Region Archives: International

Business & Politics

Canada Prime Minister heads to Asia seeking new trade partners as US ties fray

Associated Free Press in France 24
February 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, International

Mark Carney

Toronto (Canada) – Prime Minister Mark Carney heads to Asia this week seeking to broaden international trade, part of his plan to reduce Canadian reliance on the United States, which he says has left the country vulnerable. Carney leaves Thursday for India, the first stop on a three-country tour that includes Australia and Japan. “In a more uncertain world, Canada is focused on what we can control,” Carney said in a statement announcing the trip. “We are forging new partnerships abroad to create greater certainty, security and prosperity at home.” Carney has said that the US-led global order is fading and that Canada should not expect the old system to return once President Donald Trump leaves office. Trump’s tariffs on autos, aluminum, lumber and steel are hurting the Canadian economy. Carney says that to safeguard Canada’s economic future, the country needs to massively expand non-US international trade.

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U.S. has breached trade deal and Europe is ready to retaliate

By Holly Ellyatt
CNBC Europe
February 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The US has breached the terms of its trade deal with the European Union and the bloc is ready to retaliate if necessary, a top EU trade lawmaker said. “We wanted to have really stability and predictability. And unfortunately, the government, the president of the US, has really made a breach of this deal several times,” Bernd Lange, chair of the European Parliament’s international trade committee. …European officials expressed concern about the latest levy. …The European Parliament announced Monday that it has paused work on ratifying the US-EU trade deal while it sought clarity from the White House on whether the deal still stands. Lange said… “We need clarity, and this is also my clear request for the United States government — give us a certainty that for the next three years, we have no other irritations with new tariffs from the United States, and then we stick to the deal.”

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Premier David Eby promotes B.C.’s sustainable wood products in India

By Victoria Hayes, Forestry Innovation Investment
Canada Wood Group
February 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Premier David Eby and Ravi Kahlon, Minister of Jobs and Economic Growth, recently led a trade mission to India as part of government’s Look West Strategy to diversify trade and grow exports. One of the mission’s primary goals was to showcase B.C.’s leadership and capabilities in the province’s resource sectors, including sustainable forestry. To support this, Forestry Innovation Investment (FII) India organized a forestry roundtable and a site visit to Morph Design Company in Bengaluru, the luxury interiors and furniture brand of Prestige Group, to highlight B.C.’s forest products and explore opportunities for collaboration with India’s manufacturers, designers, and builders. The roundtable brought B.C. government officials together with Indian leaders from furniture manufacturing, wood importing, and the architecture and design community. Discussions focused on long-term commercial cooperation, aligned with India’s growing demand for imported wood products—driven by urbanization, rising incomes, and the expansion of furniture and interior manufacturing.

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Canada, Mexico want a trilateral agreement under CUSMA review, Canadian minister says

Reuters in CTV News
February 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

OTTAWA — The Canadian minister responsible for Canada-United States trade said Wednesday that Mexico was keen to maintain a trilateral agreement under the free trade pact between the three North American neighbors that is up for review this year. “I am reassured by the Mexican economy secretary … his desire to work with Canada and to ensure that the review of CUSMA results in a strengthened and ongoing trilateral trade arrangement,” Dominic LeBlanc said in a press conference from Mexico. LeBlanc is heading a group of over 370 delegates to Mexico for a six-day trade mission amid fears that U.S. President Donald Trump could ditch the decades-old three-way free trade agreement between the U.S., Mexico, and Canada when it comes up for review later this year. “The Mexicans have very similar interests to Canada,” LeBlanc said. “We both remain absolutely committed to the trilateral free trade agreement and working together as this review process unfolds,” he added.

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Metsä Group’s demo plant for a new lignin product starts up in Äänekoski

Metsä Group
February 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

FINLAND — Metsä Group’s demo plant for a new lignin product has started up in Äänekoski, Finland. The plant uses lignin extracted from the bioproduct mill’s production process as its raw material and it has a nameplate capacity of two tons of a new type of lignin product per day. The plant was built in cooperation with the equipment supplier ANDRITZ. Dow, a leading materials science company, is a key partner. Metsä Group’s new lignin products are called Metsä LigO™. According to Ismo Nousiainen, CEO of Metsä Fibre, part of Metsä Group, the company aims to use the wood raw material, including side streams of pulp production, as efficiently as possible to generate the greatest possible added value. …”The purpose of the new demo plant is to ensure the functionality of the lignin product’s production process, as well as the product’s characteristics and suitability for the market.”

