Region Archives: United States

Business & Politics

U.S. industry groups strongly back renewing CUSMA

By Mike Crawley
CBC News
December 1, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

As Canada’s trade deal with the US and Mexico faces a crucial review, many US industries are urging the Trump administration to preserve the agreement and to stop putting tariffs on imports from its northern and southern neighbours. Ahead of the public hearings scheduled this week, some of the heaviest hitters in the U.S. manufacturing, industrial and retail sectors have submitted briefs extolling the agreement’s benefits to the domestic economy. …CUSMA is “the most pro-US manufacturing trade agreement in history,” said the National Association of Manufacturers, the largest organization in a sector that contributes $2.9 trillion US to the nation’s GDP. …The National Association of Home Builders calls on the Trump administration to scrap all tariffs on building material imported from Canada and Mexico, including Canadian softwood lumber, which it says “fills a unique niche in residential construction that is not easily replaced with domestic sources.”

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Happy birthday, CUSMA. Is seven your lucky number?

By John Stackhouse
Royal Bank of Canada
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The much-pilloried Canada-U.S.-Mexico trade agreement was signed seven years ago this weekend—on November 30, 2018. A year later, it was amended to address rules of origin for autos, digital trade, IP, dairy and, who could forget, a sunset clause. We can all do the math. The December 10, 2019 amendments set in motion a 16-year term for the agreement, with a mandatory review every six years. Which means we’ll see more of a requiem than a birthday bash next week when Mark Carney is in Washington to help kick off the 2026 FIFA World Cup. But don’t bury CUSMA just yet. Despite the U.S. President’s freeze on negotiations, officials from both countries are talking every day and laying the groundwork for what will be an intense 2026. Not many insiders seriously expect CUSMA to go away; they’re working on changes—modifications, enhancements, renovations, depending on your point of view—that will continue to change the fabric of continental commerce.

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Canada’s trade resilience faces uncertainty as CUSMA renegotiation looms

By Tracy Moran
National Post
November 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Canada has fared pretty well amid U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade war so far. As Prime Minister Mark Carney likes to point out, the country has the best trade deal going with the United States, thanks to the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), with over 85 per cent of exports to America being tariff-free. The trouble is, that could change in the year ahead as the 2026 joint review of CUSMA gets underway. All three countries have launched consultation processes ahead of the renegotiation process to get stakeholders’ feedback on the trade agreement’s pros and cons. The next and crucial step in the U.S. involves in-person testimony at the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) hearings in Washington, D.C., from December 3 to 5, where more than 170 witnesses are scheduled to share their views. The proceedings will help the USTR gather information to inform its report to Congress, which could shape Trump’s approach to next year’s renegotiation talks.

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Dairy, whiskey, wine and steel: American industries weigh in on trade pact review

By Kelly Geraldine Malone
The Canadian Press in National Newswatch
November 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON — American industries ranging from whiskey makers and Wisconsin dairy producers to steel and automobile associations are weighing in on the future of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade. The continental trade pact, known as CUSMA, is up for mandatory review next year and the Office of the United States Trade Representative has been collecting input on the changes it should consider. CUSMA has been rattled by U.S. President Trump’s massive tariff agenda and many of the submissions urged the administration to restore duty-free trade. The Can Manufacturers Institute wrote to the Trump administration saying steel and aluminum tariffs on Canada are making their products more expensive and causing prices in grocery stores to increase. …The United States Steel Corporation said tariffs on that metal should remain indefinitely. The submissions provide insight into areas that could become irritants in looming negotiations on the critical trilateral trade pact.

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Trump quietly holds off on Canada tariff increase

By Ari Hawkins
Politico
November 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

President Donald Trump has yet to follow through on his threat to impose an additional 10 percent tariff on Canadian imports, four weeks after he halted “all trade negotiations” over an anti-tariff ad the province of Ontario ran. Trump’s announcement had Canadian exporters preparing for a worst-case scenario: a sweeping levy layered on top of existing double-digit duties. …The White House did not say whether it still plans to impose the tariff when asked for comment. But a separate US official suggested the Trump administration had opted to hold off on additional duties — which would have sent tariffs on Canadian goods to 45% — and instead continue to dangle the threat as the two sides gear up for future talks. “The Canadians know what’s on the table,” said the official. Volpe said a personal intervention by Carney in Asia last month may have helped matters, too.

