Region Archives: United States

Business & Politics

USDA Announces 2026 Appointments to the Softwood Lumber Board

The Softwood Lumber Board
December 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced the appointment of six members and four alternates to serve on the Softwood Lumber Board. The three regional alternate seats and public member and alternate seats are new for 2026. The appointed Board members are:

  • Richard Stanley, T.R. Miller Mill Co. (U.S. South, Small, second term)
  • Sonja Neiman, Neiman Enterprises (U.S. West, Small)
  • Alden Robbins, Robbins Lumber (U.S. Northeast and Lake States)
  • Sean McLaren, West Fraser (Canada West, Large)
  • Brian Chaney, Weyerhaeuser (U.S. South, Large)

Newly appointed regional alternate members are:

  • Mark Richardson, The Westervelt Company (U.S. South alternate, term 2 years)
  • Steven Hofer, Western Forest Products (U.S. West alternate, term 3 years)
  • Thomas Mende, Binderholz Timber (Importer, term 4 years)

Newly appointed public members (persons with experience in architecture, engineering, construction, development, or other related sectors that would bring supply chain perspective to the Board), include:

  • Troy Harris, Jamestown (Public member)
  • Derek Ratchford, SmartLam (Public member alternate)

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The Court of International Trade Decision Not to Reopen Record in Expedited CVD Review on Canadian Lumber

Trade Law Daily
December 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The Court of International Trade remanded the Commerce Department’s expedited countervailing duty review on Canadian softwood lumber for the ninth time on Dec. 18, finding the agency abused its discretion in declining to reopen the record to let respondent Les Produits Forestiers D&G and its cross-owned affiliate Les Produits Forestiers Portbec add information to help distinguish sales affected by subsidies to unaffiliated input suppliers. …D&G and Portbec argued that Commerce needed to take into account that the “vast majority” of the companies’ transactions involve buying Canadian lumber on a “duty paid basis in the United States and reselling the lumber to buyers in the United States.” …While the information D&G and Portbec previously submitted “may have been qualitative instead of quantitative,” the agency’s statement that the… information wasn’t previously disclosed “is contradicted by the record.” [to access the full story a Trade Law Daily subscription is required]

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Carney says sector deals with U.S. now ‘unlikely’ as USMCA talks loom

By Thomas Seal
Bloomberg News in the Financial Post
December 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Prime Minister Mark Carney said Canada probably won’t reach a near-term deal with the United States to lower tariffs on sectors such as steel and aluminum, and negotiations are likely to be rolled into next year’s review of the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement. Canada and the US were close to a pact on metals tariffs, but President Donald Trump then terminated talks in October. …“My judgment is that that is now going to roll into the broader CUSMA negotiation, so we’re unlikely, given the time horizons coming together, to have a sectoral agreement,” Carney said on Thursday. “Although if the United States wants to come back on that in those areas, we’re always ready there — we’re very ready.” …Canada is “very ready on forest products to strike an agreement,” the prime minister added. The U.S. has placed roughly 45% duties and taxes on imports of Canadian softwood lumber, to the frustration of US homebuilders.

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Canada and the US to launch formal talks to review their free trade agreement in mid-January

By Rob Gillies
The Associated Press in ABC News
December 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Canada and the U.S. will launch formal discussions to review their free trade agreement in mid-January, the office of Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said. The prime minister confirmed to provincial leaders that Dominic LeBlanc, the country’s point person for US-Canada trade relations, “will meet with U.S. counterparts in mid-January to launch formal discussions”. …Carney met with the leaders of Canada’s provinces on Thursday to give them an update on trade talks. Canada is one of the most trade-dependent countries in the world, and more than 75% of Canada’s exports go to the country’s southern neighbor. But most exports to the US are currently exempted by USMCA. …Canada is the top export destination for 36 US states. Nearly $3.6 billion Canadian worth of goods and services cross the border each day. About 60% of US crude oil imports are from Canada, as are 85% of US electricity imports.

