Region Archives: United States

Business & Politics

North Island First Nations planning to engage in free trade with Indigenous communities in the US

By Kori Sidaway
Chek News
August 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Terry Teegee

As a possible workaround to the escalating tariffs and duties from the United States, a group of BC First Nations is exploring a bold plan to engage in free trade with Indigenous communities in the United States. …“We need to find something that’s going to get us through this,” said Dallas Smith, Nanwakolas Council president. …The council is talking seriously with Indigenous Nations to the south about cross-border nation-to-nation free trade, to circumvent escalating American duties on softwood lumber. …No American Nations wanted to speak with CHEK News for fear of retaliation prior to plans being set in motion. …BC Assembly of First Nations Regional Chief Terry Teegee said, “Nations have tried, but those authorities, such as the United States and Canada, came in and imposed their authority,” said Teegee. …The group of six nations is planning to put legislation on both sides of the border to the test, soon.

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US trade court dismisses Canadian lumber company J.D. Irving challenge

MLex.com
August 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East, United States

The US Court of International Trade threw out a legal challenge from Canadian softwood lumber producers J.D. Irving Ltd. granting a motion-to-dismiss from the Commerce Department. Timothy Reif said in the opinion that J.D. Irving, which had challenged Commerce’s 2022 antidumping administrate review on grounds that the agency erred by assigning a higher cash deposit rate in the order, has its proper venue under a binational panel though the USMCA now reviewing the Commerce order. While the Canadian firm said it was challenging not the Commerce fine order but the instruction for the cash deposit rate. Reif said the challenge entered on the commerce final result and thus should rest before the USMCA panel. [to access the full story, a MLex.com subscription is required]

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SFPA Statement on the EUDR and Recent US–EU Trade Developments

The Southern Forest Products Association
August 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

We welcome the recent announcement from the White House regarding the US–EU Framework Agreement on Reciprocal, Fair, and Balanced Trade. Notably, the European Union has committed to addressing U.S. concerns about the EUDR, acknowledging that US commodity production poses negligible risk to global deforestation. This recognition is a positive step toward ensuring Southern Pine lumber producers and exporters are not unfairly burdened by regulations that fail to account for the sustainability and stewardship practices already in place within the American forestry sector. …The EUDR’s stringent traceability requirements (such as geolocation data for every plot of land from which timber is sourced) present serious compliance obstacles for U.S. producers. …Recognizing the broad impact of the EUDR across multiple agricultural sectors, the forest products industry is strategically voicing its objections through official trade and commerce channels.

Related from The White House: Joint Statement on a United States-European Union Framework on an Agreement on Reciprocal, Fair, and Balanced Trade

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White House unveils details for European Union trade deal

By Ashleigh Fields
The Hill
August 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The White House unveiled details for its trade deal with the European Union (EU) on Thursday. The Trump administration said its EU counterparts have agreed to eliminate all tariffs on industrial goods imported from the U.S. and to widen preferential market access to US seafood and agricultural products. In exchange, most EU exports — notably pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and lumber — will be taxed at 15 percent. The group of 27 member nations also agreed to ensure its companies invest $600 billion in the U.S. and to purchase at least $750 billion worth of U.S. energy over the next three years, according to the White House.

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Trade commission reaches affirmative determination in review of cabinets and vanities from China

By Larry Adams
The Woodworking Network
August 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The US International Trade Commission determined on August 21 that revoking the existing antidumping duty order and countervailing duty order on wooden cabinets and vanities from China would likely lead to “continuation or recurrence of material injury within a reasonably foreseeable time.” The Kitchen Cabinet Manufacturers Association (KCMA) said that ruling “means that the antidumping and countervailing duty orders will remain in place for at least another five years and continue to provide relief to the US domestic industry from dumped and subsidized merchandise from China.” As a result of the Commission’s affirmative determinations, the existing orders on imports of these products will remain in place. …The action comes under the five-year (sunset) review process required by the Uruguay Round Agreements Act. The Commission’s public report on Wooden Cabinets and Vanities from China will be available by October 3, 2025.

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A Forest Products Manufacturer Rooted in Sustainability: Domtar’s Story Comes to Screen

Domtar Corporation
August 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

FORT MILL, South Carolina — Domtar is featured in a new short documentary released as part of the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Leaders project. This series is an initiative that profiles companies making measurable progress toward the 17 SDGs from the United Nations to end poverty, fight inequality and injustice, and protect the planet. The documentary, titled “A Forest Products Manufacturer Rooted in Sustainability: Domtar’s 2030 Vision,” offers a behind-the-scenes look at its operations and highlights Domtar’s longstanding commitment to responsible forest management, sustainable innovation and the real-world impact of its products in everyday life. …Brian Kozlowski, Senior Director, Environment and Sustainability said, “It’s an honor to be recognized by the SDG Leaders project. We’re proud to share how sustainability is not only a priority at Domtar but also a part of who we are.”