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Fibre Excellence may soon close pulp mills in France

By Simon Matthis
Pulp and Paper News
February 12, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

FRANCE — Fibre Excellence is facing severe financing problems in France. According to Euwid, the company may soon have to idle two pulp mills in the country, Saint Gaudens and Provence. Fibre Excellence says that it is doing everything possible to avoid insolvency and to preserve the sites and jobs. The reason to this is the weakness the pulp market and high costs. From October 17 to November 24, 2025, production was suspended at the Saint Gaudens pulp mill, as a preventive measure in response to the downturn in the European pulp market. This shutdown enabled operations to resume under favorable conditions. A partial activity plan was then put in place for the site’s 271 employees in order to minimize the impact of this suspension. According to Paper Excellence, the pulp market is experiencing a marked slowdown, particularly in Asia, which is reducing demand and putting pressure on prices.

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Joint Acquisition of a New Zealand Softwood Chip Production and Export Company

Nippon Paper Group
February 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Nippon Paper Resources Australia Pty Ltd, a wholly owned subsidiary of Nippon Paper Industries Co., Ltd., has entered into an agreement to jointly acquire all the shares of Marusumi Whangarei Company Limited, a New Zealand-based softwood chip production and export company currently jointly owned by Marusumi Paper Co., Ltd. and Marubeni Corporation. …Following the acquisition, NPR and PF plan to enter into a formal joint venture shareholders’ agreement and jointly operate the business. MWC will subsequently be renamed NP Wood Fibre Company Limited. NP Wood Fibre Company Limited will operate a major New Zealand softwood chip production and export business, leveraging off the country’s abundant forest resources and positioning itself to meet the anticipated growth in global demand for softwood chips. 

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Experts warn of pulp overcapacity in Finland

By Markku Björkman
Pulp and Paper News
February 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Finland’s forest industry could be forced to reduce capacity again as rising raw material costs and weaker market conditions weigh on profitability. That assessment comes from Juha Varis, senior portfolio manager at S-Bank. …The warning comes amid a more challenging environment for pulp and paper producers. Wood prices remain elevated while demand for several forest industry products has developed more weakly than expected, increasing investor expectations that production cuts may follow. …Björn Wahlroos said that a large and modern pulp mill in Finland could be forced to shut down due to a lack of raw material. His remarks triggered wider discussion within the sector. …Varis said overcapacity in the European forest industry is evident across several segments. He added that investors expect some reduction in capacity but that it remains unclear which companies or plants might be affected.

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Finance & Economics

Mercer reports Q4, 2025 net loss of 308.7 million

Mercer International Inc.
February 12, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

NEW YORK, New York — Mercer International reported fourth quarter 2025 Operating EBITDA of negative $20.1 million compared to positive $99.2 million in the same quarter of 2024 and negative $28.1 million in the third quarter of 2025. In the fourth quarter of 2025, net loss was $308.7 million compared to net income of $16.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and a net loss of $80.8 million in the third quarter of 2025. The net loss in the fourth quarter of 2025 included total non-cash impairments of $238.7 million. This included non-cash impairments of $203.5 million recognized against long-lived assets at our Peace River mill due to the continued down-cycle environment of hardwood pulp markets, $12.2 million against certain obsolete equipment and $23.0 million against pulp inventory due to low prices and high fiber costs. …Mr. Juan Carlos Bueno, CEO: “We continue to prioritize improving liquidity and working capital, committing to rebalancing our asset portfolio and maintaining operating discipline.”

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Global Development Trends of the Paper Industry

By Amy Chu
ResourceWise Forest Products Blog
February 25, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

The global pulp and paper industry is entering a new phase of structural transformation. While overall growth remains steady, regional divergence is becoming more pronounced, product demand is shifting, and trade and regulatory pressures are reshaping traditional expansion paths. At the same time, mergers and acquisitions are increasingly serving as a strategic tool for companies seeking scale, resilience, and access to new markets. … From 2009 to 2028, the global pulp and paper industry has maintained steady growth and is expected to continue to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 2.3%. However, from a regional perspective, this growth is far from uniform. Significant differences exist in both capacity scale and growth rates across regions. Asia-Pacific is the fastest-growing region globally. By 2028, capacity is expected to grow exponentially since 2009 levels. While growth is projected to moderate between 2025 and 2028 due to a slowdown in new investments, the region will continue to lead global expansion.

