Region Archives: United States

Breaking News

Trump to Lay Out Trade Vision—but Won’t Impose New Tariffs Yet

By Meridith McGraw and Gavin Bade
The Wall Street Journal
January 20, 2025
Category: Breaking News
Region: United States

WASHINGTON—President-elect Donald Trump is planning to issue a broad memorandum that directs federal agencies to study trade policies and evaluate U.S. trade relationships with China and America’s continental neighbors—but stops short of imposing new tariffs on his first day in office, as many trading partners feared. The memo directs federal agencies to investigate and remedy persistent trade deficits and address unfair trade and currency policies by other nations. And it singles out China, Canada and Mexico for scrutiny, directing agencies to assess Beijing’s compliance with its 2020 trade deal with the U.S., as well as the status of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA, which is set for review in 2026. But the memo doesn’t, in itself, impose any new tariffs—a momentary relief for foreign capitals. Instead, the trade policy memo is an indication of debates still roiling the incoming administration over how to deliver on Trump’s campaign trail promises for across-the-board tariffs on imports. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

Related coverage in: the Globe and Mail: President-elect won’t impose new tariffs on first day

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Business & Politics

B.C. timber outlook amid looming tariffs

BNN Bloomberg
January 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Ravi Parmar, minister of forests of British Columbia, talks about the forecast for British Columbia’s timber industry in light of impending tariffs. The 7 minute video interview starts after two 30-second ads. If you don’t see the video preview click the Read More below to open it directly in Bloomberg.

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Canada should stop playing defence on Trump’s tariff threat, minister says

By Kelly Geraldine Malone
The Canadian Press in BNN Bloomberg
January 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Francois-Philippe Champagne

Canadian officials are adopting a different tone after President Donald Trump ordered a study of the United States’ trade relationship with Canada, pushing the threat of devastating tariffs down the road — temporarily. “We need to move from a defensive position to offensive in the sense that we have a lot of good things to put on the table,” Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne said. Trump signed the America First Trade Policy Monday evening, providing Ottawa with some insights into his tariff agenda. The memorandum orders multiple federal agencies to study trade policies and trade deficits. It directs the secretary of commerce and the secretary of homeland security to assess migration and fentanyl flows from Canada, Mexico and China and recommend “appropriate trade and national security measures to resolve that emergency. It also signalled the U.S. trade representative to start consultations around the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement and “make recommendations regarding the United States’ participation in the agreement.”

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Setting the Record Straight on Canada-US Trade

By Marc Ercolao and Andrew Foran, Economists
TD Economics
January 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Canada is the largest export market for the U.S. and makes up one of the smallest trade deficits, owing largely to U.S. demand for energy-related products. Trade in the auto sector is balanced between the 2 nations. While President Trump has mused that the U.S. could replace Canadian auto exports with its own domestic supply, the highly integrated North American supply chains is a major complicating factor. …With respect to Trump’s assertion that the U.S. subsidizes Canada to the tune of US$200 billion per year, it’s unclear where this number is derived. In any event, rather than a subsidy, the U.S. trade deficit is a by-product of U.S. economic outperformance relative to other countries. As Canadian’s brace for a long period of “deal making” under President Trump’s tariff strategy, here’s a primer on what’s at stake and the facts behind the rhetoric.

Related coverage in:

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Trump says 25% tariffs on Canada, Mexico could come Feb. 1

By Alexander Panetta
CBC News
January 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Donald Trump has loaded the trade gun. He hasn’t pulled the trigger one day into his latest presidential term. But he insists it’s coming. Sitting in the Oval Office for the first time in four years, Trump said he’s planning to imminently follow through with the massive tariffs he’s threatened against Canada and Mexico. “We’re thinking in terms of 25%,” Trump told reporters, repeating his complaints about the border and fentanyl. The timeline remains fuzzy: Trump signed an executive order demanding a report by April 1 on the border, migration and fentanyl, which singled out Canada, Mexico and China. America’s neighbours have now received a swift reminder of life under Trump as a never-ending roller-coaster of real threats, unfulfilled threats and negotiation. …Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly said Canada has a threefold plan that includes preventing tariffs, preparing possible retaliatory measures and working on ‘our long-term response.’