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Fire in motor at F.H. Stoltze mill in Columbia Falls is quickly doused

By Chris Peterson
The Hungry Horse News
August 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

MONTANA — Columbia Falls firefighters quickly knocked down a fire at the F.H. Stoltze Land and Lumber mill in Columbia Falls late Monday evening. Columbia Falls Capt. Shawn Loughery said the fire was in a motor that ran a conveyor belt at the mill. It was a couple stories up so the department cut the power and cooled off the motor using its ladder truck. There were no injuries and damage was minimal. They also dumped out a hopper and doused the chips with water just in case an ember had fallen in it. …There were no injuries.

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International Paper to close Savannah, Riceboro Georgia plants

By Robin Kemp and Craig Nelson
The Current Georgia
August 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

GEORGIA — International Paper announced that it will permanently close its Savannah and Riceboro plants by the end of September and cut some 1,100 hourly and salaried jobs. The closures of the company’s containerboard and packaging facilities in Savannah and its containerboard mill and timber and lumber operation in Riceboro are part of “actions to enhance its ability to serve and grow with customers,” the firm said. While eliminating its operations in Savannah and Riceboro, the firm said it will invest $250 million for renovations at its Riverdale mill in Selma, Alabama, to produce container board and sell its global cellulose. …The firm’s operations in Savannah and the surrounding area stretch back nearly 88 years. …Savannah Mayor Van Johnson expressed disappointment about the closure and concern for the 650 Savannah-based employees. …IP’s Simpson confirmed the Port Wentworth pulp mill will not close but had been sold.

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Domtar will indefinitely idle operations at its Grenada, Mississippi paper mill

By Adam Prestridge
The Northside Sun
August 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MISSISSIPPI — Domtar Corporation will indefinitely idle operations at its Grenada, Miss., paper mill in September, marking a significant transition for an industrial cornerstone that has stood at 1000 Paper Mill Rd., for decades. Officials with Domtar, which purchased Resolute Forest Products in March 2023, announced the decision to its employees Wednesday, citing a response to newsprint market conditions. …The company is taking steps to ensure a safe and orderly wind-down of production and is committed to supporting the more than 160 employees, their families and the Grenada community through career transition resources, benefits guidance and transparent communication during this period. Matthew Harrison, president & CEO for the Greater Grenada Partnership, said Domtar’s announcement is a transitional period for Grenada County. …Harrison added that the mill’s closure is “difficult,” but not the end of Grenada’s story.

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Domtar odor mitigation plan continues, demolition underway

By Belle Johnson
WJHL Tennessee
August 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

KINGSPORT, Tennessee – Domtar has announced progress is being made in the two-phase plan to help mitigate the odor coming from the Kingsport Domtar mill. About a month ago, the air permit from the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation was approved, which allows for the beginning of phase two. Contractors are on site at the back of the Domtar Kingsport mill, demolishing current structures to make room for an anaerobic digester. Domtar’s VP for Strategic Capital, Charlie Floyd, said it will take over a year for construction to be completed. “The most intense construction time frame is going to be is actually going to start late this year, into the first six months of next year, with maxing out at a little bit over 150 contract employees,” Floyd said. Floyd said Domtar is currently using temporary solutions to help with odor mitigation.

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Lowe’s to buy Foundation Building Materials for $8.8-billion to boost contractor business

Lowe’s Companies Inc.
August 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MOORESVILLE, North Carolina — Lowe’s Companies announced it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Foundation Building Materials (FBM) for approximately $8.8 billion. FBM is a leading North American distributor of interior building products. …Since 2011, FBM has grown to a network of over 370 locations in the United States and Canada serving 40,000 Pro customers. In 2024, on a pro forma basis, FBM generated approximately $6.5 billion in revenue. FBM is expected to accelerate Lowe’s Total Home strategy by enhancing its offering to Pro customers through expanded capabilities, faster fulfillment, improved digital tools, a robust trade credit platform, and significant cross-selling opportunities between FBM and Lowe’s as well as the recently acquired Artisan Design Group. …Ruben Mendoza and the senior leadership team will continue to lead FBM… and collaborate closely with Lowe’s for their Pro customers.

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Domtar Breaks ground on Rothschild Dam modernization project

Wisconsin Politics News Service
August 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

ROTHSCHILD, Wisconsin – Executives and employees of Domtar Paper Company joined state and local leaders Tuesday to break ground on a project that will modernize a section of the 113-year-old Rothschild Dam on Lake Wausau. The upgrade to the 276-foot Timber Crib Spillway section will help the dam continue to serve surrounding communities by supporting public safety and flood control, economic development, tax revenue from private residences and businesses, reservoir management and recreational opportunities. Earlier this year, Gov. Tony Evers and the Wisconsin State Legislature committed $42 million in state funding to the project. …The company’s Rothschild and Nekoosa mills supports approximately 750 direct employees. …Steve Henry, Domtar’s president of paper and packaging, said “modernizing the Rothschild Dam is essential to public safety, environmental sustainability and economic vitality in north central Wisconsin.”