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Trump hasn’t threatened ripping up North American trade deal in private talks, Carney says

By Darren Major
CBC News
December 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Prime Minister Mark Carney says U.S. President Donald Trump hasn’t given him any indication that he’s willing to walk away from the North American free trade deal that was struck during his first term at the White House. Carney met privately with Trump and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum in Washington during the FIFA World Cup draw earlier this month. Much of that conversation laid out the broad strokes for coming discussions around the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), which is up for review in 2026. …U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer recently floated the possibility of the U.S. aiming to get separate deals with Canada and Mexico — or possibly backing out entirely. …In a report tabled in the U.S. Congress on Wednesday, Greer wrote that he “will keep the president’s options open, negotiating firmly to resolve the issues identified, but only recommending renewal if resolution can be achieved.”

In related coverage:

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Trade war: The Steelworkers win gains, but the fight isn’t over

United Steelworkers
December 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The trade war launched by Donald Trump continues to intensify, striking Canadian workers. In addition to the 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum imposed earlier this year and the duties on non-CUSMA-compliant automobiles and parts, Washington added a 50% tariff on copper in July. More recently, a new 10% duty on softwood lumber was introduced, on top of the existing countervailing and anti-dumping duties. …Thanks to the mobilization and constant pressure of the United Steelworkers, several long-standing union demands have finally been adopted in Ottawa. …The federal government announced that it will now require the use of Canadian-made products in publicly funded projects and has announced new investments to strengthen Canada’s industrial capacity and the resilience of our supply chains. …Canada must go further and adopt a strong industrial strategy to reduce our dependence on the U.S. market, protect jobs, and ensure that we never again find ourselves in such a vulnerable position. 

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U.S. Lumber Coalition Comments on Much-Needed Canadian Mill Production Cuts

The US Lumber Coalition
December 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East, United States

Canada’s massive excess lumber capacity sustained by billions of dollars of government subsidies continues to drive Canada’s harmful and unfair trade practices in softwood lumber. …In the state of Maine and the nearby Canadian region, this has resulted in Canadian border mills operating at two shifts enabled by their unfair trade practices while forcing US mills in Maine to operate at one shift. Canada-based Groupe Lebel’s announcement of cutting production by 25% in the face of President Trump’s trade law enforcement and tariff measures provides the type of relief from Canadian unfair trade practices that will allow US producers to increase production. …“Too add insult to injury, many of these Quebec mills exist within 1 mile of the Maine border. They suck sawlogs from our state, convert it to lumber in Quebec, and dump it back into Maine and New England,” stated Jason Brochu, Co-President of Pleasant River Lumber Company.

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US Court of International Trade Again Remands Expedited CVD Review on Canadian Lumber

Trade Law Daily
December 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The Court of International Trade on Dec. 18 again remanded [returned to a lower court for consideration] the Commerce Department’s countervailing duty expedited review of softwood lumber products from Canada. After multiple remands, the sole remaining issue concerns the calculation of the CVD rate for respondent Les Produits Forestiers D&G and its cross-owned affiliates, including Les Produits Forestiers Portbec. Specifically, the issue is the method of calculation used to adjust for the amount of lumber D&G and Portbec bought from unaffiliated suppliers when determining how much of the suppliers’ subsidies were attributable to D&G. Barnett held that Commerce abused its discretion in the most recent remand by declining D&G’s request to reopen the record to provide additional information to help distinguish sales affected by the subsidies. The judge said finality concerns don’t overcome this failure. [to access the full story a subscription is required]

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Maine timber companies to access revamped $32 million federal grant

By Peter McGuire
Maine Public Radio
December 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Maine timber companies are in line to receive substantial incentives to manage forests and grow healthier, more valuable trees. A $32 million award to the New England Forestry Foundation was recently finalized by the US Department of Agriculture. The funding package, through the Advancing Markets for Producers initiative, replaces similar funding provided under the “climate smart commodities” program. While there are some adjustments to the program, it achieves the same purpose, according to the foundation Deputy Director Andi Colnes. The grant will largely subsidize commercial and pre-commercial thinning, Colnes said. It will also provide funding to expand market opportunities, particularly for mass timber construction, she added. …According to Colnes, the program is able to cover about 50,000 acres of New England forests, mostly commercial timberland in Maine. The foundation said 23 commercial, conservation and public forest owners are already enrolled in the project.