Related coverage in:

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U.S. Department of Agriculture Announces Key Slate of Presidential Appointments

US Department of Agriculture
January 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Washington, D.C. — The U.S. Department of Agriculture today announced the names of the following individuals who will hold senior staff positions in Washington, D.C. These appointees have been selected to implement President Trump’s America First agenda, ensuring that the needs of America’s farmers, ranchers, and producers remain a top priority.

  • Kailee Tkacz Buller — Chief of Staff of the USDA
  • Preston Parry — Deputy Chief of Staff of the USDA
  • Jennifer Tiller — Chief of Staff to the Deputy Secretary and Senior Advisor to the Secretary for Food, Nutrition and Consumer Services. 
  • Ralph Linden — Principal Deputy General Counsel of the USDA
  • Audra Weeks — Deputy Director of Communications of the USDA
  • Dominic Restuccia will serve as the White House Liaison for the USDA

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Boise Cascade names Jeff Strom new chief operating officer

Boise Cascade Company
January 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Jeff Strom

BOISE, Idaho — Boise Cascade announced Jeff Strom will become its new chief operating officer (COO), effective January 20, 2025. This new role will oversee the operations for its Wood Products and Building Materials Distribution (BMD) divisions. Jeff joined Boise Cascade in 2006. …Most recently, he served as the Executive Vice President of BMD. Jeff holds a bachelor’s degree in management from the Georgia Institute of Technology. He serves on the board of trustees for the Boise Valley Habitat for Humanity. …CEO Nate Jorgensen said: “This new addition to our executive leadership team is an important part of our effort to achieve even greater operational excellence across both our businesses. It is also part of our intentional and strategic succession planning process.”

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Procter & Gamble accused of ‘greenwashing’ in Charmin toilet paper, lawsuit says

By Jonathan Stempel
Reuters
January 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

A new lawsuit accuses Procter & Gamble of deceiving Charmin purchasers with misleading environmental claims, known as greenwashing, about how it sources its toilet paper. In a proposed class action on Thursday, eight consumers said Procter & Gamble obtains most wood pulp for Charmin from the Canadian boreal forest… through harmful logging practices such as clear cutting and burning. The consumers called this sourcing “completely at odds” with Procter & Gamble’s public commitment to protecting the environment, including its “Keep Forests as Forests” campaign and the “Protect-Grow-Restore” logo found on Charmin packages. The lawsuit called the display of logos from the Forest Stewardship Council and Rainforest Alliance misleading because Procter & Gamble uses little pulp from FSC-certified forests and the Rainforest Alliance no longer has a certification program. …The lawsuit… seeks restitution, compensatory damages and punitive damages for violations of consumer protection laws in 28 U.S. states and Washington, D.C.

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Finance & Economics

Chemicals industry, freight rails brace for Trump tariffs on Canada, Mexico

By Lori Ann LaRocco
CNBC News
January 22, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

U.S. trade with Canada and Mexico is back in Trump’s crosshairs with the tariff threat. …Much of the focus has centered on autos but Canada is also the top trading partner of the U.S. for critical chemicals, an industry now bracing for the potential impact. …Mineral firms in Canada are considered domestic sources under Title III of the Defense Production Act and have received U.S. federal funding for critical minerals projects in Canada. …Canada is also the largest supplier of U.S. energy imports, including crude oil, natural gas, and electricity. …Rand Ghayad, chief economist at the Association of American Railroads, said the interconnected rail network between the U.S. and Canada is a cornerstone of North American trade, underpinning economic growth and supply chain resilience. …The inflationary effects from tariffs will take some time to materialize, as these costs will need to be passed through to end buyers.

