s trees must contend with many lethal factors, from intense megafires to introduced diseases and invasive species. But beyond these specific pressures, new research indicates the underlying natural death rate of trees in major forests across the country is rising. This increase in tree deaths is due to higher average temperatures from climate change, according to a study published in the journal Nature Plants, and it has scientists concerned that forests will sequester less carbon dioxide in years to come. …Senior study author and plant physiological ecologist Belinda Medlyn, from Western Sydney University, said the research team was “startled” to see tree death rates, from cool temperate forests in southern Tasmania up to the savannas of the tropical north, steadily increase over the past six decades. …”Seeing this increase in mortality over time … suggests that it is really a global phenomenon, that we are seeing changes to forest function.”

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Noah’s Ark for plants: The man in charge of logging every native seed in Ireland

The Journal Ireland
December 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Darren Reidy

THE MAN IN charge of logging each native seed in Ireland has described the project as like “Noah’s Ark” for plants – a vault for renewal after ecological disasters. Conservation ecologist Darren Reidy has been researching, gathering and banking native seeds across Ireland since his appointment in 2022. ‘Banking’ the seeds of a native Irish plant is complicated – ideally you would need 10,000 seeds per species. If the plant is endangered, an assessment of all populations on the island is done to decide if it is safe to bank the species’ seeds, and if it is, they can take only 10% of the fruit. Reidy gave the example of critically endangered whitebeam trees that grow only in Ireland. “We only have five individuals of this species on the entire island, and they all occur in Killarney National Park in Kerry,” he said. “Only one of them is producing fruit. So this summer, I travelled to Killarney to collect fruit.

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Establishment of Forest Certification Ireland Board a Positive Development

Irish Farmers Association
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

IFA Farm Forestry Chair Padraig Stapleton has acknowledged the establishment of the Group Forest Certification Ireland Board as a positive development for the Irish forestry sector. This follows the inaugural meeting of the Board which was held this week. IFA Forestry Policy Executive Amy Mulchrone has been appointed as a member of the Board by Minister Michael Healy-Rae. “The establishment of the Group Forest Certification Ireland board is a positive initiative by the Minister. The increased focus on voluntary certification of privately-owned forests that this Board will now hopefully bring should significantly scale up the area certified. To date, only 8% are certified, substantially lower than Coillte plantations, which have dual certification from both the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and the Programme of Forest Certification (PEFC).”

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Forestry chief warns Scotland set to miss planting targets again

By Katharine Hay
The Scotsman
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Forestry leaders have warned Scotland will fail to meet its planting targets for yet another year amid concern investment is going elsewhere. Since annual targets for woodland expansion were set, the Scottish Government has missed the goal every year apart from 2018, when it was met for the first time. In recent years, planting rates have often fallen significantly short of the set targets, with the year from 2022 to 2023 seeing only 8,190 hectares of a 15,000 target planted. Jon Lambert, of Goldcrest Land & Forestry Group, an independent UK firm of chartered surveyors and foresters based in Edinburgh, warned the figures are down because of the lengthy and clunky grant application process. “The amount of planting in Scotland is way down than it should be,” said Mr Lambert.

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Douglas-fir shows early promise as Sitka spruce replacement

By Jack Haugh
UK Forestry Journal
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Douglas-fir may prove to be a productive alternative to Sitka spruce for the UK’s commercial forestry sector. That is one of the early conclusions from ongoing research to test the suitability of 17 tree species as potential options for future timber production. Taking place across a network of nine large-scale experiments (in locations such as the Newcastleton, Cowal, and the Black Isle), the Forest Research-led investigation also found Douglas fir had the promise for further use in the south and east of the country, where the climate is forecast to become significantly hotter and drier than today. While already considered by many as a serious option, the species only makes up around 4 per cent of the UK’s total commercial forest.

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Six researchers receive Wallenberg grants for forestry-related social research

Umeå University
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Six researchers at Umeå University will receive SEK 38 million in grants from the Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation and the Marcus and Amalia Wallenberg Memorial Fund for humanities and social science research with forestry relevance. Almost half of the thirteen projects approved are going to Umeå University, which demonstrates the university’s strength and breadth in this field. “The Swedish forestry issue has largely relied on research in natural sciences and technology, but forestry is really a social and humanistic issue, which is why this call for proposals is both relevant and innovative. And the fact that we have six projects … is a good indication of the breadth of our research in this area,” says Thomas Olofsson, Deputy Vice-Chancellor for research. Louise Eriksson, docent in psychology and researcher in environmental psychology, will receive a grant of six million Swedish kronor to investigate acceptance of climate-adapted forest management.