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Domtar Paper receives modified air quality permit from North Carolina Dept of Environmental Quality

The Reflector
December 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

NORTH CAROLINA — After reviewing public comments, the NC Department of Environmental Quality’s Division of Air Quality (DAQ) has issued a modified Title V air quality permit to Domtar Paper in Martin County. The permit authorizes Domtar to increase the amount of green logs processed at its woodyard from 2.2 million tons per 12 months to a limit of 4.4 million tons. Domtar will not make any physical modification at the mill or increase pulp production. The permit modification increases emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and triggers more stringent emissions regulations. As a result, Domtar will be required to implement the best available control technology at its woodyard, including the best practices for operation and maintenance. Air dispersion modeling reviewed by DAQ found that the increase in VOC emissions is not expected to cause an exceedance of federal health-based air quality standards.

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Trump tariffs tank Pennsylvania’s lumber industry. Now, it’s seeking a bailout

By Ivey DeJesus
Patriot-News
December 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

Jeremy Roupp is a third-generation lumber man. Growing up in northwestern Lycoming County, his family owned a sawmill and logging business. …Over the decades, Roupp has seen the precipitous decline of the industry — from the impact of the housing and economic crisis of 2008, tough trade agreements, fickle consumer demand and, more recently, the inundation of cheap alternatives into the U.S. market. Now, however, retaliatory tariffs and the loss of export markets to global competitors are threatening the survival of the industry. If the Trump administration does nothing to alleviate the pressure on the industry, Roupp said, its future vitality is in question. Roupp is amplifying the concerns of an industry that overwhelmingly voted for the man who imposed the retaliatory tariffs: President Donald Trump. Recently, some 48 hardwood companies and industry organizations from Pennsylvania sent a letter to the Trump administration urging it to include the U.S. hardwood sector in tariff relief programs.

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USDA Funding Will Expand Global Markets for Tennessee Hardwood Industry

Tennessee Department of Agriculture
December 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

NASHVILLE — The Tennessee Department of Agriculture (TDA) has been awarded funding through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Emerging Markets Program (EMP) to boost export opportunities for Tennessee’s hardwood sector through outbound and inbound trade missions with India and Vietnam. …Through two EMP awards totaling more than $880,000, TDA will lead efforts to promote Tennessee’s hardwood lumber, value-added wood products, and forest products internationally. Grant projects will connect producers with new buyers, identify emerging market trends, and build relationships that support long-term export growth. The funding will focus on expanding market access through direct international engagement. Planned activities include trade missions to India and Vietnam to assess hardwood market conditions, explore potential supply chain partnerships, and host inbound delegations in Tennessee to tour sawmills, manufacturing facilities, and forest operations.

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Maine’s Woodland Pulp set to reopen on time and at full force

By Amber Stone
The Maine Monitor in the Bangor Daily News
December 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Woodland Pulp, the largest employer in Washington County, Maine, is set to reopen this week after a monthlong pause in operations. …All 144 employees who were temporarily laid off in early November were expected to return by Wednesday, representing about one-third of the mill’s workforce. Poised on the banks of the St. Croix River across from Canada, Woodland Pulp is one of Maine’s last major mills. It produces pulp sold to papermakers worldwide. Spokesperson Scott Beal previously attributed the “extended downtime” during the layoff period to falling prices in the global pulp market, not to the additional 10% tariff the Trump administration imposed on Canadian timber products in mid-October. …Woodland Pulp is one of six mills in the Northeast United States and Quebec that have recently paused or reduced wood deliveries, according to Dana Doran, executive director of the Professional Logging Contractors of the Northeast.

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Finance & Economics

How’s the BC economy holding up in the face of the Trump trade war?