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Lumber Drops on Impending Tariffs

Trading Economics
January 21, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber prices fell toward $580 per thousand board feet, retreating from eight-week highs of $600 on January 16th, as the impending 25% tariffs on Canadian softwood lumber, set to take effect on February 1st, weighed on the market. These tariffs, imposed by President Trump, will increase the cost of Canadian lumber, which is a key input for U.S. housing construction, potentially reducing demand as builders face higher material prices. The price hike could discourage housing projects, especially as the broader construction sector slows. Trump’s executive orders aimed at stimulating U.S. housing production, including efforts to lower construction costs, may further dampen demand for imported lumber by promoting domestic sourcing. As Canada is the largest supplier of U.S. lumber, the tariff’s impact on supply and demand dynamics is expected to be significant, with builders likely seeking alternatives as lumber prices rise.›

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How Trump’s Tariffs Could Impact the Housing Market

By Kerra Bolton
Open Bank Account
January 22, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

President Donald Trump’s proposal to implement significant tariffs on the country’s key trading partners could have ripple effects on the U.S. housing market. …The tariffs could drive up prices for new homes and renovations, further straining an already tight market. “The tariffs will raise the cost of materials, which could directly increase the cost of constructing new homes,” said Wayne Winegarden at Pacific Research Institute. Experts said tariffs are a tax that increases the costs of imported goods, including building materials. …Higher material and construction costs caused by the tariffs could make buying a home out of reach for many people. “The tariffs will slow down the economy and will also encourage the Federal Reserve to pursue a higher interest rate environment,” Winegarden said. …Together, the higher rates coupled with the rising cost of construction will significantly reduce housing affordability.”

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Cost of Constructing a Home reaches record high in 2024

By Eric Lynch
The NAHB Eye on Housing
January 23, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Construction costs account for 64.4% of the average price of a home, according to NAHB’s most recent Cost of Construction Survey. In 2022, the share was 3.6 points lower, at 60.8%. The latest finding marks a record high for construction costs since the inception of the series in 1998. The finished lot was the second largest cost at 13.7% of the sales price, down more than four percentage points from 17.8% in 2022. …The average builder profit margin was 11.0% in 2024, up less than a percentage point from 10.1% in 2022. …Construction costs were broken down into eight major stages of construction. Interior finishes, at 24.1%, accounted for the largest share of construction costs, followed by major system rough-ins (19.2%), framing (16.6%), exterior finishes (13.4%), foundations (10.5%), site work (7.6%), final steps (6.5%), and other costs (2.1%). Explore the interactive dashboard below to view the costs and percentage of construction costs for the eight stages and their 36 components.

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US Annual Home Price Growth Has Returned To Pre-Pandemic Speeds

By Mark Worley
Redfin.com
January 21, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

U.S. home prices rose 0.4% from a month earlier in December on a seasonally adjusted basis, slightly slower than the 0.5% growth posted in November. This is according to the Redfin Home Price Index (RHPI). …On a year-over-year basis, home prices closed the 2024 calendar year up 5.4%. That was the second-smallest annual increase in a calendar year since Redfin started tracking the RHPI in 2013, only trailing 2015 (5.2%). Redfin predicts home prices will continue to rise steadily throughout 2025, growing at a similar rate to 2024. “Prices will keep going up consistently because it’s unlikely there will be enough new inventory to meet buyer demand,” said Redfin Senior Economist Sheharyar Bokhari. 

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Moving Out of Parental Homes is On Hold

By Natalia Siniavskaia
NAHB – Eye on Housing
January 20, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The worst on record rental affordability conditions, depleted “excess” savings of the pandemic era, and high mortgage rates halted the post-pandemic trend of young adults moving out of parental homes. The share of adults ages 25-34 living with parents or parents-in-law hovered just above 19% in 2023, stagnant from 2022, according to NAHB’s analysis. …While this percentage is the second lowest since 2011, the share remains elevated by historical standards. …Traditionally, young adults ages 25 to 34 make up around half of all first-time homebuyers. …The current share of 19.2% translates into 8.5 million young adults living in homes of their parents or parents-in-law. In contrast, less than 12% of young adults ages 25 to 34, or 4.6 million, lived with parents in 2000.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Los Angeles Fire Victims Turn to Prefab Homes for Quick Builds

By Sophie Alexander
MSN
January 20, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Even as fires continue to burn across Los Angeles, many of those who lost their houses are already making plans to rebuild. To overcome labor shortages and speed up the process, some are turning to prefabricated homes… Michael Wara, senior research scholar at Stanford University’s Woods Institute for the Environment, said much of Paradise, California, was rebuilt with prefabricated homes after the devastating 2018 Camp Fire. He expects the same in Los Angeles. “There are not enough general contractors in Los Angeles to rebuild 12,000 structures in addition to all the other work,” he said. “Solutions where you can build most of the homes somewhere else not subject to the labor constraint that will affect Los Angeles could be particularly attractive.”