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Japan Housing Starts Drop Less than Estimated

Trading Economics
February 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Japan’s housing starts fell 0.4% yoy in January 2026, easing from a 1.3% drop in the previous month and beating market expectations of a 1.6% decline. It marked the third consecutive month of contraction, though the pace was the mildest since July 2024. Rental housing starts declined at a slower rate (-1.5% vs -3.4% in December). Meanwhile, owner-occupied homes rebounded (6.6% vs -1.8%), as did prefabricated housing (5.1% vs -6.1%). Starts for two-by-four homes also accelerated (8.7% vs 2.8%). In contrast, built-for-sale housing fell 4.8%, reversing a 1.9% increase in December.

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Drax Beats Forecasts Despite Lower Profit, Impairment Hit

By Eamon Akil Farhat
Bloomberg News in the Financial Post
February 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Drax Group Plc’s profit declined last year but exceeded analyst estimates, helping lift the shares to their highest level in almost two decades despite significant impairment charges. Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization totaled £947 million ($1.3 billion), beating analyst estimates for £913.7 million. Citigroup Inc. analyst Jenny Ping cited lower pellet costs and record generation at its main biomass plant as supporting the result. The figure was still 11% lower than a year earlier, which Drax attributed to weaker power prices. The company’s share price rose as much as 6.2% to the highest since October 2006 before paring gains. …Drax reaffirmed its target of £600 million to £700 million of annual adjusted EBITDA after 2027 and said it expects 2026 earnings to align with analyst forecasts of about £662 million. The company also expects to return £1 billion to shareholders through dividends and share buybacks from 2025 until 2031, with £2 billion invested in growth areas.

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Russia timber industry under pressure after 2.5% lumber output drop

Wood & Panel Europe
February 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Russia’s lumber industry is entering a period of sustained pressure as production volumes continue to fall and regulatory risks increase. Official data shows that lumber output declined by more than 2.5% last year, reinforcing concerns across the forestry and wood processing sectors. According to Rosstat, Russia’s lumber production dropped from 29.2 million cubic metres in 2024 to 28.48 million cubic metres in 2025. Output remains well below historical highs. Current production is estimated to be 2 to 3 million cubic metres lower than the 2019 peak of roughly 32 million cubic metres. The downturn reflects structural challenges rather than short-term disruption. Domestic demand has weakened. Export markets have narrowed. Access to European machinery and technology has been reduced. These pressures are being felt across both logging and downstream processing operations. China now absorbs more than 70% of Russia’s lumber exports. …Softwood lumber production fell by 3.5% last year. Output declined to 25.7 million cubic metres. 

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Suzano reports Q4, 2025 net income of $R116 million

Reuters in Trading View
February 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Brazilian pulp maker Suzano posted a core profit and a net revenue for the fourth quarter above analysts’ expectations, while also announcing a new share buyback program and its market pulp strategy for the year. Core profit, or adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA), stood at 5.58 billion reais, down 14% year-on-year. Suzano attributed the core profit fall to a lower average net pulp price and the depreciation of the US dollar against the Brazilian real in the period. Net profit of 116 million reais reversed a 6.7 billion real loss, on the back of lower net financial expenses. Net revenue fell 8% to 13.1 billion reais. Volumes of pulp sold by Suzano rose 4% to 3.4 million metric tons; paper sales increased 10% to about 474,000 tons.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canada and China Renew Cooperation on Wood Construction Under MOHURD MOU

By Lance Tao
Canada Wood Group
January 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

On Jan 15, 2026, Canada and China renewed a long-standing framework for cooperation on modern wood construction and low-carbon urban development with the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between Natural Resources Canada and China’s Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development (MOHURD). The agreement was signed in Beijing by NRCan Minister Tim Hodgson and MOHURD Minister Ni Hong, in the presence of Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and Chinese Premier Li Qiang. The Government of British Columbia is a signatory to the MOU, represented through a previously executed original signed by B.C. Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar. The renewed MOU builds on more than a decade of collaboration between the two countries aimed at advancing sustainable building practices and promoting the use of wood as a low-carbon construction material. Forestry Innovation Investment (FII), has played a central role in supporting and operationalizing this cooperation through sustained policy engagement, technical exchange and in-market coordination.