By Marc Lee
Policy Note – Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
December 18, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

President Trump’s tariff and trade policies dominated the world’s political discourse through 2025. …The good news is that the BC economy has been fairly resilient through 2025. …BC trade resilience can also be attributed to a broader export commodity mix, dominated by forestry, agricultural and seafood products, as well as mining and oil and gas. …Forest products were tagged with a sectoral tariff of 10 per cent in October 2025, on top of new anti-dumping and countervailing tariffs on softwood lumber. …This has put tremendous pressure on an industry. …It’s difficult to disentangle the impact of tariffs from overall adverse trends in the BC forest industry, many mill closures and curtailments in recent years. BC forestry exports are among the most exposed to the US market, with about 75% of forestry exports headed south. Exports of softwood lumber were down 26% in August 2025 compared to August 2024. Pulp and paper exports were also down 9% on a year-to-date basis compared to 2024.

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Canadian forestry exports to the U.S. hit lowest in 5 years

BNN Bloomberg – Commodities
December 16, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Mark Parsons, chief economist at ATB Economics, joins BNN Bloomberg to discuss the state of Canadian softwood lumber following fall in U.S. exports. [This is a video story]

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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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US Lumber Capacity Lower Midway Through 2025

By Jesse Wade
The NAHB Eye on Housing
December 18, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

US sawmill production has remained essentially flat over the past two years, according to the Federal Reserve G.17 Industrial Production report. This most recent data release contained an annual revision, which resulted in higher estimates for both production and capacity in US sawmills. This revision shows current levels above 2017 by 7.5%. This revision also leads to an increased production capacity estimate, now peaking in the fourth quarter of 2024, and exceeding the capacity level seen in the early 2010s. …The utilization rate has experienced an overall downward trend since 2017 as a result of added capacity, yet stagnant production. However, the second quarter of 2025, on a four-quarter moving average, experienced a slight uptick from 66.5% to 68.1%. Meanwhile, sawmill production, based on a four-quarter moving average, is 0.9% higher in the second quarter of 2025 compared to the first quarter. However, sawmill production remains just 0.3% above 2023 levels.

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US Inflation Slows in November (with a Caveat)

By Fan-Yu Kuo
The NAHB Eye on Housing
December 18, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

US inflation unexpectedly eased in November, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) latest report. This data release was originally scheduled for December 10 but was delayed due to the recent government shutdown. While most indexes showed deceleration, this report does not necessarily prove a downward trend in inflation due to missing October data and incomplete November collection. December’s report may be more pivotal for markets and the Fed. The recent government shutdown disrupted data collection for many macroeconomic indicators including the CPI. …Though inflation is expected to peak in the first quarter of 2026, the Fed is likely to continue easing given signs of labor market weakening. The housing market’s sensitivity to interest rates suggests rate cuts could help ease the affordability crisis and support housing supply even as builders continue to face supply-side challenges.

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Lumber Market Navigates Choppy Waters Amid Softening Demand and Price Volatility

MarketMinute in the Chronicle Journal
December 17, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The recent softening demand and prices in the lumber market represent a critical inflection point, marking a transition from unprecedented volatility to a more complex, albeit somewhat stabilized, environment. The key takeaway is that while the extreme highs of the pandemic era are behind us, lumber prices have established a new, elevated baseline, significantly impacting housing affordability and construction costs. This recalibration is driven by a delicate balance of oversupply in some segments, subdued but potentially recovering demand, and persistent supply-side challenges, including increased tariffs on Canadian imports and ongoing labor shortages. …The lasting impact of this period will likely be a more resilient and adaptable construction industry. …The market is not returning to its pre-pandemic state; rather, it is evolving into a new equilibrium where strategic foresight and agility will be paramount for success.