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Successful U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center test advances readiness of mass timber shelter

By Sophia Espinosa
Engineer Research and Development Center
January 17, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

CHAMPAIGN, Illinois – The U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) took a significant step in transforming contingency construction. In November 2024, researchers conducted a seismic test on an eco-conscious mass timber shelter that highlights the future of relocatable Cross-Laminated Timber (CLT) structures. This test assessed the performance and safety of the first prototype of a CLT shelter made from thermally modified coastal western hemlock. The research was conducted in collaboration with the Composite Recycling Technology Center and Washington State University. Together, they are working to revolutionize the construction of sustainable and resilient structures for emergency and temporary housing. …industry statistics show that as of September 2024, 2,253 multi-family, commercial, or institutional mass timber projects were either in progress or completed in the U.S., according to WoodWorks, a partner on an ERDC Commercial Solutions contract. …As the nation faces increasing challenges from natural disasters, resilient infrastructure is more crucial than ever. 

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Special Report: Mass Timber On The Rise

By Brynn Shaffer
The Los Angeles Business Journal
January 20, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

LOS ANGELES — Amid rising surface temperatures and an ongoing climate crisis, scientists and architects alike are working hard to think of creative ways to reduce carbon emissions when it comes to the building sector – which is responsible for roughly 37% of total greenhouse emissions, according to the World Economic Forum. This in part has manifested a rise of mass timber projects across the globe. …“We’re looking for solutions to reduce our carbon impact and timber, wood, is the lowest embodied carbon product,” James Donaldson, a partner at Elysian Park-based architecture firm Johnson Fain, said. “And if you can reduce the embodied carbon of a building, you’re forever locking down its carbon footprint.” …Chinatown welcomed one of the first and largest hybrid CLT buildings in Los Angeles, 843 N. Spring St., when developer Redcar Properties Ltd. unveiled the five-story property in August. 

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Fay Jones School receives $300,000 award from U.S. Forest Service

The Magnolia Reporter
January 20, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

Peter MacKeith & Matt Waller

The U.S. Forest Service recently awarded a $300,000 grant to faculty in the Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design and Sam M. Walton College of Business at the University of Arkansas. Grant funds will be used to identify, research, develop and promote the use of innovative wood construction products and build business opportunities for Arkansas’ forest economy. This federal grant will be matched by the recipients. Matt Waller, dean emeritus and supply chain management professor in the Walton College, along with Peter MacKeith, dean and professor in the Fay Jones School, will work with associated project members to establish the Arkansas Wood Products Innovations Cooperative. The initiative will focus on applied design research, industry collaboration and economic development. …The objectives of the grant funding include establishing the Arkansas Wood Products Innovations Cooperative to drive applied design research, industry collaboration and economic development.

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Forestry

Indigenous communities in B.C. and California promote cultural burns for disaster mitigation

By Santana Dreaver
CBC News
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West, US West

Joey Gonzales, a Tataviam and Chumash model and actor from southern California, is one of the thousands of Indigenous people in California who watched their homeland burn.  “What’s really missing is the Indigenous perspective on these fires, knowing that they could have been prevented.” Cultural burning is a traditional fire management practice that has been used by Indigenous peoples in Canada, the U.S. and around the world to eliminate fuel build-up that contributes to the intensity of wildfires and promotes the regrowth of native species that local Indigenous communities depend on… Mata-Fragua says it’s important for those involved in disaster mitigation to acknowledge and encourage Indigenous practices because Indigenous peoples have been caring for those lands for thousands of years and understand the geography of their regions.