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‘Cultural break’: U.S. senators say relations with Canadian neighbours are suffering

By Michael MacDonald
CBC News
November 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East, United States

Angus King

The tariffs imposed on Canada by US President Trump have clearly caused economic pain for Canada, but a US senator from Maine says he’s more worried about how Canadians are reacting on a personal level. “Like any neighbours, there’s always going to be issues back and forth, and we’ve been fighting about softwood lumber for as long as I could remember,” Angus King told an international security conference in Halifax on Saturday. “But the deeper problem is the cultural break; the idea that Canadians don’t think of Americans as their friends and neighbours, but as adversaries.” The annual Halifax International Security Forum that opened Friday has attracted more than 300 delegates from around the world, including politicians, academics, government officials, military leaders and non-government organizations. …King said the lingering rift between Canadians and Americans is particularly troubling in a state that borders on New Brunswick and Quebec.

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Canada Doubling Down On Unfair Trade and Subsidies

The US Lumber Coalition
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — Canadian Prime Minister Carney’s government issued yet another massive subsidy announcement to prop up Canada’s excessive and harmful lumber overcapacity and production. This bail out comes on top of other multi-billion dollar subsidies aimed at neutralizing US trade law enforcement actions and President Trump’s plan to increase US softwood lumber production through tariff measures. …The Carney government will only exacerbate the softwood lumber trade issue, and will eventually result in the US government collecting those subsidies as the US continues to enforce its trade laws. To date, Canadian companies have paid over $7 billion dollars in duties. “Canada should responsibly reduce its massive excess lumber overcapacity that remains the underlying cause of Canada’s unfair trade practices,” stated Zoltan van Heyningen. …We urge President Trump to consider additional immediate measures in response to Canada’s continued abuse of the US market,” said Chair Andrew Miller.

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Newhouse Introduces Legislation to Strengthen U.S. Timber Industry

Office of Dan Newhouse
November 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Dan Newhouse

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-WA) introduced the Supporting American Wood and Mill Infrastructure with Loans for Longevity (SAWMILL) Act alongside Rep. Terri Sewell (D-AL) to permanently reauthorize the Timber Production Expansion Guaranteed Loan Program (TPEP). … “The SAWMILL Act gives timber mills the ability to grow their operations and support rural communities who stand to benefit even more from a strong, local timber industry. …This legislation is a positive step we can take to make sure the federal government is making it easier for the industry to be successful here at home.” …TPEP offers low-interest, long-term loans for timber and wood processing companies to invest in their facilities and equipment, with a particular emphasis on supporting timber mills processing hazardous fuels. This simultaneously boosts rural economies and reduces wildfire risk on public lands. The legislation is supported by the American Wood Council, American Forests, and The Lumber Manufactory (TLM).

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King, Collins Urgently Request Certainty on Tariffs for Maine’s Forest Products Industry

By Angus King and Susan Collins
Office of Angus King
November 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Angus King

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senators Angus King (I-ME) and Susan Collins (R-ME) are urgently requesting tariff relief for Maine’s forest products industry. …The Maine forest products industry is deeply interconnected with Canada. Last year alone, Maine exported roughly 2 million tons of wood. Similarly, and within the same time frame, Maine imported 2.3 million tons of wood. …“We are aware that the Administration is considering measures to provide aid to agricultural industries that cannot weather the headwinds in global markets as a result of the tariffs. Accordingly, we believe that the forestry products industry should be eligible and included in any relief program. …“In closing, we are supportive of the Administration’s goal to strengthen domestic manufacturing and the U.S. forestry industry. However, as trade negotiations continue, we ask that you provide prompt relief to our hardworking forestry product manufacturers so they can thrive now and for years to come,” the Senators concluded.

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Roy O. Martin III surprised with Louisiana Tech Honorary Doctor

Louisiana Tech University News
December 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

Louisiana Tech University conferred an honorary doctorate of Humanities for Roy O. Martin III, chairman and CEO of RoyOMartin in recognition of his decades of leadership, service, and his transformational support of the University’s Forestry program. Martin was honored in a surprise ceremony by President Jim Henderson and College of Applied and Natural Sciences Dean Gary Kennedy. The presentation took place at Martin’s retirement celebration as CEO of RoyOMartin… Martin’s partnership with Louisiana Tech has had a profound impact on the University’s academic and research enterprise. His vision and advocacy were instrumental in the development of the Forest Products Innovation Center, a facility now under construction on Tech’s South Campus. Set to open in Fall 2026, the FPIC will advance forestry education, research, and cutting-edge discovery while supporting interdisciplinary research and workforce development tied to one of Louisiana’s most essential industries.