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Merger to create New Zealand’s Leading Independent Forestry Manager

By Forests360
Scoop Independent News
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Two of New Zealand’s leading forestry businesses – PF Olsen and Forest360 – announced their merger to create the largest independent forest management company in Australasia. As part of the transaction, PF Olsen and Forest360 will bring on private investor Adamantem Capital as an investment partner, alongside existing PF Olsen cornerstone shareholder Quayside Holdings to support the group’s next stage of growth. Combining decades of experience, complementary services and deep regional roots, the merger will make for a stronger, more resilient business for forestry clients across New Zealand and Australia. Together, the group will manage approximately 480,000 hectares of forest and support more than 1000 clients, from major institutional investors to family-run businesses and private landowners. …Existing executives will lead the merged entity, with Forest360’s Dan Gaddum being appointed Group CEO, PF Olsen’s Ross Larcombe appointed Group Chief Commercial Officer and Forest360’s Marcus Musson appointed Group Chief Operating Officer.

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EU deforestation law: Council and Parliament reach a deal on targeted revision

European Council
December 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Council’s presidency and the European Parliament’s representatives reached a provisional political agreement on a targeted revision of the EU regulation on deforestation-free products (EUDR). The aim is to simplify the implementation of the existing rules and postpone their application to allow operators, traders and authorities to prepare adequately. …The co-legislators supported the Commission’s targeted simplification of the due diligence process… opting instead for a clear extension of the application date for all operators until 30 December 2026, with an extra six-month cushion for micro and small operators. …The co-legislators also agreed to remove certain printed products (such as books, newspapers, printed pictures) from the scope of the regulation, reflecting the limited deforestation risk associated with these items. The European Commission has been tasked by both co-legislators with conducting a simplification review and presenting a report by 30 April 2026. The agreement will have to be formally adopted by both institutions.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Arctic Bioenergy Summit Heads to Yellowknife, Jan. 26–28, 2026

Wood Pellet Association of Canada
December 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

The Arctic Energy Alliance and the Wood Pellet Association of Canada will co-host the Arctic Bioenergy Summit and Tour this January in Yellowknife—an emerging hub for northern renewable energy innovation. With the speaker roster nearly complete, Day 1 will set the tone with a deep dive into bioenergy’s role across Canada’s North, from evolving policy frameworks to community-led energy solutions. Sessions will explore regional strategies, technology developments, and bioenergy success stories, highlighting what’s working in remote and Indigenous communities and the lessons learned along the way. Speakers will also tackle supply-chain challenges, including logistics, fuel production and distribution, and the unique complexities of operating in northern climates. The program wraps up with a networking reception—an opportunity for delegates to connect, share insights, and build partnerships advancing sustainable energy in the Arctic and beyond.

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We discovered microbes in bark ‘eat’ climate gases. This will change the way we think about trees

By Luke Jeffrey, Southern Cross University
The Conversation AU
January 8, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — Our research has uncovered the hidden world of the tiny organisms living in the bark of trees. We discovered they are quietly helping to purify the air and remove greenhouse gases. These microbes “eat”, or use, gases like methane and carbon monoxide for energy and survival. Most significantly, they also remove hydrogen, which has a role in super-charging climate change. …Bark was long assumed to be largely biologically inert in relation to climate. But our findings show it hosts active microbial communities that influence key atmospheric gases. …Over the past five years, collaborative research between Southern Cross and Monash universities studied the bark of eight common Australian tree species. We found the trees in these contrasting ecosystems all shared one thing in common: their bark was teeming with microscopic life. …Trees could be a major, previously unrecognised, global natural system for drawing down hydrogen out of the atmosphere.