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South Carolina paper mill closures threaten timber industry and conservation goals

By Jennifer Howard, South Carolina Land Trust Network
The Post and Courier
January 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East, United States

Jennifer Howard

SOUTH CAROLINA — International Paper’s announcement of the impending closure of the Georgetown paper mill follows on the heels of the closure of the WestRock paper mill in North Charleston as well as other shutdowns across the Southeast. While some may celebrate fewer trucks on the road or the fading of a mill’s distinct odor, a healthy forest products industry is imperative for the conservation of special places, a hallmark of South Carolina’s values and culture. …More than half of South Carolina’s forests are owned and managed by families. …Land ownership is an investment, one that requires considerable resources at the time of tree planting and throughout the lifecycle of the trees. That investment is recouped when the trees are thinned or harvested. …The closure of these two major mills on the coast means that landowners will continue to experience a crippling financial loss. When landowners of forests and farms suffer financially, conservation suffers.

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How America courted increasingly destructive wildfires − and what that means for protecting homes today

By Justin Angle
Lake Country News
January 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Today, state, federal and private firefighters deploy across the country when fires break out, along with tankers, bulldozers, helicopters and planes. The Forest Service touts a record of snuffing out 98% of wildfires before they burn 100 acres (40 hectares). One consequence in a place like Los Angeles is that when a wildfire enters an urban environment, the public expects it to be put out before it causes much damage. But the nation’s wildland firefighting systems aren’t designed for that… More than one-third of U.S. homes are in what’s known as the wildland-urban interface – the zone where houses and other structures intermingle with flammable vegetation. This zone now includes many urban areas where wildfire risk was not considered when their cities were developed.

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Earth’s Largest Organism Slowly Being Eaten, Scientist Says

By Richard Elton Walton
The Conversation
January 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

In the Wasatch Mountains of the western US on the slopes above a spring-fed lake, there dwells a single giant organism that provides an entire ecosystem on which plants and animals have relied for thousands of years. Found in my home state of Utah, “Pando” is a 106-acre stand of quaking aspen clones. Although it looks like a woodland of individual trees with striking white bark and small leaves that flutter in the slightest breeze, Pando (Latin for “I spread”) is actually 47,000 genetically identical stems that arise from an interconnected root network. This single genetic individual weighs around 6,000 metric tons. By mass, it is the largest single organism on Earth. Although Pando is protected by the US National Forest Service and is not in danger of being cut down, it is in danger of disappearing due to several other factors.

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Inclusion of indigenous voices in revised Northwest Forest Plan focus of symposium

By Ryan Bonham
KEZI News 9 Oregon
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Northwest Forest Plan is undergoing a once-in-a-generation amendment process and a symposium held on Wednesday afternoon on the University of Oregon campus worked to make sure that vital voices are included in the process. The symposium brought together multiple groups to make sure that the voices of indigenous communities, environmental justice advocates, and others are included in the forest plan’s amendment process. The goal is to educate the community about the critical importance of including indigenous perspectives and indigenous leadership in solving the climate and wildfire crisis affecting northwest forests… Nearly 280 people attended the symposium that was held in the Redwood Auditorium at the Erb Memorial Union. More details on the symposium can be found on the University of Oregon’s website.

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What makes a neighbourhood resilient to fires?

By Umair Irfan
Vox
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Yana Valachovic

Wildfires are a fact of life in California. As the flames die down and residents return, this moment presents an opportunity to think more holistically about reducing wildfire risk in Los Angeles and other fire-prone regions. “There’s a lot that we can do as residents and homeowners to really change that trajectory and make small, often inexpensive actions that can make a big difference in changing the outcome when our buildings are exposed to the pathways of wildfire,” said Yana Valachovic, a fire scientist at the University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources Fire Network… “I’m a licensed professional forester, so I will share my bias that I do like wood. We grow a lot of trees in California. It is our available natural resource, and I think it’s important to be able to use what you have in your community. The wood itself is combustible, but there are treatments that can make it fire-resistant.”

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WA’s new lands chief hits pause on controversial timber sales

By Lynda Mapes
The Seattle Times in the Daily News
January 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Dave Upthegrove

OLYMPIA — On his first day as Washington’s new commissioner of public lands… Dave Upthegrove knew one thing he would do right away: make good on a campaign promise by pausing for about six months on cutting unprotected, older forests on state trust land. …Upthegrove said he will direct his staff at the Department of Natural Resources to get a better handle on the older unprotected forests managed by the state: where they are, how much there is, and what criteria defines them. Some forests, or portions of them, might be released for cutting before the pause is up, depending on what is learned, Upthegrove said. The pause doesn’t mean the state will cut less timber overall, but it will change where the agency harvests, and what type of trees DNR cuts, Upthegrove said. …Nick Smith, with the American Forest Resource Council, an industry group, was skeptical. …Upthegrove’s decision to retain so many of the agency’s professional staff is reassuring, Smith said, and “we appreciate that he is accessible and willing to talk.”

