Region Archives: United States

Opinion / EdiTOADial

Supply chain pressures surge to four-year high — weak demand continues to test forest product markets

By Kevin Mason, Managing Director
ERA Forest Products Research
June 2, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States, International

Kevin Mason

The Global Supply Chain Pressure Index, which provides a gauge of global supply chain conditions, spiked in April and currently sits at its highest level in almost four years. Several other measures, including the World Bank’s Supply Chain Stress Index are hovering around all-time highs as well. The conflict in the Middle East and resultant spike in energy prices has clearly driven some of the recent increase in supply chain pressure, and the logjam in the Strait of Hormuz, along with some ongoing challenges in the Red Sea, have forced many vessels to take longer routes, adding travel time, increasing fuel costs, and stretching capacity. 

However, the situation in Iran is not the sole driver of recent supply chain pressure: In the US we are seeing an acute shortage of truck drivers following a government crackdown on driver qualifications and after a wave of trucking-firm bankruptcies. As a result, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis’ long-distance trucking price index has recently jumped from a reading of 181 in January to 210 in April (also approaching all-time highs last seen during the pandemic). Similarly, overland freight pricing data from DAT Freight and Analytics shows that flatbed truck rates have surged since the onset of the Iran war—the national average spot rate for flatbed trucks was $2.72 per mile in February and has rocketed to $3.64 by May. DAT’s national load-to-truck ratio (the number of loads posted for every available truck posted on the DAT load board) sat at an eye-watering 72 in April, up from 35 in April 2025 and just 19 in April 2024. 

A deal with Iran may be in the works, but as we learned after the COVID pandemic, it can take months (if not years) for supply chains to normalize. Buckle up. 

Read More

Business & Politics

Canada Makes New US Trade Proposals, Warns of ‘Turbulence’

By Brian Platt, Thomas Seal and Josh Wingrove
Bloomberg in Yahoo! Finance
June 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Dominic LeBlanc

Canada made new and detailed proposals on trade to the US based on negotiating progress in recent weeks, said Canadian cabinet minister Dominic LeBlanc. “A strong, prosperous Canadian economy is good for North America, and we discussed how we can work together on a number of issues that strengthen the competitiveness of the North American economy,” he said. …LeBlanc refused to share details of the proposals but downplayed suggestions that Canada was being left behind Mexico. …Hours after LeBlanc’s news conference, the US proposed new tariffs on imports from 60 trading partners after an investigation into how countries handle goods allegedly produced by forced labor. …However, the new tariff won’t apply to USMCA-compliant goods from Canada and Mexico, according to the notice from the US Trade Representative. That mirrors an earlier exemption to Trump’s so-called IEEPA tariffs — the ones that were thrown out by the high court.

 

Read More

US proposes 25% Brazil-wide tariffs, links deforestation to wood prices

Lesprom Network
June 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The US Trade Representative has determined that several Brazilian acts, policies, and practices are actionable under Section 301 and has proposed tariffs of 25% on all goods of Brazil, with specified exemptions and an annex of excluded products. …The determination covers multiple areas, including illegal deforestation, and states that timber and agricultural production linked to illegal deforestation can burden U.S. commerce by lowering costs for competing products and distorting prices. The notice describes timber-sector fraud risks, including the laundering of illegally harvested timber through supply chains, and states that illegally sourced timber products can devalue legally sourced timber prices by an estimated 7% to 16%. On wood-related findings, the notice references concerns that Brazilian products may be made with timber harvested illegally. It also describes limits in auditing and verification under Brazil’s Forest Code registration system. …The notice sets a public comment schedule that opens June 1, 2026.

Read More

International Paper Completes $360MM Acquisition of North Pacific Paper Company

International Paper
June 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

MEMPHIS, Tennessee – International Paper has completed the acquisition of North Pacific Paper Company (NORPAC), a portfolio company of One Rock Capital Partners, for $360MM.  The acquisition brings together two strong teams, high-quality products, and a shared commitment to serving customers. Adding NORPAC to the International Paper portfolio will enhance system flexibility and expand capabilities. …The acquisition of NORPAC is part of International Paper’s strategic transformation to maximize value creation for customers, employees and shareholders.  …NORPAC is a Longview, Washington based producer of environmentally sustainable lightweight recycled packaging papers.