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January’s Market News from Canada Wood Group

Canada Wood Group
February 10, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

Canada Wood’s January market news highlights the continued expansion of Canadian wood products into key international markets, with a strong focus on mass timber, technical innovation, and long-term partnerships. Articles explore new opportunities for Canadian species in China’s growing glulam sector, including efforts to diversify beyond Douglas fir into Hem-Fir, SPF, and yellow cedar. Other features examine rising interest in mass timber construction in South Korea, driven by carbon-reduction goals and modern architectural demand. The January updates also showcase how long-standing Canadian demonstration projects in southern China are building confidence in wood’s durability in challenging climates, helping pave the way for larger, more complex structures. Rounding out the month is news of renewed Canada–China cooperation on wood construction, reinforcing shared commitments to low-carbon building and sustainable urban development. Together, these stories offer a timely snapshot of how Canadian wood expertise is shaping construction practices abroad.

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JELD-WEN reaches key sustainability milestone

By JELD-WEN UK Ltd
Furniture & Joinery Production
February 25, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

JELD-WEN, a leading manufacturer of specialist timber doorsets, has confirmed that “wood used in its manufacturing comes from 100% responsible sources in all its UK operations” – placing it well ahead of targets to demonstrate sustainable wood sourcing by 2030 as part of net zero goals. Both of JELD-WEN’s UK sites in Sheffield and Penrith use timber from forests awarded with Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC) and Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certification, placing UK operations at the forefront of sustainable sourcing within the JELD-WEN portfolio. This is the latest sustainability milestone achieved by the manufacturer, helping to protect against deforestation, as well as ensuring JELD-WEN products are not produced at the expense of ecosystems or other natural resources – and that the rights of local communities are protected.

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Sustainable timber and steel hybrid solution specified for sports centre

Local Authority Building & Maintenance
February 23, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

©BKStructures

United Kingdom — Specialists in engineered timber and hybrid construction, B&K Hybrid Solutions (BKHS), have played a pivotal role in the creation of Cozenton Park Sports Centre; a state-of-the-art leisure facility that exemplifies sustainable and innovative design. The project, located in Medway, replaced the ageing 1990s pool complex with an energy-efficient and aesthetically striking hybrid structure, setting a benchmark for leisure developments in the UK. … BKHS were appointed to manufacture and install the hybrid engineered timber and steelwork elements which underpin the facility’s design, combining the visual appeal and natural warmth of timber with the strength of steel. Working in collaboration with specialist supply chain partners Stora Enso for the Cross Laminated Timber and Rubner for the glulam components, BKHS delivered a precision-engineered solution tailored to the project’s sustainability and performance goals. …The pool hall features glulam columns and beams measuring 1,700 by 240mm at 5m intervals, creating a clear 26.3m span. 

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LIFE projects champion wood for greener, more beautiful and affordable homes

European Commission
February 16, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Modern timber construction can significantly reduce the carbon footprint of buildings compared to conventional materials, such as concrete and steel, whose energy‑intensive production contributes to a large share of the sector’s emissions. Wood sequesters carbon throughout its life cycle … and avoids an additional 1.1-1.5 tonnes of emissions when substituting for concrete or steel. Despite wood’s green credentials, scaling up timber construction … requires value chains and a trained workforce that understands its properties, building techniques and appropriate applications. LIFE WOOD for Future is addressing this knowledge gap by supporting universities, vocational schools and training centres. The project develops wood-based curricula for architects, engineers and technicians, as well as practical pathways for construction workers and local SMEs to integrate wood into design and construction. By linking academic knowledge with hands-on training, the LIFE project demonstrates how wood-based buildings can be designed and built safely, efficiently and sustainably, increasing the likelihood of greater adoption. 

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Include wood-based systems in national building code: Experts

The New Indian Express
February 12, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

BHUBANESWAR: India should explore inclusion of wood-based construction and buildings into the national building code to achieve optimal outcomes for climate change and the economy, opined experts at the 14th National Workshop of Japan International Cooperation Agency Assisted Forestry Projects. The three-day workshop is organised by the Odisha Forestry Sector Development Project focuses on strengthening sustainable wood supply systems, promoting forest certification and expanding agroforestry to meet both domestic and global demands. Odisha Forestry Sector Development Society officials said while the National Building Code of India advocates bamboo for use in construction … international experts at the workshop opined that production and use of wood-based and other natural construction materials can also be explored to reduce dependence on carbon-intensive materials further and encourage sustainable forestry.