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Radovich named forest industries executive VP

By Lee Bloomquist
Mesabi Tribune
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

Tom Radovich

Minnesota’s forest products producers will have a new leader representing the industry. Tom Radovich has been named incoming Minnesota Forest Industries (MFI) executive vice president. Radovich, formerly operations manager at Sappi paper mill in Cloquet, takes over Dec. 9 for Rick Horton, retiring MFI executive vice president. …Radovich has decades of experience in the forest products industry. Radovich holds a bachelor’s degree in Paper Science and Engineering from the University of Minnesota in the Twin Cities. He has 30 years of experience at the Sappi mill. …MFI is a trade organization that represents Minnesota’s primary forest products mills. Minnesota’s forest products industry is the fifth largest sector in the state, employing more than 72,500 people with gross sales over $26 billion annually, according to MFI. However, like many other industries and businesses, the forest products industry is facing workforce challenges.

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CN a ‘strong fit’ for lumber dealer’s growth strategy, new upper Michigan plant

By Jeff Stagl, managing editor
Progressive Railroading
November 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

KINCHELOE, Michigan — A unique manufacturing facility opened in September along a CN line in Kincheloe, Michigan. Located in the Chippewa County Industrial Park in Michigan’s upper peninsula, the $7.3 million, 20,000-square foot facility serves as a transportation and logistics hub for wood and lumber dealer Maple Transport. The facility features a rail spur and is situated near Interstate 75. The new manufacturing hub will support Michigan’s $20 billion forest products industry and serve other new or expanding businesses, Maple Transport officials say. Project funding included $5.8 million from the U.S. Economic Development Administration, $1.25 million in matching dollars from the Michigan Economic Development Corp., and contributions from the Chippewa County Economic Development Corp. and a Strategic Site Readiness Program grant. Construction began in spring 2024 on the manufacturing facility, which Maple Transport will use to ship wood products, CN officials said in an email. The facility will be served by both CN and trucks.

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Monadnock Paper Mills Appoints Andrew Manns as Chief Executive Officer

Monadnock Paper Mills
November 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

BENNINGTON, New Hampshire — Monadnock Paper Mills, the oldest operating paper mill in the US, has appointed Andrew Manns as Chief Executive Officer, following the planned leadership transition initiated by the late Richard G. Verney. Manns brings 30 years of experience with Monadnock, joining the company in 1995 as VP of Finance before being personally requested by Verney to lead the company as CEO. …As CEO, Manns brings continuity to Monadnock’s mission at a time when the paper and packaging industries face increasing complexity, from sustainability regulations to supply chain disruption and evolving customer expectations. Having navigated over 200 years of continuous operation, Monadnock will remain committed to delivering high-quality materials that meet market needs while minimizing environmental impact. 

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Finance & Economics

US Building Material Prices Continued to Rise in September

By Jesse Wade
NAHB Eye on Housing
November 25, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Aggregate residential building material prices rose at their fastest pace since January 2023 in the latest Producer Price Index release from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Input energy prices increased for the first time in over a year, while service price growth remained lower than goods. The Producer Price Index for final demand increased 0.3% in September, after falling 0.1% in August. …The price index for inputs to new residential construction rose 0.2% in September and was up 3.1% from last year. The price of goods inputs was up 0.1% over the month and 3.5% from last year, while prices for services were up 0.3% over the month and 2.5% from last year. The goods component has a larger importance to the inputs to residential construction price index, representing around 60%. On a monthly basis, the price of input goods to new residential construction was up 0.1% in September.

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US Consumer Confidence Fell Sharply in November

The Conference Board
November 25, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index® declined by 6.8 points in November to 88.7 (1985=100) from 95.5 in October. The Present Situation Index—based on consumers’ assessment of current business and labor market conditions—fell by 4.3 points to 126.9. The Expectations Index—based on consumers’ short-term outlook for income, business, and labor market conditions—fell by 8.6 points to 63.2. The Expectations Index has tracked below 80 for ten consecutive months, the threshold under which the gauge signals recession ahead. …Dana Peterson, Chief Economist, The Conference Board said, “All five components of the overall index flagged or remained weak. The Present Situation Index dipped as consumers were less sanguine about current business and labor market conditions. The labor market differential dipped again… and all three components of the Expectations Index deteriorated. Consumers were notably more pessimistic about business conditions six months from now.”