Read More

Forest Service offers separation incentives to employees ahead of relocations

By Jory Heckman
The Federal News Network
June 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The Forest Service is offering separation incentives to employees ahead of an agency reorganization that will move hundreds of positions across the country. The Forest Service told employees in a recent email that it will offer Voluntary Early Retirement Authority (VERA) and Voluntary Separation Incentive Payments (VSIP) to employees impacted by the agency’s upcoming reorganization. The Agriculture Department announced in March that the Forest Service would move its headquarters to Salt Lake City, Utah. The agency plans to shutter its nine regional offices, and so far plans to keep 20 of its 77 research facilities. “There is a position for each of you in the new structure, and your skills and experience are essential to the work ahead,” Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz told staff in the email. “At the same time, we know that not all positions will look the same or be located in the same places they are today.”

Read More

EU trade lawmakers back compromise on trade deal with Trump

By Camille Gijs and Carlo Martuscelli
Politico EU
June 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

BRUSSELS — The European Parliament’s trade committee approved by a wide majority a compromise struck with EU governments and the Commission on legislation to implement a trade deal with the United States. Lawmakers backed, by 31 votes to six, with three abstentions, changes to legislation under which the EU agreed to eliminate tariffs on US industrial goods and some agricultural products — a key pillar of the agreement struck last summer. European institutions are now racing to complete the legislative process before July 4, when Trump has threatened to impose higher tariffs. Tuesday’s vote follows months of internal EU wrangling, as lawmakers slowed their deliberations after Trump threatened to seize Greenland in January and the U.S. Supreme Court struck down much of his tariff agenda in February. Overall, the European Parliament pushed to secure more guardrails against the risk that Trump again threatens the EU.

Read More

Trump signs proclamation amending tariffs on steel, aluminum and copper imports

By Christian Martinez and David Lawder
Reuters in CTV News
June 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

LOS ANGELES – U.S. President \ Trump on Monday signed a proclamation amending his Section 232 national security tariffs on some aluminum, steel and copper imports, the White House said. The proclamation lowers tariffs on some steel and aluminum derivative products, including certain types of agricultural machineryand residential heating, air conditioning and ventilation equipment to 15% from 25% previously. It makes mobile industrial equipment, such as bulldozers and forklifts, subject to a 15% tariff “when imported from trade deal countries that are entitled to such treatment,” the White House said in a statement. The order also allows foreign companies to qualify for a 10% tariff if “their capital equipment includes at least 85% U.S. melted and poured or smelted and cast steel or aluminum by weight.” …The changes will remain in place until Dec. 31, 2027 “to spur near–term investments that will rebuild the Nation’s industrial base,” the White House said.

Read More

A mill town in mourning: Nippon Dynawave cleanup and questions continue

By Katie Pyzyk
Packaging Dive
June 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

LONGVIEW, WASHINGTON — Travelers near Nippon Dynawave Packaging Co.’s pulp and paper mill in Longview can smell freshly cut wood from the multiple nearby businesses that produce lumber, paper and packaging. Absent is the recognizable odor emitted during wood pulping, due to the mill’s nearly complete shutdown since a deadly white liquor tank implosion there. The May 26 implosion is being called one of the deadliest US workplace incidents in decades. …The Washington National Guard is among the local, state and federal crews assisting at the NDP facility, which has largely ceased operations. …The pain and sense of loss is palpable in this 38,000-person community in Southwest Washington, as well as in the surrounding areas of the state and neighboring Oregon. Gov. Bob Ferguson called for Washington state agency buildings’ flags to remain at half staff through sunset on June 7. Tears and stoic, strained faces were visible on those near the NDP site over the weekend.

Read More

Irving Forest Products’ Ashland sawmill expansion will double space and production

By Paula Brewer
The Bangor Daily News
June 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MAINE — Irving Forest Products’ Ashland sawmill will soon double its space with help from the Finance Authority of Maine. FAME has approved approximately $42 million in tax credit financing for the project, an agency spokesperson said Thursday. The funding will allow Irving to modernize the mill in Nashville Plantation, which borders Ashland, at a time of growth for Maine wood products. The expansion will double the mill’s production and bring about 80 new jobs to the rural community, according to the company. “The expansion will add a second sawline and 68,000 square feet to the mill,” Anne McInerney, J.D. Irving VP of communications, said Friday. “The new sawline is designed to process larger and longer logs.” Irving Forest Products opened the 68,500-square-foot mill in 2014. The facility employs 140 full-time staff, which will rise to about 220 once the addition is online, McInerney said. Tax credit financing offers tax incentives to investors for backing a project. 