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Gov. Kotek, state agencies brace for Trump impact on expanse of federal land in Oregon

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Capital Chronicle
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

…President Donald Trump issued a flurry of executive orders aimed at boosting fossil fuels production and mining on federal land… 60% of Oregon forests is owned by the federal government — and it’s managed primarily by the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service. The two agencies oversee more than 32 million acres in the state, and federal agencies are responsible for funneling hundreds of millions of dollars to the state to manage those areas, including protecting endangered or threatened species. State and federal land often spill over borders, requiring federal collaboration with Oregon agencies and leaders, who espouse environmental values at odds with those of Trump. Gov. Tina Kotek, her natural resources advisor, Geoff Huntington, and the heads of Oregon’s environmental protection and natural resource agencies said they’ve been planning for this second Trump presidency. …[Both] told the Capital Chronicle they are hopeful for collaboration but prepared for conflict. 

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Alaska leaders cheer Trump oil and gas drilling executive order

By Pilar Arias
Fox News
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

President Donald Trump signed executive order aimed at boosting oil and gas drilling, mining and logging in Alaska. While state political leaders cheer, environmental groups see it as worrying. …”It means a timber industry in the Tongass National Forest can once again take place. It means Alaska can begin the process [of] finally getting its remain[ing] acreage of land from the federal government”, Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy said on X about the executive orders. …It also aims to reverse restrictions on logging and road-building in a temperate rainforest. …Cooper Freeman, Alaska director at the Center for Biological Diversity, told The Associated Press that the president “just can’t wave a magic wand and make these things happen. Environmental laws and rules must be followed… We’re ready and looking forward to the fight of our lives to keep Alaska great, wild and abundant”.

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Weyerhaeuser’s Longview lumber mill gets another big fine for stormwater pollution

By Andre Strepankowsky
Lower Columbia Currents
January 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

For the second time this decade, Weyerhaeuser Co.’s Longview lumber mill has been hit with a serious state fine for violating state stormwater control regulations. On Monday, the state Department of Ecology announced it has fined the company $145,000 for 36 stormwater discharge violations, 15 monitoring requirements violations, and 16 reporting requirement violations, all of which occurred between July 2022 and May 2024… “We believe strongly in permit compliance and invest significant time and resources to ensure we are meeting all environmental standards,” Weyerhaeuser Co. spokeswoman Mary Catherine McAleer said in an e-mailed statement Thursday. The latest penalty follows another related to stormwater that Ecology issued to Weyerhaeuser‘s Longview lumber mill in 2022, when the agency fined the facility $40,000 for repeated water quality violations.

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Oregon lawmakers scramble to fund devastating wildfire season

By Linda Lee Country Media
The Lincoln County News
January 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Oregon is grappling with the aftermath of a record-breaking wildfire season that has left the state facing a staggering $218 million bill. The unprecedented costs have ignited a fierce debate among lawmakers over who should foot the bill and how to prevent future financial crises. The state’s current funding model for wildfire response has come under intense scrutiny. Private landowners contribute to a fund that is capped at ten million, while the state’s general fund covers the remaining costs. This year, however, the general fund will bear the brunt of the expenses, paying more than fourteen times the amount contributed by private landowners. Representative Paul Holvey, D-Eugene, has long been a critic of the state’s reliance on the general fund for wildfire costs. He argues that large-forest landowners should be held responsible for the fires on their land.

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Trump signs executive order to boost development of Alaska’s ‘extraordinary’ natural resources

The Anchorage Daily News
January 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A sweeping executive order signed by President Donald Trump during the first hours of his second term aims to boost Alaska’s natural resource industry by reversing environmental protections that limit oil and gas extraction, logging, and other development projects across the state. The order was one of dozens signed by Trump following his inauguration Monday.  Trump’s broad order, titled “Unleashing Alaska’s Extraordinary Resource Potential,” follows a request from Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy for swift action reforming the federal government offices and policies that oversee Alaska’s resource development industry. The policy changes were also championed by Alaska’s all-Republican congressional delegation. …“We will drill, baby, drill,” Trump said in his second inaugural address. One of his executive orders signed Monday established a “national energy emergency.”