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Share of US New Homes with Decks Edges Lower

By Paul Emrath
NAHB Eye on Housing
November 25, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The share of new homes with decks edged down from 17.6% in 2023 to a new all-time low of 17.4% in 2024, according to NAHB tabulation of data from the HUD/Census Bureau Survey of Construction (SOC). Over the longer term, the share of new homes with decks has been declining steadily since reaching a peak of 27.0% in 2007 and 2008. Amidst that decline, the share of new homes with patios has been trending upward, from under 50% to over 60%. From the re-design of the SOC in 2005 through 2024, the correlation between the percentages of new homes with patios and decks is -0.85, indicating that patios and decks are functioning as substitutes over time—i.e., as patios become more common, they are crowding out decks. …Even so, decks remain relatively popular on new homes in some parts of the country. …Moreover, in the latest edition of What Home Buyers Really Want, 79% rated a deck as an essential or desirable feature.

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Fannie Mae forecasters are predicting mortgage rates will fall below 6% by the end of next year.

By Fannie Mae
PR Newswire
November 21, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — Fannie Mae’s monthly economic and housing outlook, published by the Economic and Strategic Research (ESR) Group, is now available. The forecast files, which contain the ESR Group’s expectations for mortgage rates, single-family and multifamily originations, and real GDP growth, among other data points step from their November Economic Forecast and their November Housing Forecast. Highlights include: 

  • Mortgage rates are expected to end 2025 at 6.6% and 2026 at 6.0%.
  • Total home sales projected at 4.73 million units in 2025 and 5.08 million in 2026.
  • The ESR expects home prices to rise 2.5% in 2025 and 1.3% in 2026.
  • Single-family mortgage originations are forecast at $1.88 trillion in 2025 and $2.34 trillion in 2026.

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US consumer sentiment little changed in November

The University of Michigan
November 21, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Consumer sentiment was little changed this month with a 2.6 index point decrease from October that is within the margin of error. After the federal shutdown ended, sentiment lifted slightly from its mid-month reading. However, consumers remain frustrated about the persistence of high prices and weakening incomes. This month, current personal finances and buying conditions for durables both plunged more than 10%, whereas expectations for the future improved modestly. By the end of the month, sentiment for consumers with the largest stock holdings lost the gains seen at the preliminary reading. This group’s sentiment dropped about 2 index points from October, likely a consequence of the stock market declines seen over the past two weeks. Year-ahead inflation expectations inched down from 4.6% last month to 4.5% this month. This marks three consecutive months of declines, but short-run inflation expectations still remain above the 3.3% seen in January. 

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US Existing Home Sales Rise in October

By Fan-Yu Kuo
NAHB Eye on Housing
November 20, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Existing home sales rose to an eight-month high in October as buyers took advantage of lower mortgage rates, according to the National Association of Realtors (NAR). Resale inventory improved from a year ago but remained below pre-pandemic levels. Relatively tight supply continued to push home prices higher and challenge housing affordability. …Mortgage rates hovered between 6.5% and 7% earlier this year due to economic and tariff uncertainty. However, with the Fed resuming rate cuts in September, mortgage rates have fallen gradually. As of October 30th, the average mortgage rate decreased to 6.17%, the lowest in over a year. …Total existing home sales, including single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums, and co-ops, rose 1.2% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.10 million in October, the highest level since February. On a year-over-year basis, sales were 1.7% higher than a year ago.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

How building codes shaped material, social, and environmental landscapes in American cities

By Benjamin Schneider
The Architect’s Newspaper
November 21, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

The Type V City by Jeana Ripple, a professor of architecture at the University of Virginia. Ripple examines how the spread of wood-frame “Type V” buildings shaped the economies, social relations, and well-being of five American cities: Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, Tampa, and Seattle. …Almost every American city contains neighborhoods dominated by wood frame construction–light, cheap, combustible, and requiring the lowest upfront investment of labor and material in the building industry. Known as a Type V (five) construction in the terminology of building codes, these buildings became ubiquitous in the American urban landscape thanks to the abundance of timber, housing affordability aspirations, and the adoption of a uniform code. …By examining the development of building materials and codes alongside the environmental, social, economic, and political context of each city’s development, Ripple reveals previously overlooked connections between the power structures underpinning regulatory evolution and the impacts that lay just beyond the frame of city builders’ priorities. 