Read More

27 fire departments work for 10 hours to battle blaze at Michigan pallet business

By Roberto Acosta
Michigan Live
June 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

GOODLAND TOWNSHIP, Michigan – Firefighters were on scene for roughly 10 hours working to put out a large blaze at a Lapeer County business. The incident began shortly before 5 p.m. Thursday, June 4. …Goodland Township and Imlay City fire departments were dispatched for the structure fire. Everyone was able to vacate the premises. The chief arrived with one minute of the call and noticed one of the several buildings on the 4-acre property was fully involved. A request was then made for assistance. …A total of 27 fire departments responded. …“With the tremendous fuel load (wood), initial firefighting tactics were a challenge due to extreme heat,” the chief’s statement reads. “The entire site was fully engulfed in fire within 15 minutes of the initial call.” …The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

Read More

Smoke visible for miles after fire breaks out in Jasper County lumber mill

By Scott Lawrence
6 KFDM
June 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

JASPER County, Georgia — Firemen from the Jasper, Tri-Community, Beech Grove, East End Fire, Lake Rayburn and Angelina Fire Departments have all converged on the Lincoln Lumber Mill where a fire in the kiln has sent thick smoke into the air that can be seen for miles. No injuries have been reported. Mike Lout with our media partner KJAS reports the fire broke out this morning at the mill off Highway 96, just south of Jasper. First responders say the fire broke out in the dryer house or kiln of the operation. Firemen have so far been able to limit the fire to the drying house. However, flames and smoke are filling the building and firemen are continuing to pump water into the structure.

Read More

Saothair Capital Partners Completes Acquisition of EAM Corp. from Domtar

By Soathair Capital Partners LLC
PR Newswire
June 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

WAYNE, Pennsylvania — Saothair Capital Partners, a private equity firm, announced it has completed the acquisition of EAM Corp. from Domtar through a newly-formed affiliate. Founded in 1998 and headquartered in Jesup, Georgia, EAM is a manufacturer of nonwoven airlaid and laminated absorbent materials used in feminine hygiene, adult incontinence, baby diaper, medical, industrial and food packaging applications. …Following the acquisition, current EAM General Manager Vanecia Carr will serve as Chief Executive Officer and Lori Venn will serve as Senior Vice President, Sales and Marketing.

Read More

Finance & Economics

US NBSK prices decline amid oversupply; European downtime and rising inventories shape pulp market

By Bryan Smith
RISI Fastmarkets
June 5, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

North American pulp market sentiment remains divided as the months-long pricing rally in bleached hardwood kraft (BHK) clashed with a weak bleached softwood kraft (BSK) sector, where downtime or closures could emerge as the only catalyst to save off price erosion, industry contacts told Fastmarkets. Key takeaways include:

  • US NBSK May prices fell $20 per tonne to $1,570 due to oversupply, while BHK prices rose by $50 per tonne.
  • Global pulp producer inventories increased to 42 days of supply in April, with a 158,000-tonne rise in stock.
  • In response to weak prices, producers in Europe have started to rationalize capacity and take downtime, including mill closures.
  • Fluff pulp prices surged, with US and European prices up $90 per tonne and further June price hikes announced.

Read More

US lumber prices hit eight-week high on supply concerns

Fordaq
June 3, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

North American lumber futures climbed to approximately USD 597.50 per thousand board feet on June 3, their highest level since April, as persistent supply constraints continued to offset subdued housing demand. North American lumber futures rose to around USD 597.50 per thousand board feet on June 3, reaching their highest level in eight weeks. The move represents a 4.1% increase from a month earlier and reflects a market still dealing with the impact of Canadian import disruption. The price rise comes despite historically soft housing starts, showing that supply concerns remain an important driver for the market. Mills and distributors are holding limited inventories, while seasonal restocking ahead of the summer building season has added support to prices. …The net result is a structurally tight supply position. Mills and distributors are holding limited inventories, while buyers are entering the summer building season with restocking needs.

Read More

Lumber Futures Hit 8-week High

Trading Economics
June 3, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber increased to 598.00 USD/1000 board feet, the highest since April 2026. Over the past 4 weeks, Lumber gained 3.57%, and in the last 12 months, it increased 0.5%.

Read More

U.S. Labor Market Remains Resilient in May

By Jing Fu
NAHB Eye on Housing
June 5, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Despite rising inflation and ongoing economic uncertainty, the U.S. labor market remained resilient in May. Nonfarm payrolls increased for the third consecutive month, and the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%. Job gains were concentrated in leisure and hospitality, local government, and health care, while financial activities experienced a decline in payroll employment. Wage growth moderated in May, with average hourly earnings rising 3.4% year-over-year. This pace is 0.5 percentage points lower than a year ago. Importantly, wage growth has been outpacing inflation for nearly two years, which typically occurs as productivity increases. …Job growth in early 2026 has improved notably compared with 2025 but has yet to fully match the pace observed in 2024. Through May, monthly payroll gains have averaged 114,000, compared with 10,000 per month in 2025 and 122,000 per month in 2024.