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Building Material Dealers continue credit card swipe-fee battle

The HBS Dealer
December 17, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

As 2025 comes to a close, the National Lumber & Building Material Dealers Association (NLBMDA) continues to advance advocacy efforts to address the growing burden of credit card swipe fees on lumber and building material dealers and the entire merchant community. This month, on Capitol Hill and in the courts, NLBMDA has been actively engaged in efforts to reform the broken credit card payment system that allows Visa and Mastercard to set interchange fees with little transparency, competition, or accountability. For many dealers, these fees now rank among the largest operating expenses, often surpassing costs such as utilities or equipment. Swipe fees have more than doubled over the past decade and have increased by roughly 70 percent since the onset of the pandemic, reaching a record $187.2 billion in 2024. During the current holiday season alone, credit card swipe fees are projected to generate more than $20 billion for Visa and Mastercard.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Softwood Lumber Board Generates 396 MM BF of Incremental Demand in Q3

The Softwood Lumber Board
December 19, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, United States

The Softwood Lumber Board has released its Q3 2025 Report, highlighting significant progress tied to its new strategic plan. This quarter, SLB-funded programs advanced a coordinated strategy centered on high-opportunity sectors—1-8 story multifamily, commercial, K-12 education, and the fast-growing industrial segment—while accelerating project conversions, strengthening building code support, scaling post-secondary education, and expanding outreach in key cities.

Key Q3 highlights include:

  • SLB-funded programs generated 396 MM BF of incremental lumber demand
  • The SLB’s new strategic plan focuses investment where wood already wins
  • SLB Education advanced its mission to shape future architects and engineers
  • WoodWorks delivered strong project conversion results
  • Think Wood continued driving market preference through high-quality design content and resources
  • The AWC strengthened wood’s position in codes and standards
  • The SLB and USDA Forest Service announced the winners of the 2025 Mass Timber Competition: Building Sustainable Schools

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Beyond the Surface: How Decorative Concrete Is Redefining Design in 2026

By Rich Cofoid
For Construction Pros
December 17, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Decorative concrete has come a long way. What was once viewed as just a decorative overlay or backyard patio upgrade is now a key player in modern construction. …A major force driving decorative concrete forward is its unparalleled ability to replicate the look and feel of natural materials. Today’s form liners, silicone molds and hybrid overlays create textures so realistic that even trained professionals can mistake them for real stone, hardwood, or slate. Stamped Concrete Wood Grain 2The Euclid Chemical Company – These finishes are particularly in demand for exterior applications such as outdoor kitchens, pool decks, retaining walls and walkways — areas where aesthetics must blend seamlessly with extreme durability. …This realism doesn’t stop at surface texture. Artisans are refining techniques like hand scoring, multi-tone staining, and faux grouting to emulate mortar joints and wood grain weathering.

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Mass timber makes healthier schools, healthier forests in Washington

By Erica Spiritos
The Seattle Times
December 19, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

Schools built with mass timber have recently opened to positive community response in the Seattle, Renton and Highline school districts, and another is under construction in West Seattle. … Throughout the United States and Canada, about 150 educational projects have already been built with mass timber. Mass timber products such as Glulam and Cross-Laminated Timber are made from lumber stacked in layers to create large components — columns, beams and panels that become the structures of buildings of all types. These large building components drive efficiency in construction while reducing the carbon footprint. In Washington, mass timber can now be used in buildings up to 18 stories, a renewable, resilient alternative to steel and concrete. The Pacific Northwest is well-positioned to be a leader in this industry. …structures made from mass timber, where the wood remains exposed, have positive effects on a physiological level, reducing blood pressure and heart rate and resulting in a feeling of calm.

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Fire tests confirm not all fire-retardant treatments are equal

By Western Wood Preservers Institute
EIN Presswire
December 16, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

VANCOUVER, Washington — With the growing threat of wildfire fueling increased demand for fire-retardant treated wood (FRTW), some manufacturers are offering unproven lower-cost alternatives to help meet that demand, often making misleading claims to promote them. But recent testing shows it’s easy to get burned when those claims don’t stand up to scrutiny. …Results from the testing showed when it comes to meeting rigorous codes-specified fire testing requirements, wood products treated with non-pressure applied fire retardants are unreliable at best. In all 10 tests of pressure-treated FRTW, the products met the objective of the ASTM E2768 — the flame front did not progress beyond 10.5 feet at any point during the 30-minute test. But 19 of the 21 products treated with non-pressure applied fire retardants were unable to reach the 30-minute mark without the flame front progressing beyond 10.5 feet.