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Michigan officials announce mass timber project initiatives

By Dakota Smith
Woodworking Network
November 21, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

LANSING, Michigan — Michigan’s Department of Natural Resources, along with Michigan State University, the Michigan Green Building Collaborative and WoodWorks, have announced a new initiative program for mass timber projects being built in the state. …Although mass timber is not yet produced in Michigan, construction using mass timber has grown significantly. That increased demand, combined with Michigan’s forest resource signals significant potential for mass timber manufacture here. …The new program provides financial and technical support to project teams engaged in the early planning and design phases of new projects that use mass timber as a primary structural or architectural material. …Project teams that receive awards – ranging from $25,000 to $75,000 – will participate in a cohort led by MassTimber@MSU and WoodWorks. …“WoodWorks is proud to partner with the Michigan Mass Timber Catalyst Program to accelerate the adoption of mass timber for new construction projects throughout Michigan,” said Jennifer Cover, CEO of WoodWorks.

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Forestry

Mapping the climate niches of forest insects and diseases in Canada under current and future climate

By John Pedlar, Daniel McKenney & Glenn Lawrence
Nature
November 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Insects and diseases are important disturbance agents in Canadian forests and there is concern that their impacts will intensify under climate change. Here we report on an effort to model and map the climate niches of more than 4000 forest insect and fungus species in Canada – including high-profile pest species that are already, or may soon become, established in the country. This work employs occurrence data from historical, national-scale forest insect and disease surveys. …We further employ national forest inventory products (gridded maps) to summarize forest host volumes at risk of infestation by selected insect and disease species. …We demonstrate use of the products through examples, including brown spruce longhorn beetle, southern pine beetle, oak wilt, and map overlays that show hotspots for bark beetles under current and projected climate. We hope this tool will help pest managers to better understand how these species may respond to projected climate change.

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Solving America’s 50-million-ton-a-year sawdust problem

By David Tenny, president & CEO, National Alliance of Forest Owners
Agri-Pulse
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

David Tenny

Across rural America, pulp and paper mills have been closing or downsizing at an alarming rate. These mills once purchased their wood fiber, including pulpwood, chips and sawdust, from sustainably managed forests. Mill closures have caused 50 million tons of annual wood fiber processing capacity to disappear, wiping out hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue for forest owners and sawmills. This isn’t just a market problem. It’s a rural jobs problem, a housing problem and a forest-health problem. …We need new markets for this material.  A simple, commonsense and bipartisan way to help create new markets is to fix the definitions of woody biomass in the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) so wood fiber can fully qualify as an eligible feedstock, as intended. …The good news is… Airlines want more sustainable fuel, and forest owners and sawmills have wood fiber to create biofuels.  

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US Forest Service Honoring Native American heritage

By Chief Tom Schultz
US Department of Agriculture
November 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Tom Schultz

Next year, we will celebrate 250 years of our great nation. It’s an opportunity to reflect on our history and on the people and events that shaped America. The story of our country is intertwined with its land, a topic we in the Forest Service are familiar with. As such, we must recognize the people who stewarded this land since time immemorial, prior to European contact. Reflecting on the contributions of the first stewards of the land is one important way to commemorate Native American Heritage Month. The native peoples of North America developed land management expertise years before our nation was established. We are fortunate to learn from this expertise as we partner with tribal nations to do the critical work that’s needed to maintain the health and vitality of our nation’s forests. …We make a greater difference when we work with tribes and learn from their traditional knowledge. 

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Don’t trade salmon wealth for timber pennies

By Linda Behnken, Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association
The Anchorage Daily News
November 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

As the US Forest Service considers the future management of the Tongass National Forest, I hope that Alaska’s congressional delegation will listen to what Southeast Alaskans already know: Wild salmon are one of the Tongass’ most valuable resources. If we leave the trees standing and protect the habitat that fish need, the Tongass will continue to generate billions of dollars in natural dividends, in turn supporting thousands of fishing jobs and providing millions of pounds of nutritious seafood year after year. …For decades, Southeast Alaska’s communities and fishermen have fought industrial logging in the Tongass. …The harmful impacts of industrial logging on Southeast Alaska’s salmon watersheds and our natural dividends are not hypothetical. Protecting the Tongass is the most cost-effective way to improve ecosystem productivity and ensure the well-being for all who call Southeast home. 