Read More

US Mortgage Rates Increase Further as Inflation Remains Elevated

By Catherine Koh
NAHB Eye on Housing
June 4, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Mortgage rates continued to increase in May as inflation accelerated. According to Freddie Mac, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.41% in May, up 7 basis points  over April. Since the conflict in the Middle East began, the 30-year mortgage rate has increased by 36 basis points. The average 15-year rate averaged 5.76% in May, up 7 bps from April, and up 33 basis points since the end of February. Even so, both rates remain lower than a year ago by 41 bps and 19 bps, respectively. The 10-year Treasury yield, a key benchmark for long-term borrowing, averaged 4.47% in May, 16 bps higher than the previous month. …Persistently high inflation has also strained household budgets. As people used more of their disposable income or drew down on savings to cover everyday expenses, the personal saving rate fell to 2.6% in April. The rate was the lowest since June 2022 when CPI was at its peak.

Read More

Economic Uncertainty Slows Single-Family Construction Across All Geographies

By Catherine Koh
NAHB Eye on Housing
June 2, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Single-family construction declined across all geographies in the first quarter of 2026, according to the latest Home Building Geography Index (HBGI), as elevated interest rates, rising material costs, and labor shortages slowed home building activities at the start of the year. Meanwhile, multifamily construction remained broadly resilient, posting growth in most markets. The pullback in single-family activity was sharpest in large metro core counties, which recorded a 16.0% year-over-year decline — a deterioration of 3.2 percentage points from the prior quarter. …These declines are part of a longer-term structural shift away from dense population centers. …Multifamily construction told a different story in Q1 2026, expanding across most geographies. Large metro core counties led the way with 20.8% growth, picking up pace after returning to positive territory in the prior quarter. …The first quarter of 2026 HBGI data along with an interactive map can be found here.

Read More

US Structural Lumber: Capital Flows Shift to the South

By Felipe Martinez
Mexico Business News
June 1, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The US commercial construction and wood products landscape has been undergoing a noticeable geographic realignment. …At the center of this transition are two powerhouse species that help define the market: Douglas Fir and Southern Yellow Pine. Understanding how manufacturers are positioning themselves around these distinct timber baskets might offer valuable insight into where resources are building the critical infrastructure for the next decades of commercial, agricultural, and residential construction in the United States. …While the West Coast navigates these supply bottlenecks, the American South seems to be experiencing a sustained wave of modernization and investment, capitalizing on robust regional resources. …Take for example the recent investments made by companies like Canfor. …The company opened a cutting-edge sawmill complex in Axis, Alabama, an endeavor that highlights the industry’s shift toward high-tech manufacturing.

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

2026 North American Fenestration Standard Published

Fenestration & Glazing Industry Alliance
June 1, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, United States

The 2026 edition of AAMA/WDMA/CSA 101/I.S.2/A440, North American Fenestration Standard/Specification for windows, doors, and skylights (NAFS) has been published. This standard is the result of a multi-year effort by CSA Group, Fenestration and Glazing Industry Alliance (FGIA) and Window & Door Manufacturers Association (WDMA). An agreement among the three organizations requires NAFS to be reviewed every five years… The updated 2026 standard supersedes the 2022 edition, representing a continued evolution of the standard while improving harmonization across North America. The Joint Document Management Group (JDMG), comprised of representatives from all three associations, stresses the importance of NAFS-26. “Unlike with the previous version of NAFS, there were no major revisions for NAFS-26, with the exception of the secondary designator clarification,” said Lisa Bergeron, Director of Business Development and Government Affairs for JELD-WEN, who served as FGIA’s JDMG co-chair. “NAFS remains an excellent industry tool as an internationally accepted performance standard for the included fenestration product types.”