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The perfect storm: why did LA’s wildfires explode out of control?

By Gabrielle Canon & Lois Beckett
The Guardian
January 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

…LA, and much of the United States, was asking how wildfires could rage out of control in one of the richest cities in the world – a city with a long history of dealing with fire. What could have, what should have, been done? And who was to blame? …“There is an element of human hubris in this to think we can have full control,” Dr. Edith de Guzman, a cooperative extension specialist in adaptation policy who has closely studied impacts from the climate crisis on communities, said. “Nobody would blame officials for not stopping a hurricane – when a hurricane comes, it comes.” …What hit LA last week was a perfect storm – a combination of extreme weather, a warming climate, human hubris and and safety measures that have been delayed or disregarded for decades. …Firefighters faced an enormous task, both Safford and de Guzman said. And the homes they were defending were built in absolutely untenable places.

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Forest service fines loggers up to $16K for Yellow Lake Fire

By Connor Thomas
KPCW Utah
January 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

UTAH — The investigation into the Uinta blaze found it started a day earlier than initially thought. The amount is the maximum fine allowed under the timber harvesting contract loggers held with the U.S. Forest Service, according to an agency investigative report obtained through a public records request by KPCW. The Yellow Lake Fire consumed more than 33,000 acres in the Uinta Mountains. It was at one point the highest priority fire in the United States with 889 firefighters responding at its peak. The forest service’s investigation did not include the total cost of fighting the fire, and it redacted the name of the logging company responsible.

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New iForester application puts tree knowledge in the public’s pockets

By Emily Matchar
Purdue University
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Imagine you’re a landowner with dozens or hundreds of mature hardwood trees — not a stretch, since the majority of forestland in the U.S. is privately owned. If you want to know the trees’ value, you’ll need to hire a professional forester. What if, before you start working with the forester, you could gain preliminary information about the trees’ value and other features with your phone? That’s the hope behind iForester, an app developed by Purdue University’s Song Zhang, a professor of mechanical engineering, and Cheryl Qian, a professor of industrial design, in collaboration with Songlin Fei, director of the Institute for Digital Forestry. The idea for the app was born over dinner at a colleague’s house about three years ago. The two began to discuss the digital divide in forestry — the way some members of society, especially rural residents, don’t have equal access to new technology.

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Restoring the States pine marten population

By Shauna Johnson
WJFW-TV12
January 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation announced millions of dollars in grants, including for one project focusing on pine marten habitat in northern Wisconsin’s Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest. The Great Lakes Fish & Wildlife Commission (GLIFWC) gave $690,000. GLIFWC, the Universities of Wisconsin, and the U.S. Forest Services are contributing approximately $170,000. Charlie Rasmussen, GLIFWC Director of Communications said in Wisconsin, martens and are both State and tribally threatened species. Martens are nocturnal weasels that weigh between 2 and 3lbs. “Theres’s research being done right now as to why Wisconsin martens are not fairing as well as Michigan and Minnesota Martens,” said Rasmussen. “Theres’s research being done right now as to why Wisconsin martens are not fairing as well as Michigan and Minnesota Martens,” said Rasmussen. …This project is a combined effort between communities and tribes working together to recover the threatened species,” said Rasmussen.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

America’s second Paris withdrawal is not like the first

By Andrew Freedman
Axios
January 21, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

President Trump’s move to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris Climate Agreement for a second time sends a clear signal to international partners that the U.S. is hot and cold on climate action. …There may be sufficient momentum now in both the Paris regime as well as the burgeoning clean energy sector that this will make only a symbolic difference. To have the U.S., which is the second-largest emitter behind China, exit the agreement has the potential for other countries to start viewing the U.S. as an unreliable partner on climate and potentially other issues as well. Last time the U.S. left, no other country followed that move. This time could be different, given the rightward, anti-climate policies tilt in some key countries. …America’s withdrawal from Paris doesn’t take effect immediately, although the executive order notes the administration will treat it as such.