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Logging project thins trees to create, enhance grizzly bear habitat

By Kevin Maki
NBC Montana
November 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

TROY, Montana — Vincent Logging, a family-owned logging company in Libby is working with Hecla Mining Company to manage its forested lands for wildlife habitat. It’s a 15-hundred acre research project to determine which management techniques provide the best habitat for endangered species. …It’s forest land in the Bull Lake area on Hecla Mining property near Troy. “We’re going to create grizzly bear habitat or enhance existing habitat for the bear,” he said. “Doing so, will enhance habitat for all the other critters that are living in here or that might live in here. We’re also studying it for success or failure at the same time.” Chas said thinning small diameter trees opens the area to create more plants that grizzlies like to eat. Larger diameter trees and thickets are left untouched to create a safe haven for the bears.

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Loggers scrambling to keep projects on track

By Peter Aleshire
Payson Roundup
November 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

ARIZONA — For the first time in months, Forest Service timber managers last week attended a Natural Resources Working Group meeting on the continuing effort to restore Northern Arizona forests and protect communities including Payson, Show Low, Pinetop and Pine. Local officials and logging operators said they are still searching for ways to handle millions of tons of low-value brush, slash and small trees that crowd the region’s overgrown ponderosa pine forests. The group, formed through the Eastern Arizona Counties Organization, meets regularly with industry representatives and Forest Service staff. …The Four Forest Restoration Initiative (4FRI) completed about 18,000 acres of thinning in the past year. Mass layoffs and the shutdown limited collaboration and fieldwork. …Pascal Berlioux, executive director of the Eastern Arizona Counties Organization, said a major problem was reduced production at the Lignetics plant in Show Low, which normally buys large amounts of biomass for wood-pellet manufacturing.

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Alaska timber industry says it needs more supply to survive

By Larry Persily
The Wrangell Sentinel
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

It was no surprise that everyone on the timber panel at this month’s Alaska Resource Development Council conference had the same message: The industry needs a larger supply of trees to cut. And a steady, bankable supply, said Joe Young, of Tok, who started Young’s Timber in Alaska’s Interior more than 30 years ago. …The Nov. 13 industry panel at the annual conference held in Anchorage also talked about demand for their product and the challenges in meeting that demand. Juneau attorney Jim Clark, said the Trump administration’s move to rescind the Roadless Rule, which has been around since 2001, could help open areas of the Tongass National Forest to logging. …The lack of timber sales, financial pressures and opposition from conservation groups have knocked down Alaska timber industry jobs from almost 4,000 in 1990 to about 700 in 2015 and just 360 in 2024, according to Alaska Department of Labor statistics.

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Oregon senators push for wildfire disaster relief for Columbia Gorge Scenic Area

By Alex Baumhardt
The Oregonian
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©USFS Flickr

Oregon’s U.S. senators are urging their peers on a powerful budgeting committee to send emergency funding to Oregon and other states where national lands and parks were recently burned by wildfires. More than a million acres of federal land burned across the West this summer, including thousands of acres of the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area straddling Oregon and Washington in the Rowena and Burdoin fires. While state, tribal and private lands are eligible for disaster aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, federal land managed by natural resource agencies are not. Officials at the National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management have to seek congressional help to finance recovery efforts. In light of this, Oregon’s Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden joined eight other Democratic senators in writing Monday to the chairs of the Senate Appropriations Committee asking for federal funding. 

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Regional sawmills extend life of beetle-killed trees from Routt County

By Suzie Romig
Steamboat Pilot & Today
November 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Kremmling, Colorado — The Mill in Kremmling is contributing to the natural carbon-storing success of trees in Routt County by purchasing and reusing standing dead trees logged during wildfire mitigation projects and turned into usable wood products. The company’s goal is to support the local economy and Colorado’s timber industry by creating a demand for forest products sourced entirely from fire mitigation projects, said Lisa Hara, owner and CEO at The Mill. Some 90% of the trees processed at The Mill come from Routt County, with 10% from Jefferson County for Douglas fir wood, Hara said. “We help Routt County by creating a demand for materials that come directly from fire mitigation and watershed projects,” said Hara, who purchased The Mill in spring 2023. “Instead of being treated as waste, this wood becomes a resource, one that supports forest health and rural jobs at the same time.”