Read More

Low carbon, high coordination: Designing MEP systems in mass timber buildings

By Robin Graves, Jessica Mangler and Brett McQuillan
The Construction Specifier
June 4, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Mass timber has emerged as a leading material in the pursuit of low-carbon, sustainable construction. With its warm, natural aesthetic and significantly lower embodied carbon than steel and concrete, mass timber is increasingly used across a wide range of building types. However, unlike conventional steel or concrete structures, the very characteristics that make it appealing also create unique challenges. The constraints of mass timber construction, such as exposed structural elements and prefabricated panels with limited flexibility, demand a new level of precision and foresight in the design and coordination of mechanical, electrical, and plumbing (MEP) systems. By anticipating the structural and aesthetic challenges of mass timber and engaging in thoughtful MEP design and coordination, engineers, architects, and specifiers can deliver high-performance buildings that not only celebrate the beauty of timber but also help meet decarbonization and sustainability goals. …Mass timber’s prefabricated nature and exposed aesthetics require precise, early-stage coordination among mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems. 

Read More

Understanding the differences between old-growth and modern managed-forest lumber.

By Justin Fink
Fine Homebuilding Magazine
June 2, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

If you’ve ever spent some time amongst old-house lovers, and especially the craftspeople who work on them, you’ll no doubt have heard mention of “old-growth lumber.” It’s a material that’s spoken of with reverence, usually as supporting evidence for the “they don’t build ’em like they used to” argument, and always contrasted with today’s lumber, which is deemed comparatively subpar. So what is it about old-growth lumber that makes it so legendary, and if it’s so great, why don’t we use it anymore? …So yes, the trees are generally between 100 and 150 years old, but old-growth lumber is also characterized by competition to survive and disturbance history. In other words, if the forest is left alone for long enough, and no natural disasters reset the clock, you end up with old-growth trees. So it’s not that we can’t produce old-growth lumber now, it’s that it doesn’t fit our production needs.

Read More

Forestry

New Maps Chart Old-Growth Forests in Alaska and British Columbia

The Mirage News
June 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West, US West

Mature and old-growth forests are vital for biodiversity, carbon storage, cultural traditions and economic activity. But in Alaska and British Columbia, these rich resources haven’t been reliably mapped, leaving much unknown about what land is protected. Now, University of Oregon researchers are leading a comprehensive mapping effort that sheds light on the location, makeup and conservation status of old-growth forests across the region. Their data show that more than 40% of mature and old growth forests in the study area are in places that lack permanent legislative protection. These forests also store the most carbon in the study area. …Old-growth forests in Alaska and British Columbia are protected through a range of land classifications, including national parks, national monuments and wilderness areas. But by far the greatest area of old-growth forest was found in “Inventoried Roadless Areas” in Alaska.

Read More

The US government is pillaging our national forests from within

By Greg Frazier, ex-Agriculture Dept’s chief of staff
The Hill
June 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins claims “moving the Forest Service closer to the forests we manage is an essential action that will improve our core mission of managing our forests.” That is sophistry — a failed attempt to justify an ill-advised, destructive reorganization plan to remove Forest Service headquarters from Washington and radically cut its research infrastructure. Her fallacy implies that adjacent communities have a superior claim on national forests. …Government nihilists and dismantlers have for years peddled the “proximity begets policy expertise” canard, without evidence. …Meanwhile, Tom Schultz, the chief of the Forest Service, made clear his lingering allegiance to his former employer’s interests. Last month, he laid them out to House appropriators: “timber sales, critical minerals permitting, grazing allotment management.” That timber, he said, is “vital to the nation’s well-being.” In reality, only 6 percent of the total timber supply in the country comes from national forests.

Read More

Washington state schools chief should leave forestry to the experts

By the Editorial Board
The Seattle Times
June 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Chris Reykdal

In his role on the state’s Natural Resources Board, the state’s schools chief Chris Reykdal has in recent years voted against some timber harvests with older trees. …Each month, they generally approve of the agency’s choices for logging, which follow board policy. Reykdal, though, has been protesting stands where trees near 100 years old are on the chopping block. The state’s elected superintendent of public instruction is neither a trained forester, ecologist, nor any kind of timber management expert. …Upward of 20 DNR staff are involved before the Board of Natural Resources sees the results of that work. …For that reason, Dan Brown, a fellow board member and dean of the University of Washington’s College of the Environment, called out Reykdal’s sale-by-sale approach as “reckless” at a January public meeting. …Leave science to the scientists, Commissioner Reykdal. [to access the full story a Seattle Times subscription is required]

Read More

Environmental groups sue to stop 400 acres of logging in Washington’s Elwha Watershed

By Aspen Ford
The Washington State Standard
June 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Three environmental groups are suing to block the logging of nearly 400 acres of state forestland in Washington’s Elwha Watershed. Filed Monday, the lawsuit against the state’s Department of Natural Resources argues the agency failed to adequately assess the environmental harm of two timber sales, known as “Parched” and “Tree Well.” Logging would pose a “direct threat” to Port Angeles’ drinking water, which is sourced solely from the Elwha River, the lawsuit contends. “There’s only about 800 acres of structurally complex forests left in the watershed. And nearly half of those are these two timber sales that we appealed,” said Elizabeth Dunne, an attorney with Earth Law Center… Under the Department of Natural Resources’ standards, only trees that predate 1850 are considered old growth and set aside for conservation. The oldest stands proposed for harvest in the Parched sale are around 140 years old, dating back only to the 1880s. 