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Takeaways from COP 30 for the building sector and next steps

By Roxana Dela Fiamor
US Green Building Council
February 9, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

At COP 30 in Belém, Brazil, the 2025 United Nations climate conference was widely seen as an “implementation COP”. …Here, USGBC shares concrete initiatives from COP 30 for a people-centered transition of the buildings sector and what will shape the agenda in 2026. …Public procurement and low-carbon construction – The ICBC adopted a Global Framework for Action on Sustainable Procurement, recognizing that public spending, around 13–20% of GDP, can serve as a strategic lever to create demand for low-carbon construction materials and practices. By leveraging the purchasing power of national and local governments, policymakers can send the long-term market signals needed to shift the construction sector toward net zero, given that construction and infrastructure together account for the largest share of public authority budgets. Ministers and over 300 stakeholders also endorsed the Principles for Responsible Timber Construction, promoting bio-based, circular building practices and ensuring the sustainable management of wood resources as demand grows.

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A suncream made from wood: Is this the future of skin care?

The Boar (U of Warwick, UK)
February 7, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

There are two types of suncream: chemical and physical. Chemical suncreams absorb the UV rays into heat … physical sunblocks scatter and reflect the UV rays on top of the skin. While they offer a broader spectrum of protection, their photo-catalytic nature and small particle size carry a potential risk. The synthetic compounds have adverse side effects on humans and the environment. …Wood is a material that is very effective at scattering light as a result of its cellular structure, absorbing light through one of its components, lignin. The compound is an organic polymer in the cells of many plants which makes them rigid and woody. It also offers sun protection factors (SPFs) that exceed 180. Lignin has a natural phenolic network that forms a shield against ultraviolet light, offering protection against the sun without the need for petroleum-based filters.The use of lignin as sun protection for skin is promising, particularly as a renewable and waste-free resource. 

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Forestry

Lawyers for US cancer sufferers challenge Bayer’s $7.25bn Roundup settlement deal

By Carey Gillam
The Guardian UK
February 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

A group of 14 law firms representing nearly 20,000 plaintiffs is seeking to intervene in Bayer’s proposed class action settlement of Roundup litigation, citing concerns that the deal will not be fair to cancer sufferers. The group filed both a motion to intervene and a motion for an extension of time for court preliminary approval of the deal on February 24. The law firms say the deal appears “unprecedented” and raises multiple “red flags”. “It is hard to escape the impression that the proposed settlement would give Monsanto everything it desires – a near-complete release of liability for Monsanto and its parent company, Bayer AG – while giving inadequate consideration to many putative class members, who would surrender their substantive rights in exchange for settlement offers that may never result in payment,” the law firms state in their motion. …Bayer said that it expects a “robust debate” about the settlement proposal.

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Entries open for the Marcus Wallenberg Prize

fundsforNGOs
February 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Marcus Wallenberg Prize is one of the most prestigious recognitions in the forest sector, celebrating transformative innovations that contribute to: Sustainable forestry practices, Technological breakthroughs, Environmental resilience, Industry development, and Global knowledge advancement. It plays a crucial role in promoting scientific leadership and technological progress within the forest-based economy. The prize honors groundbreaking scientific and technological achievements that significantly advance knowledge and innovation within the global forest-based sector. Open to individuals or small research teams worldwide, nominations are accepted annually until 30 April, with preference given to achievements from the past ten years. Established by the Marcus Wallenberg Foundation, the prize recognizes path-breaking research and technological innovation that contributes to sustainable development and progress within forestry and forest-based industries worldwide. Nomination Deadline: 30 April each year.

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After logging bans, Australia turns to “forest thinning”. Does it reduce fire risk?

By Rhett Ayers Butler, Mongabay founder
Mongabay
February 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

As native forest logging ends in parts of Australia, governments and industry are turning to large-scale forest thinning as a tool to reduce bushfire risk, prompting a new debate over how best to protect communities in a warming climate. Research shows thinning can lower fire severity under some conditions, especially when paired with prescribed burning, but its effectiveness often diminishes during extreme fire weather — the very conditions driving the most destructive fires. Scientists warn that removing trees can alter forest structure, dry fuels, release stored carbon, and eliminate critical wildlife habitat, meaning the ecological and climate costs may be substantial in high-conservation forests. The controversy reflects deeper tensions over land use, public safety, and economic transition, with critics arguing that large-scale thinning risks becoming logging by another name while supporters see it as a necessary adaptation to escalating fire danger.