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Forestry

Lawsuit Challenges Trump Plan to Shut Americans Out of Public Lands Decisions

By Wendy Park and Ian Brickey
The Center for Biological Diversity
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

WASHINGTON— Conservation groups sued the Trump administration today for scrapping decades-old rules protecting Americans’ right to participate in environmental reviews for logging, mining, drilling, road construction and other industrial projects on their public lands. Environmental reviews under the National Environmental Policy Act, one of the nation’s bedrock environmental laws, are often communities’ only way to obtain information and provide input into the thousands of projects up for approval each year on public lands. “Trump is taking a wrecking ball to public lands so his industry cronies can make a quick buck, but we’re pushing back and demanding a voice for the American people,” said Wendy Park, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “The National Environmental Policy Act is what keeps the public in the loop and lets people speak up when destructive projects threaten our backyards. Cutting the public out locks big decisions away in bureaucratic backrooms.”

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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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New map shows where high-risk wildfire areas overlap with Utah communities

By Julia Sandor
Fox 13 Salt Lake City
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SALT LAKE CITY — Utah Division of Forestry, Fire & State Lands released their new High-Risk Wildland Urban Interface (WUI) Map. They created this map because of House Bill 48, which passed during the 2025 legislative session. You can find the map here. Any property owner can access the map using the Utah Wildfire Risk Tool. The map shows the structure’s exposure score, and different layers can be seen on the same page. The High-Risk WUI layer identifies areas where wildfire risk and structural development overlap, helping communities understand and address risks to protect their homes and neighborhoods. There are about 60,000 structures within the high-risk boundary and multiple factors that go into assessing those risks including vegetation and fuel characteristics, previous fires in the area, and topography. Joseph Anderson, the Wildfire Risk Reduction Program Manager with Utah DNR said the areas in the state affected by the new map is narrower than he expected.

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US Lawsuit seeks final protection for spotted owls

The Plumas Sun
December 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CALIFORNIA — The Center for Biological Diversity, represented by Earthjustice, reports it recently sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for failing to finalize Endangered Species Act protections for California spotted owls. “The survival of the California spotted owl hangs by a thread and they desperately need protections,” said Noah Greenwald, endangered species co-director at the Center for Biological Diversity. …In February 2023 the agency proposed protecting spotted owls in southern California as endangered and those in the Sierra Nevada — including in Plumas County — as threatened, starting the clock on a one-year deadline to finalize protections. Those decisions are now more than two years overdue. The center and partners first petitioned to protect the owls 25 years ago. …“The Fish and Wildlife Service’s long delay in granting the owl protections under the Endangered Species Act continues to hinder the California spotted owl’s fight for survival.”

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Pine beetles are poised to decimate Front Range forests: ‘Our ability to stop the spread is very limited’

By Elise Schmelzer
The Denver Post
December 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

DENVER — Vast swaths of the ponderosa pine forests that blanket Colorado’s Front Range mountains could turn rust-colored and die over the next five years as pine beetles begin to spread aggressively, new federal forecasts show. Aerial surveys conducted by the U.S. Forest Service over the last year found evidence of rapidly spreading beetle infestations along the mountains and foothills that stretch from southern Larimer County to southern El Paso County, including the western flank of metro Denver. Already, pockets of dead trees are visible from Interstate 70 and U.S. 285. The rapid uptick in beetle-killed trees near the state’s largest cities and major highways prompted state leaders to form a task force this month to grapple with the outbreak. Gov. Jared Polis issued an executive order Dec. 15 and created the Mountain Pine Beetle Ponderosa Outbreak Task Force to address the growing wildfire threat and the beetles’ potential impact to watersheds, recreation and infrastructure.