Read More

Fire Officials are on High Alert, Residents Encouraged to Be Prepared

Flagstaff Business News
June 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Wildfire season is upon us in Northern Arizona. Although our fire-adapted ponderosa pine forest could experience a wildfire at any time, May and June are typically the driest and most fire-prone months for large, destructive wildfires, following spring’s gusting winds that strip moisture from grasses and downed logs.  National Weather Service (NWS) officials say this year, especially, we need to be particularly vigilant as winter’s snowpack was far below normal. Although last fall’s warm storms bumped up precipitation for the year with 0.93 inches above-normal rainfall, winter snowfall fell short. Just 26.9 inches of snow landed in Flagstaff for the 2025-’26 winter season, far below the 90-inch annual average. Thus, Flagstaff is entering summer with a snowpack deficit that ranked this winter season as the fourth-lowest snowfall in Flagstaff’s recorded weather history, dating to 1899.

Read More

Controversial plan to kill owls is underway in WA. Here’s who’s leading the way

By Gavin Feek
The News Tribune
June 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Barred owls …are now officially under attack themselves. Theoretically, they’ve been in danger since the U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife released its barred owl management plan in 2024, announcing its intention to kill tens of thousands of barred owls per year for up to 30 years to protect the northern spotted owl and California spotted owl populations. The federal government and some environmentalist groups agree that protecting the endangered owl is necessary, but others argue it is inhumane and exists only to aid the timber industry. It’s been two years since the plan’s announcement, but only since November has a group in Washington officially begun killing barred owls… The Yakama Nation Tribe in South Central Washington has initiated barred owl management on reservation lands and is actively killing the once-protected species. They are the first and currently the only group in Washington to do so.

Read More

Governor Newsom fast-tracks 400 wildfire prevention projects, expands prescribed fire, and unveils draft five-year action plan

Office of Governor Gavin Newsom
June 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SACRAMENTO – Governor Newsom announced today unprecedented results in preventing catastrophic wildfires and protecting communities. Following his March 2025 emergency proclamation to mitigate catastrophic wildfire risks, state agencies fast-tracked more than 400 projects across nearly 100,000 acres. At the same time, the state has advanced prescribed and cultural burning through coordinated action, streamlined processes, and expanded partnerships. And the Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force today released a draft five-year action plan to guide California’s next phase of work protecting communities and restoring landscapes. Following Governor Newsom’s emergency proclamation on wildfire-prone forests and subsequent actions to accelerate wildfire resilience work, California fast-tracked more than 400 priority wildfire prevention projects, including over 220,000 activity acres of treatments across nearly 100,000 footprint acres. …Today, the Governor’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force released its draft Wildfire and Landscape Resilience Action Plan (2026-2031), a plan to accelerate action to confront California’s wildfire challenges.

Read More

Governor Newsom announces expansion of the world’s largest civilian aerial firefighting fleet

Office of Governor Gavin Newsom
June 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SACRAMENTO – Marking a significant advancement in California’s wildfire preparedness, Governor Gavin Newsom today announced that the state’s fourth C-130 Hercules (C-130H) airtanker has entered active service. Alongside this deployment, the Governor celebrated the launch of California’s 11th Helitack base, which hosts the Sikorsky S70i Fire Hawk helicopter. Both resources will be stationed at the Ramona Airport in San Diego County, strategically integrating them into California’s world-leading aerial fleet. “The addition of this fourth C-130 Hercules airtanker to our world-class fleet, combined with the historic establishment of our 11th Helitack base, significantly enhances the rapid, aggressive response needed to save lives and protect our natural resources. California is making the investment into the key resources that help protect our communities from catastrophic wildfire.” In 2024, under Governor Newsom’s leadership, California made history as the first state in the nation to own, operate, and deploy its own fleet of C-130H Airtankers.