Additional related coverage by Rhett Ayers Butler: Is “forest thinning” just logging by another name?

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The Nature Conservancy and Forest Stewardship Council Africa Sign Partnership

Forest Stewardship Council International
February 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Nature Conservancy (TNC) and the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) Africa have signed a Memorandum of Understanding establishing a strategic partnership to advance sustainable forest management and climate focused forest conservation across Africa. The agreement, effective through 2030, provides a framework for the two organizations to scale efforts that protect forests, reduce emissions, restore degraded landscapes, and support sustainable livelihoods. Africa’s forests are central to climate regulation, biodiversity protection, water security, and economic development. Through this partnership, TNC and FSC Africa will align conservation science, credible forest certification systems, policy engagement, and community driven approaches to improve forest governance and expand responsible management across priority landscapes.

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Growing Trust Beyond Forests: Webinar to spotlight agroforestry and urban forestry certification

The Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC)
February 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

On 25 February, PEFC International will host the webinar Growing Trust Beyond Forests: PEFC Trees outside Forest certification for urban forestry and agroforestry, bringing together voices from science, policy, business, and local government. Held online in two live sessions (10:00 and 15:00 CET), the 90-minute event will focus on what it takes to scale responsible tree management beyond traditional forests and how credibility can be built along the way. The webinar will open with Arianna Oggioni of PEFC International, who will introduce the concept of trees outside forests and explain why agroforestry and urban forestry are gaining momentum as solutions for climate resilience, biodiversity, and sustainable production. Her remarks will set the stage for a central question running throughout the event: how can good practice on the ground translate into trusted, credible claims?

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Bayer agrees to pay billions to settle Roundup lawsuits

By Mike Heuer
Reuters in Yahoo! Finance
February 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Officials for Germany-based Bayer have agreed to pay $7.25 billion to settle a class action filed by those who say its Roundup weedkiller caused them or their loved ones to develop cancer. The proposed settlement would create a fund to pay for existing and future claims filed by those who say the weed killer caused non-Hodgkin lymphoma. …Bayer filed the proposed settlement in the city of St. Louis Circuit Court on Tuesday that also would include a separate Durnell case that is before the Supreme Court. …Bayer subsidiary Monsanto will make annual payments into the settlement fund over the next 21 years. Monsanto officials do not admit to any wrongdoing and said they agreed to the settlement to end the tens of thousands of lawsuits filed against it and stop more from being filed. …Bayer’s shares slumped, wiping out the previous day’s gains, as investors questioned whether the settlement would mark a ‌decisive turnaround.

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Tasmanian logging sites and mill shut down as protests escalate

The Echo
February 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Twenty forest defenders protested at the Smithton Ta Ann mill yesterday, while more than 100 forest defenders are involved in frontline actions across three sites as part of Bob Brown Foundation’s Forest Resistance Tour. Two treesitters have spent two nights holding off logging in the Lake St Claire area, while other protesters continue to occupy the forests in the Central Highlands. …At the contentious Ta Ann Smithton mill, Anna Markey and Erin Miller are with fellow forest defenders peacefully occupying the mill. ‘I’m here today with BBF to protest the logging of native forests. I am disgusted and terrified that the government here subsidise this foreign company to destroy and profit from our beautiful native forests,’ said Anna Markey, retired schoolteacher and grandparent from Goolwa, South Australia, who is locked on at the Ta Ann mill.

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Environmental activists shut down Ta Ann timber mill in Tasmania’s north-west

Pulse Tasmania
February 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Environmental activists have forced the shutdown of a timber mill in north-west Tasmania. Two women were arrested on trespass charges at the Ta Ann veneer mill in Smithton on Tuesday, as a week-long campaign against native forest logging escalates. …The Bob Brown Foundation said 20 “forest defenders” had occupied the site, with at least one person locking themselves to infrastructure. …The foundation said the protest marked day two of a planned week of action, with participants travelling from across Australia to take part. …In response, Ta Ann Tasmania’s General Manager Robert Yong described the actions as a disruption to a “fully complying lawful business that adds value to sustainable supplies of hardwood logs”. “Their attack on Ta Ann puts the employment and health and safety of employees going about their business at risk,” Yong said.