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Logging advocate works to lead contrasting groups for sustainable forests

By Kevin Maki
NBC Montana
November 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Bruce Vincent

The timber industry was a mainstay of western Montana’s economy for decades. But that economic force entered a sharp decline. Divisions between the industry and critics were especially rampant in the 1980’s and 90’s. But one of Montana’s most prominent logging activists is on a journey of collaboration. NBC Montana met Bruce Vincent in his hometown of Libby. …Bruce would become a hero to many in the logging industry. But for critics he was a lightning rod. He remembers what they called ‘the Timber Wars.’ …For a long time Bruce said he was in the fight. But he got tired of it. …Bruce said he was raised to be a steward of the forest. It’s that message that he has worked all these years to share. “We did a good job at fighting,” he said. “But we sucked at leading. We needed to learn how to lead this discussion on what we think forest sustainability could look like.”

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Forest Service sued by conservation orgs over Nolichucky River logging

By Ryley Ober
Asheville Citizen Times
December 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

North Carolina — Two conservation organizations sued the U.S. Forest Service alleging the agency unlawfully entered into a contract with a logger to harvest timber near the Nolichucky River in the Pisgah National Forest, including within 20 acres of old-growth forest. The lawsuit claims the U.S. Forest Service sold timber through an unauthorized salvage logging operation on 135 acres of national forest land as part of post-Tropical Storm Helene debris removal within the Nolichucky River Gorge, which runs along North Carolina’s northwestern border with Tennessee. Helene caused “moderate to catastrophic” damage to more than 187,000 acres of national forest land, totaling around $44 million in lost vegetation and land damage in the Pisgah and Nantahala National Forests. The Southern Environmental Law Center filed the suit Nov. 6 in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina on behalf of the Center for Biological Diversity and MountainTrue. 

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In burned forests, the West’s snowpack is melting earlier

By Mitch Tobin
The Water Desk
November 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

As the American West warms due to climate change, wildfires are increasingly burning in higher-elevation mountains, charring the watersheds where the region’s vital snowpack accumulates. A new study has found that in the immediate aftermath of fires across the region, the snowpack disappears earlier in burned areas. This change can threaten forest health and affect the downstream farms, cities and species that rely on the snowpack for their water, according to other research. Scientists who study the effects of wildfires on the snowpack and streamflows are finding that the story is complex and nuanced. The impacts can vary greatly across the West’s diverse ecosystems and topography. Plus, each wildfire burns differently, so the severity of the blaze is another critical factor. …Published in the Sept. 17 issue of Science Advances… The research also concluded that warming temperatures due to climate change will further accelerate post-fire melting.

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Environmental groups sue US Forest Service over logging in Pisgah National Forest

By Rian Stockett
ABC 13 News
November 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

PISGAH NATIONAL FOREST, North Carolina — A lawsuit has been filed against the US Forest Service over what environmental groups call an “unlawful” logging project in Pisgah National Forest. “The reason that we’re in court is because not only did the Forest Service fail to provide notice to the public about a logging project under NEPA (National Environmental Policy Act) as they were required to do, but also because they’re doing that in an area that is just so sensitive and important,” said Sam Evans, Southern Environmental Law Center’s (SELC) national forests and parks program leader. …A USDA Forest Service spokesperson said, “Per longstanding agency policy, we’re unable to comment on the merits of any lawsuit filed in response to our efforts to keep the communities we serve safe by removing excess wildfire fuel left in the wake of Hurricane Helene.”

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Pecking with power: How tiny woodpeckers deliver devastating strikes to drill into wood

Brown University
November 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — It’s one of nature’s mysteries: How can woodpeckers, the smallest of which weigh less than an ounce, drill permanent holes into massive trees using only their tiny heads? New research shows that there’s much more at play, anatomically: When a woodpecker bores into wood, it uses not only its head but its entire body, as well as its breathing. In a study published in the Journal of Experimental Biology, a team led by biologists at Brown University reveals how woodpeckers combine breathing and whole-body coordination to drill into trees with extraordinary force. “These findings expand our understanding of the links between respiration, muscle physiology and behavior to perform extreme motor feats and meet ecological challenges,” said lead author Nicholas Antonson… The team studied downy woodpeckers, the smallest species of woodpeckers in North America, which populate forested areas throughout the United States and Canada.