Read More

From forest to front door: Understanding how wildfire spreads through communities

By Ty Burke
University of California, Berkeley
May 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

As California’s population boomed — from 10 million in 1950 to over 40 million today — the number of people living in fire-prone areas multiplied. …Despite the thousands of wildfires in California each year, we still don’t know that much about them — especially when it comes to how they spread in urban areas. The wildland-urban interface is the zone in which buildings and infrastructure border natural areas. Homes in this zone are at higher risk of burning, but quantifying that risk is challenging. Until recently, the mathematical models used to predict wildfire spread largely ignored these areas. Where a simulated wildfire reached a developed community, the models treated the land as unburnable. Which, of course, it’s not. …As wildfires push into urban areas, they behave in ways scientists are only beginning to understand. But Gollner is figuring out how to predict what urban wildfires will do next — by turning fire modeling into a complex, evolving problem.

Read More

Exhibit Space Now On Sale for Forest Products Machinery & Equipment Exposition, Returning to Savannah in 2027

The Southern Forest Products Association
June 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Metairie, LA  – The Southern Forest Products Association (SFPA) today announced that exhibit space is now available for the Forest Products Machinery & Equipment Exposition (EXPO), set for August 18–20, 2027, at the Savannah Convention Center in Savannah, Georgia. Equipment manufacturers, technology providers, and service companies serving the forest products industry can now reserve their place on the show floor. Hosted biennially by SFPA, EXPO is the longest-running tradeshow in the forest products industry, tracing its roots to the 1950 Logging and Sawmill Machinery Exposition in New Orleans. The 2027 event marks the show’s first appearance in Savannah, placing it in the heart of the Southern Pine lumber community while keeping the event accessible and cost-conscious for exhibitors and attendees alike. …Space is assigned using a priority points system for SFPA members and returning exhibiting companies. 

Read More

Scientists are injecting elm trees with a killer fungus to save them

By Abagael Giles
Vermont Public
June 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

©Wiki

“American elm is a foundation tree species in floodplain forests,” says Leila Wilson, an ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service. “They are facing severe threats from non-native pests and pathogens…” Wilson knows these trees well. Each one comes from a seed she harvested from a tree whose flowers she isolated with little plastic bags, then hand-fertilized using pollen collected in the lab. … “We’re going to be infecting them with the Dutch elm disease fungus,” she says as she drills the first hole. …She and her colleagues will look for survivor trees by rating the lushness of their canopies. …The ones that survive will have their seeds harvested to be used to grow a nursery stock that can be planted as part of floodplain restoration projects around the region.

Read More

What seedling census tell us about the future of Michigan’s forests

By Robin Smith
Michigan State University
June 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

The history of a forest might be measured by the trunks and branches looming overhead. But for some MSU researchers, a forest’s future lies in what’s growing under their feet. Every summer for nearly three decades, a team led by Ecology, Evolution and Behavior core faculty member Richard Kobe has made its way to Manistee National Forest in northwestern Lower Michigan to look for new trees that have sprouted. At less than a year old, the youngest seedlings growing in the understory aren’t much taller than their toes. But now, the team’s annual counts of 10 common tree species are starting to reveal clues to what the region’s forests might look like in the 20, 40 or 100 years to come. …In a new study published in Global Change Biology Communications, McNichol and Kobe compared years of seedling data collected at 12 sites spread across a 370-square-mile area in Michigan’s Manistee National Forest.

Read More

U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff cosponsors bill to speed wildfire response in Georgia

By Kay Frazier
WALB News 10
June 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Jon Ossoff

US Sen. Jon Ossoff is cosponsoring bipartisan legislation to establish faster wildfire response times on federal land in Georgia. Ossoff joined the Wildfire Response and Preparedness Act, which was introduced by Sens. Tim Sheehy and Andy Kim. The bill would create a 30-minute national standard response time for wildfires on federal land. The new standard is designed to improve response times on federal forest land across Georgia. “In recent years, the State of Georgia has seen unprecedented wildfire activity threatening lives and property. This bipartisan bill will ensure that firefighters and first responders are able to quickly respond to these emergencies and keep our communities safe.” In March, Ossoff helped secure funding for the city of Valdosta to purchase fully equipped vehicles for the Valdosta Fire Department and a burn building with an attached four-story training tower.