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Pyrolysis as a Strategic Instrument in Modern Forest Management

By Wayne Shen
Earth
January 6, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Forest management has entered a phase defined by competing pressures. Fire risk is rising. Biomass residues are accumulating. Carbon accounting expectations are tightening. Pyrolysis has emerged as a technical lever capable of addressing these constraints simultaneously. Its value lies not in abstract sustainability claims, but in its operational and ecological consequences when integrated into forestry systems. Reducing Fuel Load and Wildfire IntensitymOne of the most immediate benefits of pyrolysis in forest management is fuel load reduction. Thinning operations, deadwood removal, and post-harvest residues generate large volumes of low-grade biomass. When left unmanaged, this material increases wildfire probability and severity. …When treated as an ancillary technology, pyrolysis underperforms. When embedded as a strategic tool, it amplifies the effectiveness of existing management practices. Pyrolysis contributes by connecting fuel reduction, carbon management, soil health, and economic viability within a single operational logic. 

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Why nature should be the new bottom line for business in 2026

By Eva Zabey
Reuters
January 5, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Last year will be remembered as a real test of commitment for the global sustainability agenda. Political uncertainty and regulatory rollbacks, particularly the weakening of flagship EU legislation such as the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive and yet another delay in enforcing the European Union Deforestation Regulation, signal a troubling loss of resolve. These decisions reward inaction and deter the very ambition needed to secure long-term economic and environmental resilience. But the crisis of nature loss should not be left to the shifting winds of policy; it requires businesses to step forward and lead the way. As we enter 2026, a pivotal triple-COP year for climate, biodiversity and desertification, it’s time to look past the political noise. While compliance meets today’s requirements, only a deeper commitment to the environment can protect a business against the lasting costs of nature loss. 

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A Tough Year For Forestry in the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme

By Felix Brandt
PF Olson
December 17, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

NEW ZEALAND — Let’s not sugar coat it: this year was a tough year for forestry in the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS). It’s especially frustrating as we had begun to believe the government’s promise, made just after it took power in late 2023, to “restore credibility in the ETS”. Indeed, this promise looked plausible up until quite recently. After all, the LUC restrictions, while unpopular among forestry companies and investors, had been clearly communicated long before the 2023 election. So no surprises there – except for a pleasant surprise in August, when the government announced it would not adopt the Climate Change Commission’s somewhat perplexing recommendation to reinject about 14 million of unsold auction NZUs from 2028 to 2030. The positive streak finally ended in October when the government began a staccato of policy tweaks that have cumulatively undermined confidence in the government’s commitment to climate change mitigation and, by extension, the ETS.

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How the Next Big Thing in Carbon Removal Sunk Without a Trace

By Alexandra Talty
Wired Magazine
December 11, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Marty Odlin

With support from Microsoft, Stripe, and Shopify, Running Tide billed itself as on the cutting edge of carbon removal. In the end, it resorted to dumping thousands of tons of wood chips in the sea.  American Marty Odlin spoke at a town hall meeting in Akranes, Iceland. Odlin, the founder of a US climate startup called Running Tide, had become a well-known figure around Akranes that summer of 2022… He was setting up a base of operations in a nearby harbor, planning to unleash a counteroffensive against climate change. Odlin had outlined a plan to create jobs in this former fishing hub of 8,000. He’d need people to help sink huge volumes of biomass in the surrounding ocean. …Hróbjartsson, Running Tide’s former general manager, is skeptical about how much positive impact the marine carbon-removal industry can have. “We’re just making a prettier carbon-offset market,” he says of the industry. “It’s lipstick on a pig.”

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Authors retract Nature paper projecting high costs of climate change

Retraction Watch
December 5, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The authors of a highly publicized study predicting climate change would cost $38 trillion a year by 2049 have retracted their paper following criticism of the data and methodology, including that the estimate is inflated. “The economic commitment of climate change,” which appeared April 17, 2024, in Nature, looked at how changes in temperature and precipitation could affect economic growth. Forbes, the San Diego Union-Tribune and other outlets covered the paper, which has been accessed over 300,000 times. It has been cited 168 times, according to Clarivate’s Web of Science. But after two commentaries published this August raised questions about the study’s data and methodology, the researchers revisited their findings. “The authors acknowledge that these changes are too substantial for a correction,” the retraction notice, published today, states. The authors, from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, revised their analysis… and plan to submit a revision for peer review.