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Forests are changing fast and scientists are deeply concerned

By Aarhus University, Denmark
Science Daily
February 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Forests around the world are quietly transforming, and not for the better. A massive global analysis of more than 31,000 tree species reveals that forests are becoming more uniform, increasingly dominated by fast-growing “sprinter” trees, while slow-growing, long-lived species are disappearing. These slower species act as the backbone of forest ecosystems, storing carbon, stabilizing environments, and supporting rich webs of life—especially in tropical regions where biodiversity is highest. …The research also highlights the growing role of naturalized tree species, meaning trees that originated elsewhere but now grow wild in new regions. Nearly 41 percent of these species share traits like rapid growth and small leaves, which help them survive in disturbed environments. …The study shows that tropical and subtropical regions are likely to experience the most severe impacts from forest homogenization. …According to the researchers, human actions are the main force behind these changes in forest composition. …This makes protecting slow-growing tree species increasingly urgent.

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Forest’s Strange Response to an Eclipse May Have a More Mundane Explanation

By David Nield
Science Alert
February 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

In a controversial study published in April last year, researchers described an astonishing phenomenon: a forest of Norway spruce trees (Picea abies) appeared to ‘sync’ their electrical signaling ahead of a partial solar eclipse. Now there’s a new theory about what was actually going on. Having examined the data, ecologists Ariel Novoplansky and Hezi Yizhaq from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel propose an explanation that’s not quite as sensational. Novoplansky and Yizhaq suggest that the electrical activity seen in the trees was caused by a temperature drop, a passing thunderstorm, and several local lightning strikes; factors that previous research has shown can trigger similar signaling responses in plants.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Drax launches strategic review of its Canadian pellet operations

By Erin Krueger
Biomass Magazine
February 26, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, United States, International

Drax Group is launching a strategic review of its Canadian pellet operations due to a constrained fiber market and low margins. …CEO Will Gardiner discussed the company’s changing pellet production strategy. …“Our US business is fundamentally part of our UK supply chain. That business is doing very well As you will have seen, our Canadian business is more challenged, and we’ve been talking about this for some time as margins have come down due to fiber costs rising in Canada more rapidly than indexed power prices in Asia. As we noted last year, this dynamic contributed to the decision we’ve made to close one of our pellet plants in Williams Lake towards the end of last year.” As a result, Drax is not currently expecting to commit any additional capital to the pellet production segment, including the paused pellet plant planned for development in Longview, Washington.

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MPs call to halt Drax subsidy over sustainability doubts

By Jillian Ambrose
The Guardian UK
February 19, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Ed Miliband

UK Secretary of State for Energy, Ed Miliband is under pressure from MPs to suspend subsidies worth £2m a day paid to the owner of the Drax power plant in North Yorkshire after court documents cast doubt on the company’s sustainability claims. …The politicians said they were “deeply concerned” that Drax may have been given “substantial billpayer subsidy” while the company “may have knowingly and consistently concealed information” about the green credentials of its wood sources. …The letter revealed that senior executives at Drax had privately raised concerns about the accuracy of its public sustainability claims, after allegations that it was burning wood from some of Canada’s most environmentally important woodlands. …Drax said: These allegations were investigated by our regulator, Ofgem, who concluded that they did not find any evidence that we had been issued with [subsidy certificates] incorrectly. …They also found no evidence of deliberate misreporting.”

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Cepi challenges the EU on carbon, biomass and financing

By Faustine Loison
Print Industry News
February 17, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

With European manufacturing output down by up to 40% since 2018, and 200,000 industrial jobs lost last year, the European Confederation of the Paper Industry (Cepi) wants to put biomass, circularity and decarbonization financing back at the heart of the industrial debate. The trade organization relies on a report commissioned from Deloitte. According to this analysis… the use of biomass and efficiency in the circularity of materials are structural advantages for European industry in the face of imported fossil products. The report highlights the fact that the forestry and timber industry, which is already governed by national legislation, has to contend with over a hundred additional European regulations. In Cepi’s view, this overlap is holding back biomass-related industrial development. Moreover, paper collection and recycling remains fragmented across the member states. This heterogeneity complicates the optimization of secondary material flows, despite the fact that paper is one of the most recycled materials in Europe.