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Longleaf Pine Through Time: How Centuries of Change Shaped a Forest and the Effort to Manage it

Mississippi State University Extension Service
November 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Historically, the longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) forest extended for approximately 92 million acres across the southeastern US, from the Piedmont region to the Gulf Coastal Plain, and from Virginia to Texas. It was one of the most important species in different ecosystems supporting a complex web of life and human livelihoods for millennia. …However, less than 4% of the original longleaf range remains intact today, due to logging, fire exclusion, and land use change. Very few old-growth longleaf remnants exist only in four of the nine longleaf states (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and North Carolina), and some ecosystem types have no remaining representatives of the primary forest. Fortunately, a growing interest in restoring longleaf for wildlife habitat, climate resilience, and cultural heritage is sparking renewed efforts across public and private lands. This publication aims to track the origins and decline of the longleaf pine ecosystem from a historical and social point of view. 

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Minnesota forest management dispute hinges on age of aspen when it’s cut

By Dennis Anderson
The Minnesota Star Tribune
November 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Minnesota Forest Industries executive vice president Rick Horton argues in this second installment of my interview with him that loggers don’t determine the age of aspen that is cut on state lands, the Department of Natural Resources does. The conflict is one of a handful of flashpoints that arose after the federal government withheld more than $20 million from the DNR for failing to document wildlife benefits of logging on state wildlife management areas — a controversy about which the Legislative Auditor also issued a critical report. In my November 14 column, I quoted a retired DNR forest wildlife planner and a retired DNR forester who said the state’s timber industry’s influence over the DNR threatens forest wildlife. Headquartered in Duluth, Minnesota Forest Industries represents the state’s approximately 69,000 Minnesotans who cut timber and manufacture lumber, siding and other wood and paper products. 

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Domtar, Eastman to continue reporting certain gases despite Environmental Protection Agency plans

By Jorgelina Manna-Rea
The Times News
November 26, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US East

Domtar Corp. and Eastman Chemical Co. said they will continue to record and report climate-warming emissions even with the Environmental Protection Agency’s move to end a reporting program for them. The EPA’s Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program, which went into effect in 2010, requires about 8,000 facilities to annually report their greenhouse gas emissions. That includes chemical plants and pulp and paper manufacturing facilities like Eastman and Domtar’s Kingsport locations. …Domtar said in a statement to Six Rivers Media that it plans to continue reporting greenhouse gas data and reducing those emissions are part of the company’s objectives. “Many of our customers and stakeholders are concerned about climate issues, and carbon footprints are increasingly being considered in purchasing decisions,” said Jan Martin, Domtar’s director of U.S. Public Affairs. …Other industry trade groups have shared their own concerns over the end of the program, saying it could complicate their processes or add new costs. 

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Health & Safety

EPA to abandon air pollution rule that would prevent thousands of U.S. deaths

By Amudalat Ajasa
The Washington Post
November 25, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States

The Environmental Protection Agency is abandoning a rule that limits fine-particle pollution, a move experts say could lead to dirtier air and more US deaths. …The agency argued in the US Court that the rule was done “without a rigorous, stepwise process”. …Paul Noe testified that the EPA’s model would make it difficult for businesses to construct manufacturing plants and obtain federal permits for them. Noe, who is with the American Forest and Paper Association, said that by “setting the standard so close to background levels” of fine particulate matter, there would not be “sufficient ‘permit headroom.’” He added that industry was no longer the primary contributor of PM2.5 in the US, with wildfires and dust accounting for a greater share of the problem. The withdrawal drew instant backlash from environmental groups. …“The administration wants to take away Americans’ right to breathe clean, safe air,” said John Walke with NRDC. [to access the full story a subscription is required]

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Forest History & Archives

The murder that ended a young Bay Area editor’s crusade to save the redwoods

By Martha Ross
The Mercury News
November 26, 2025
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: US West

Ralph Sidney Smith

Ten days before 31-year-old newspaper editor Ralph Sidney Smith was shot and killed by an angry reader on the streets of Redwood City, he enjoyed a final visit to his favorite place on Earth. …Like other early environmental activists, including John Muir, Smith used his writing to sound the alarm about rampant logging that was destroying California’s coastal redwoods, telling the public and the politically connected — including industrialist and US Senator Leland Stanford — that the state was on the brink of losing a vital natural resource. …As editor of the Times and Gazette, Smith prioritized covering logging’s widespread destruction of ancient redwood forests throughout the state. …Smith wasn’t a pure “nature preservationist” because his ideal public forest would be a self-supporting tourist attraction, with roads, hotels, camping grounds and “streams stocked with trout.” …Smith’s reported “love of justice” put him in harm’s way. …Tragically, Smith’s murder meant he didn’t live to see a state park established in Big Basin.

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