In related coverage:

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Health & Safety

Wildfire emissions in 2025 reach records for Europe and Canada

By Iain Hoey
International Fire & Safety Journal
December 5, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, International

The Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) has reported that global wildfire emissions from January to November 2025 reached around 1,380 megatonnes of carbon, with record European Union emissions and Canada recording its second highest annual total in the CAMS dataset. CAMS compared the 2025 figure with estimated emissions of 1,850 megatonnes of carbon from January to November 2024 and 1,940 megatonnes over the full year 2024. According to CAMS, Canada contributed an estimated 263 megatonnes of carbon to the 2025 total, with only 2023 recording a higher annual figure in the 23 year dataset that began in 2003. CAMS noted that biomass burning in tropical Africa remains the largest contributor to global biomass burning emissions, and that this region has driven an overall decline over the past two decades because of fewer savanna fires. In contrast, CAMS data show rising emissions in recent years in other regions, including North America between 2023 and 2025 and the record fire season in South America in 2024.

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Why Trump is backing Bayer in weedkiller cancer battle

By Nik Martin
Deutsche Welle (DW)
December 22, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, International

The long-running legal fight over Bayer’s weedkiller Roundup has seen nearly 200,000 cancer claims filed in US courts over the past seven years and is now being turned into a political tug of war. In prior Roundup lawsuits, the US Justice Department under former President Joe Biden, had argued that consumers should be allowed to pursue damages against Germany’s chemical giant, with most claims involving non‑Hodgkin lymphoma after long-term exposure to the pesticide. Earlier this month, however, President Donald Trump’s administration reversed course. After the US Supreme Court sought the Solicitor General’s view, the Justice Department sided with Bayer and urged limits on the tens of thousands of outstanding claims. Bayer has already paid out around $10 billion to settle disputed cancer claims in the US. …Bayer’s case is being closely watched in Europe, where the European Union has extended glyphosate’s approval until 2033 despite fierce opposition from environmental groups. 

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Forest History & Archives

Collecting a Future Forest: My First Cone Harvest in Northern British Columbia, 1968

By Don Pigott
Yellow Point Propagation Ltd.
January 7, 2026
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada, Canada West, International

Don Pigott

Don Pigott is a forest seed and silviculture specialist whose career spans more than five decades in BC and internationally. He spent 13 years with MacMillan Bloedel’s Forest Research Division working in silviculture, tree improvement, and seed orchard management before founding Yellow Point Propagation in 1982. Through Yellow Point, Don has worked extensively in seed collection, processing and storage, tree improvement, gene conservation, ecological restoration, and international cooperative research projects. This story looks back to where that career began.

In the spring of 1968, I was between my first and second year of forestry… jobs were hard to get, but I had the good fortune to land a job with a Forest Service marking crew in Quesnel. …What followed was a summer spent moving north, living out of a rusty 1956 Dodge station wagon, and working out of tiny ranger offices nestled between lakes and mosquito swamps. …You had to be quick… as hordes of mosquitos would follow in behind you. The work was varied and often enjoyable—checking bush mills, issuing burning permits, mapping scarified cutblocks, and learning firsthand why regeneration was such a challenge in the Interior at the time. …We could often establish hundreds of plots without finding any regeneration.

Then came the cone crop. …One of the best spruce cone crops in many years, and suddenly the focus shifted to seed. Armed with a .22 rifle that proved nearly useless, an axe, and later a rotating cast of fallers and helpers, we set up camp at Mossvale Lake. …It wasn’t pretty, efficient, or cheap. …Crews came and went, equipment failed, tempers flared, whiskey appeared, and responsibility arrived faster than experience. In the end, the quota was met—and the bill was memorable. …One of the most expensive collections in the history of the Forest Service. Looking back, that first cone collection was rough, chaotic, and deeply formative… a beginning that shaped everything that followed.

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How evergreen trees shaped human history

By Beth Saulnier, Cornellians
The Cornell Chronicle
December 9, 2025
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: International

In the early 1770s, American colonists furious over British meddling in their trade of a key agricultural product finally had enough and rose up – an act of rebellion that would ultimately spark a revolution. But this wasn’t the Boston Tea Party. It was the Pine Tree Riot – a bit of rural lawbreaking by some New Hampshire residents that would inspire their Massachusetts brethren a year later. And it’s just one of the myriad ways that evergreens have played a transformative role in human history – chronicled in “Evergreen,” a new book by Trent Preszler, M.S., Ph.D., a professor in the Cornell SC Johnson College of Business. …[The book] includes the trees’ connection to slavery in the Deep South, where workers were forced to clear-cut land for cotton cultivation; the environmental toll of today’s artificial Christmas trees, which Preszler decries as yet another source of plastic waste; and how the timber industry offered an unlikely refuge for gay men in an era when homosexuality was criminalized.

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