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Frog Love Songs and the Sounds of Climate Change

By Kat Kerlin
University of California Davis
February 12, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

When the time is right, a good love song can make all the difference. A study from the University of California, Davis, found that temperature affects the sound and quality of male frogs’ mating calls. In the colder, early weeks of spring, their songs start off sluggishly. In warmer weather, their songs pick up the pace, and female frogs take note. Better songs make the males more attractive mates and suggest to females that conditions are suitable for reproduction. …The results carry implications for conservation amid climate change. …Understanding when frogs breed, how that may shift as the climate warms, and what is driving those shifts is critical to their conservation. …females do not necessarily come to the pond just because the males are calling. The time has to be right for her eggs to survive. That clue lies in the quality of the male’s song, which is more attractive once it’s warmer. 

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Study finds climate change set the stage for devastating wildfires in Argentina and Chile

By Isabel Debre
Associated Press in The Canadian Press
February 11, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Human-caused climate change had an important impact on the recent ferocious wildfires that engulfed parts of Chile and Argentina’s Patagonia region, making the extremely high-risk conditions that led to widespread burning up to three times more likely than in a world without global warming, a team of researchers warned on Wednesday. The hot, dry and gusty weather that fed last month’s deadly wildfires in central and southern Chile was made around 200% more likely by human-made greenhouse gas emissions while the high-fire-risk conditions that fueled the blazes still racing through southern Argentina were made 150% more likely, according to World Weather Attribution, a scientific initiative that investigates extreme weather events soon after they happen. That probability will only increase, the experts added, as humans continue to blanket the planet with heat-trapping gases.

Related coverage in Gizmodo, by Ellen Lapointe: As Patagonia Burns, the World May Lose Some of its Most Ancient Trees

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Extensive tree planting needed to hit net-zero livestock by 2050 – study

By Adam Murphy
Agriland
February 6, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Scotland would have to plant several hundred thousand hectares of new woodland to achieve net-zero carbon emissions in the livestock sector by 2050 through afforestation alone, a new study has shown. The study by The James Hutton Institute, which was recently published in the journal Science of The Total Environment, investigated how multi-functional afforestation and livestock reduction could contribute to helping Scotland achieve net-zero emissions in the livestock sector by 2050. This goal aligns with the Paris Agreement on climate change. Researchers have simulated a scenario in which approximately 30,000ha per year of new woodland and agroforestry were planted in Scotland between 2020 and 2025. …It is often assumed such planting can only occur at the expense of grazing area, so the researchers coupled this planting effort with a linear decrease in livestock, with an estimated total reduction of approximately 50% of the present herd numbers.

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Warming enhances soil carbon accumulation in boreal Sphagnum peatlands

Nature
February 9, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Boreal ecosystems store twice as much carbon as the atmosphere and warm faster than the global average. The current paradigm based on boreal forests and tundra considers that warming will accelerate boreal carbon loss. However, the warming response of Sphagnum peatlands, storing ~40% of boreal carbon stocks, remains under-investigated. …investigations into two long-term warming experiments in Finnish peatlands, we demonstrate that warming enhances soil carbon accumulation in boreal Sphagnum peatlands. This result sharply contrasts with warming-induced carbon loss from boreal forests and tundra, owing to the unique metabolic response of Sphagnum… Our estimates suggest that warming-induced increase of soil carbon in boreal Sphagnum peatlands (assuming no hydrological changes or plant species shifts) may offset nearly half the boreal forest carbon-sink decline or heterotrophic respiration increases in Arctic tundra under warming. These findings highlight the vital but overlooked role of Sphagnum peatlands in counteracting boreal carbon loss under future warming.

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Global economy must move past GDP to avoid planetary disaster, warns UN chief

By Matthew Taylor
The Guardian UK
February 9, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The global economy must be radically transformed to stop it rewarding pollution and waste, UN secretary general António Guterres has warned. Speaking to the Guardian after the UN hosted a meeting of leading global economists, Guterres said humanity’s future required the urgent overhaul of the world’s “existing accounting systems” he said were driving the planet to the brink of disaster. “We must place true value on the environment and go beyond gross domestic product as a measure of human progress and wellbeing. Let us not forget that when we destroy a forest, we are creating GDP. …In January, the UN held a conference in Geneva titled Beyond GDP attended by senior economists from around the world. …A report published by the group late last year argued that… the need for an economic transformation had become increasingly urgent.

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