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What is the Paris Agreement? Trump pulled the US out — again

By Angela Fritz
CNN
January 20, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

President Donald Trump signed actions on the first day of his second term to pull the United States out of the Paris Agreement, an international climate change treaty in which nearly 200 countries agreed to work together to limit global warming. …Representatives from the US were leaders in the Paris Agreement negotiations. It was adopted by nearly 200 countries during the Obama administration in 2015. Trump announced his intent to pull the US out of the Paris Agreement in 2017, though it wasn’t formalized until November 4, 2020, a day after the presidential election that Biden ultimately won. On the first day of his term, Biden announced his intent to reenter the Paris Agreement. On the first day of Trump’s second term in January 2025, Trump ordered the withdrawal from the Paris Agreement again as he sought to increase US production of fossil fuels. …In the meantime, a leading United Nations climate change official reiterated “the door remains open to the Paris Agreement.”

Additional coverage by David Thurton in CBC: Guilbeault says it’s ‘deplorable’ Trump will pull out of Paris Agreement as California burns

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Climate and community resilience on the docket in 2025

By Jay Kosa
Salish Current
January 22, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

Whatcom County has embraced climate resilience as a goal and recognizes that mature forest protection is one of the best ways to preserve what we already have in these natural systems. Updating the funding mechanism to better address the near-term needs of local beneficiaries like Mount Baker School District would alleviate tensions that can arise when communities are asked to choose between better near-term revenue for schools and the myriad benefits of conserving mature forests. A $2 billion public education package is up for consideration. This funding package would move K–12 public schools toward being fully funded, taking pressure off of the Department of Natural Resources to provide timber revenues to fill gaps in school operating budgets (a use for which common school funds were never intended).

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Forest owner wants to put burned acreage back into carbon offset market, but critics skeptical

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Capital Chronicle
January 21, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

A large Oregon forest meant to offset planet warming emissions was burned three years ago in a wildfire, and the project had to be pulled from a carbon credit market that aims to fight against climate change. Now, its owners want to re-enter some of those burned acres into California’s carbon market, which generates credits based on the amount of emissions stored by trees. When trees are burned, they release some of those stored emissions, but the owners, Green Diamond Resource Company, maintain that the scorched land still offers some climate benefits. The move would mark a first, and it worries critics… “Do you want to count on those arid, ponderosa pine forests in southern Oregon for carbon offsetting? For making good on 100-year climate commitments?” said Grayson Badgley.

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Health & Safety

Winston man dies in fatal Douglas County logging accident

By Ryan Bonham
KEZI News 9 Oregon
January 17, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

AZALEA, Ore. – Douglas County law enforcement and emergency personnel responded to a logging accident in which a 49-year-old Winston man died at the scene on Thursday afternoon, according to the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office. DCSO officials said that 911 dispatchers received a report at about 3:19 p.m. on January 16 of an accident at a logging site with a seriously-injured victim. Responding sheriff’s deputies and emergency responders located the victim in the 15000 block of Upper Cow Creek Road in Azalea, authorities said. Douglas County sheriff’s officials said that emergency personnel administered life-saving measures but the victim, identified as Justin Godel, was declared deceased at the scene.

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Forest Fires

New wildfire breaks out north of Los Angeles, forces evacuations

By David Swanson and Daniel Trotta
Reuters
January 23, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

CASTAIC, California – A new wildfire that broke out north of Los Angeles on Wednesday rapidly spread to more than 9,400 acres, fueled by strong winds and dry brush, forcing mandatory evacuation orders for more than 31,000 people. The Hughes fire, about 50 miles north of Los Angeles, sent huge flames and plumes of smoke over a hilly area and further taxed firefighters who have managed to bring two major fires in the metropolitan area largely under control. In just a few hours on Wednesday, the new fire grew to two-thirds the size of the Eaton Fire. The affected area was not as populated as those blazes, said a spokesperson for the firefighters, Matthew Van Hagen. “It’s more sparsely populated. However, we are dealing with high winds, which we also saw with the other fires, along with … a very receptive fuel bed and steep topography again,” he said.

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