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The western U.S. Tried to stop wildfires and it backfired

By The American Geophysical Union
Science Daily
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Wildfires are not always purely destructive. In many forests, fire can clear out built up dead material, return nutrients to the soil, and help ecosystems reset. For more than 100 years, the United States has spent billions of dollars on fire suppression to protect people, homes, and sensitive environments. But putting out too many fires can also prevent landscapes from getting the burns they need, allowing extra fuel to accumulate and raising the risk of larger fires later. New research … reports that nearly 38 million hectares of land in the western United States are historically behind on burning. The researchers describe these areas as being in a “fire deficit.” …”Conditions are getting so warm and dry that it’s causing huge amounts of fire compared to the historical record,” said Winslow Hansen, director of the Western Fire and Forest Resilience Collaborative and scientist at Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies. 

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Western leaders demand probes into wildfire mitigation cuts

KNAU Arizona Public Radio
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©NPS Flickr

Several elected leaders from northern Arizona are calling on Attorney General Kris Mayes to determine if the Trump administration’s cuts to wildfire mitigation efforts are illegal. Coconino County Supervisor Lena Fowler, Tusayan Mayor Clarinda Vail and Flagstaff mayor Becky Daggett are among the 160 western officials who are concerned about the drop in federal fire preparedness in recent months. They signed onto a letter as part of the Mountain Pact, a group that advocates for western communities in climate, public lands and outdoor recreation policy. They are urging their respective state attorneys general to push back against layoffs, voluntary deferred resignations and early retirements within the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service and the National Park Service. It comes months after the Dragon Bravo and White Sage fires burned more than 200,000 acres on the Kaibab National Forest and in Grand Canyon National Park.

Additional coverage in the Aspen Times by Ryan Spencer: Colorado local elected leaders call on state attorney general to take action on ‘rapid decline of federal wildfire preparedness’ under Trump administration

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Rush to Avoid Red Tape Derails Logging Project Near Yellowstone

By Robert Chaney
The Mountain Journal
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Cutting red tape and streamlining project work have been marching orders for the U.S. Forest Service throughout the first year of the second Trump administration. Last week, a federal court ruling on a Greater Yellowstone landscape project showed how far those directives can backfire.  …Initially proposed in 2020, it received a decision notice in 2023. Opponents referred to it by its acronym, SPLAT, and promptly sued to block it. In his December 11 opinion, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy wrote that South Plateau failed to meet requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act, National Forest Management Act and Endangered Species Act. But he added the “primary challenge concerns the project’s conditions-based management approach.” Molloy generally agreed with the plaintiffs’ concern. “This approach,” he said, “conflates a promise of future statutory compliance with actual compliance.”

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Rainforest Action Network Resigns from the Forest Stewardship Council, Citing Loss of Credibility

Rainforest Action Network
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

San Francisco — Rainforest Action Network (RAN) has resigned from the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), ending more than 30 years of membership in the world’s most widely recognized forestry certification system. RAN says the FSC’s certification label is failing to provide credible assurances of responsible forest management. RAN was a founding member of FSC in 1993 and remained engaged for decades because of the need for a robust third party verified forestry certification scheme. The FSC previously set the gold standard for responsible forestry in a market flooded by timber and paper products bearing logos of weaker forest certification schemes such as the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification. But the organization says recent decisions by the FSC have fatally undermined its credibility.

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Massive wildfire reduction projects coming to Colorado forests, which could include logging

By Ishan Thakore
Colorado Public Radio News
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Two major U.S. Forest Service projects — authorized under federal emergency powers — will target up to around 308,000 acres of public land along the Front Range with treatments meant to reduce wildfire risk, including logging. That’s a massive area, around the total size of the city of Los Angeles. The projects, spread out over at least two decades, may include clear-cutting patches of national forest up to 20 acres, using prescribed burning to reduce timber that could fuel blazes, and spreading herbicide over thousands of acres. Completing those treatments may also require building temporary roads through thousands of acres of previously untouched forest — known as roadless areas. …The plans, and other Forest Service proposals, have drawn sharp criticism from some environmental groups, who say they encourage large-scale logging on public lands.