Read More

Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

California makes controversial change to cap-and-invest program

By Jeff St. John
Canary Media
June 1, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

The California Air Resources Board on Friday approved major changes to the state’s cap-and-invest program, including a controversial plan to allow polluting industries to earn free emissions allowances if they invest in decarbonizing their facilities — a move critics say could undermine California’s decarbonization goals. Friday’s vote capped months of fighting between environmental groups and polluting industries over the future of the state’s two-decade-old carbon-trading regime, which lawmakers reauthorized last year. Companies covered by the program must either reduce their carbon emissions below a certain state-mandated limit or buy allowances from the market to offset emissions in excess of that limit. …CARB Chair Lauren Sanchez agreed at Friday’s hearing to insert several last-minute amendments, to forestall the risk of MDI undermining state carbon-reduction targets or throttling carbon market revenues. …Ultimately, the board voted 10 to 3 to adopt the plan. The MDI program will open in mid-2027.

Read More

U.S. Endowment, Georgia Tech’s Aerospace Systems Design Laboratory Complete Forestry Residues Study

EIN Newsdesk
June 4, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: US East

GREENVILLE, SC — The U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities and the Georgia Institute of Technology have completed a two-semester research project designed to help rural communities, investors and policymakers evaluate new markets for wood fiber after pulp and paper mills close. Developed through Georgia Tech’s Aerospace Systems Design Laboratory (ASDL), the prototype decision-support tool models how underutilized forestry and mill residues could be converted into biomass power, renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel. The tool allows users to test how choices about feedstock supply, plant location, transportation, financing assumptions, market prices and policy incentives affect project viability. The work responds to a major shift across the forest sector. Since 2015, more than 40 pulp and paper mills have closed, eliminating an estimated 60 million tons of annual demand for wood fiber from forest regions across the country. A new economic analysis commissioned by the Endowment … finds that additional pulp and paper capacity remains at risk in the years ahead.

Read More

Louisiana lawmakers approve incentives for controversial wood pellet industry

By Tristan Baurick
Verite News | Deep South Today
May 28, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: US East

A bill aimed at making Louisiana more enticing to the wood pellet industry has sailed through the state Legislature. House Bill 670 won unanimous approval in the Louisiana House and Senate and was granted final passage on Wednesday (May 27). It would ease regulations for pellet manufacturers while directing state support toward workforce development, financial incentives and infrastructure improvements designed to meet the industry’s needs. The industry has come under fire for repeatedly breaking air pollution rules in Louisiana and Mississippi and contributing to greenhouse gas emissions in the United Kingdom, where most of the pellets are burned to produce energy marketed as “sustainable biomass.”  The bill’s supporters admitted they knew little about the industry but backed the measure in hopes of reviving the state’s struggling logging sector. …“This bill uses taxpayer money to support a foreign industry and makes it easier for them to pollute Louisianians’ air and water,” said the Dogwood Alliance. 

Additional coverage in Biomass Magazine, by Erin Krueger: Louisiana Senate approves wood pellet bill

Read More

Health & Safety

Why is dilution a cleanup strategy for the Longview mill disaster?

By Greg Kim
The Seattle Times
June 4, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

LONGVIEW, Washington — After a tank containing about 600,000 gallons of “white liquor” imploded in Longview on May 26, killing 11 people, cleanup efforts have largely consisted of diluting affected waterways. You might be wondering, is dilution enough to clean up a chemical spill? The Washington State Department of Ecology says it is, and that it comes down to the composition of white liquor. White liquor mostly consists of two chemical compounds — sodium hydroxide (commonly called lye) and sodium sulfide. What makes it dangerous to humans and the environment is primarily the high concentration of hydroxide, which results in high pH levels. That helps break down wood chips into pulp in paper mills but can burn tissue and corrode materials like concrete, plastics and rubber. Diluting with water reduces the concentration of hydroxide, which neutralizes the pH. …The components that remain after diluting white liquor with water, such as sodium, oxygen, and hydrogen, are naturally occurring elements that don’t pose an environmental risk, Tang said. [to access the full story a Seattle Times is required]

Read More

Worker dies in accident at North Tuscaloosa County lumber mill

By Stephen Dethrage
Tuscaloosa Thread
June 4, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

TUSCALOOSA, Alabama — A worker at a lumber mill in north Tuscaloosa County was killed in a workplace accident Wednesday night, investigators have confirmed. Captain Jack Kennedy, the commander of the Tuscaloosa Violent Crimes Unit, confirmed that they are investigating a workplace fatality at the W G Sullivan Lumber Co. on Highway 171 east of Samantha in the northern part of the county. Kennedy said the worker, whose identity the VCU is not publicly releasing, died in an accident involving machinery. He said the body will be sent to Montgomery, where the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences for autopsy. At this time, the VCU does not believe there was a criminal element to the death, which is why they are not identifying the victim publicly.

Read More