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Federal judge strikes down logging project near Yellowstone National Park

By Darrell Ehrlick
The Idaho Capital Sun
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

IDAHO — A federal judge halted a large logging project near Yellowstone National Park because he said the US Forest Service submitted plans that made it impossible to judge how it would affect critical grizzly bear habitat. The 16,500-acre project located in the Custer Gallatin National Forest would have allowed the US Forest Service to select timber and build roads for logging. But without offering specifics, the project only pledged that its plans would consider the total distance of the roads and not exceed certain parameters in acreage size, designed to protect critical bear habitat. However, Judge Donald Molloy said that the plans amounted to giving the Forest Service permission and trusting that it would be compliant later. He also said that the plans also made it difficult to judge how the logging project would impact grizzly habitat.

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Forestry holds place as second largest ag commodity in Mississippi

By Nathan Gregory
Mississippi State University Extension
December 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

STARKVILLE, Mississippi — For all the major investments and structural changes in 2025, marked by significant sawmill expansions, shifting market dynamics and continued pressure in the pulp and paper sector, Mississippi’s timber industry observed limited monetary change. The state’s total timber value for 2025 is estimated to be $1.47 billion, which is down 1% from last year. This year’s harvest amounted to 36.4 million tons of timber products, which is down slightly from last year based on timber severance tax receipts. The value of standing timber paid to landowners as stumpage was $660 million, a 9% decline from 2024. The harvest and trucking industries, however, added $807 million to timber’s value in 2025, which was 7% more than last year. Eric McConnell, associate professor of forest business, said the industry experienced a sizable increase in the small pine sawtimber. …The forestry industry also faced pulp and paper headwinds. 

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Agriculture commissioner urges residents to be diligent as Florida faces increased wildfire risks amid dry conditions

By Caleb Yauger
News4JAX
December 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

FLORIDA – Florida state officials warned of heightened wildfire risks across the state as dry conditions were expected to continue into 2026. “I’ve been with the agency a long time, and this is the driest winter that I can remember in quite a while,” Florida Forest Service Director Rick Dolan said during a Friday press conference. The number of wildfires had increased significantly, with more than 3,000 reported in 2025 compared to approximately 2,000 in 2024. This surge came months before Florida’s typical peak wildfire season, which usually occurs between April and June. Florida Commissioner of Agriculture Wilton Simpson emphasized that human activity was a major concern. “The majority of those fires are started by backyard fires, arson, things of that nature,” Simpson said. “We need everyone to be diligent as we come into the new year with the drier conditions.”

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How the Trump administration is fast-tracking logging in Illinois’ only national forest

By Juanpablo Ramirez-Franco
WBEZ Chicago
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

…Shawnee is the only national forest in the state and one of the smallest in the nation. The agency initially billed the timber sale, called the McCormick Oak-Hickory Restoration Project, as a “thinning” operation to remove older trees and make room for younger saplings. But logging operations contribute to habitat loss, and Stearns found the Forest Service’s justification lacking. … For months, he and other local environmentalists scoured the web and newspapers for mentions of the sale to prepare for the comment period, but the McCormick Project never turned up. …It turned out that the Forest Service advertised the project under a different name — “V-Plow” — and by the time advocates realized it, they were a week into the project’s three-week comment period. …The following month, Stearns and other environmentalists sued the agency, trying to block the plan.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

America’s Largest Landowner Bets It Can Replace Met Coal With Pine Trees

By Ryan Dezember
The Wall Street Journal
December 17, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

Weyerhaeuser, America’s largest private landowner, said it has launched a venture to turn runty trees and sawdust from its fleet of mills into a replacement for metallurgical coal used in steel making. The forest-products company said it expects production to begin in 2027 at a facility being built next to its sawmill in McComb, Mississippi—the first of several biocarbon plants planned by Weyerhaeuser and partner Aymium. It is the latest effort to find a market for the trees too small or otherwise unsuitable for making lumber. Such wood has typically been sent to pulp and paper mills, but U.S. wood-pulp consumption capacity has plunged due to waning paper demand. …Stockfish said he envisions the venture with Aymium operating as many as 10 or 11 biocarbon production facilities across Weyerhaeuser’s U.S. properties. …Aymium CEO James Mennell said the company’s process works with all species of wood as well as agricultural residues. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

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Health & Safety

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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