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Finance & Economics

What are the Prospects for Lumber Prices?

By Andrew Hecht
Barchart
August 21, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

The United States is the top wood-importing country. Trade issues and tariffs could be a significant factor in determining the path of least resistance for lumber, lumber futures, and wood product prices over the coming weeks and months. …The offseason for lumber demand is on the horizon. The potential for increased price variance due to the uncertainty created by U.S.-Canada trade relations remains high, and the path of least resistance of U.S. short-term interest rates is likely to be lower. Time will tell if longer-term rates follow any Fed Rate cuts over the coming months. Lumber remains a critical construction material, and the current price levels offer a positive risk-reward profile. Accumulating lumber-related assets on a scale-down basis during periods of price weakness over the coming weeks and months could be optimal for 2026, provided the housing market improves and lumber demand rises. 

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Lumber prices are tumbling. Here’s what that means for the housing market now.

By Myra Saefong
Dow Jones in Morningstar
August 21, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber buyers placed unsuccessful bets on tariffs and interest rates Lumber prices have dropped by more than 14% from a record high in early August. Many home builders, contractors and retailers wagered that higher U.S. tariffs on imports would boost the cost of lumber, while lower interest rates would lift demand for the building material. But those bets have failed to pay off – and lumber prices have tallied a steep decline from a record high reached only three weeks ago. That price decline could lead to a drop in production at a time when home-building and housing demand starts to heat up. The demand component for spring 2025 was a “complete swing and a miss,” said Greg Kuta, at lumber broker Westline Capital Strategies. …On Tuesday, lumber futures for September delivery settled at $595.50 per thousand board feet. …Canadian mills are losing out with lumber prices well under the cost of production,” Kuta said.

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Powell Appears to Signal Rate Cuts Due to Evolving Circumstances

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
August 22, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Federal Reserve Chair Powell gave a mostly green light for monetary policy easing in September. Noting that inflation remains elevated, Powell stated that “the balance of risks appears to be shifting.” …The implication of this observation is that easing is in view for monetary policy given the Fed’s dual mandate of maintaining both price stability and full employment. Markets expect a cut in September. Powell detailed an important point for the housing demand, that the labor market has avoided large job losses due to policy tightening and the economy has shown “resilience.” The Fed chair also indicated that inflation pressure is now in the data from tariffs, including a rise in goods prices. …Moreover, some of the pressure from tariffs is being relaxed as trade deals are arranged and de-escalations of some trade tensions are undertaken. Canada’s drop of retaliatory trade actions against the US is a good example.

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US New and Existing Homes Remain Largely Unaffordable in Second Quarter

By Rose Quint
NAHB Eye on Housing
August 21, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

While new homes remain largely unaffordable, builder efforts to improve housing affordability paid dividends in the second quarter of 2025, according to the latest data from the NAHB/Wells Fargo Cost of Housing Index (CHI). The CHI results from the second quarter of 2025 show that a family earning the nation’s median income of $104,200 needed 36% of its income to cover the mortgage payment on a median-priced new home. Low-income families, defined as those earning only 50% of median income, would have to spend 71% of their earnings to pay for the same new home. …The second quarter of 2025 marked the largest historical gap where existing home prices exceeded those of new homes. …The percentage of a family’s income needed to purchase a new home was unchanged at 36% from the first to the second quarter, while the low-income CHI fell from 72% to 71% over the same period.

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Higher softwood lumber prices could lead to increased demand for hardwood pallets

By Antonio Gallotta
RISI Fastmarkets
August 19, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Economic uncertainty has clouded the pallet market outlook, as July’s job report revealed weaker-than-expected job growth. The elimination of the de minimis tariff exemption for low-value shipments is expected to improve pallet demand. Anticipated interest rate cuts will have a knock-on effect on housing affordability, stimulating the construction sector which in turn impacts lumber prices. …As pallet usage has grown, softwood has become the dominant material used in pallet manufacturing due to its abundance and cost-effectiveness. Hardwood mills were hit hard, and many saw closures, after the Chinese property market collapsed as that was its biggest end-use market. This Canadian softwood lumber supply shock does certainly leave the door open for the hardwood pallet to regain some market share. Supply and demand indicators are pointing to higher prices towards the end of 2025 and into 2026.

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Growth for Custom Home Building Amid Single-family Weakness

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
August 20, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

NAHB’s analysis indicates year-over year growth for custom home builders amid broader single-family home building weakness. The custom building market is less sensitive to the interest rate cycle than other forms of home building but is more sensitive to changes in household wealth and stock prices. With spec home building down and the stock market up, custom building is gaining market share. There were 54,000 total custom building starts during the second quarter of 2025. This was up 4% relative to the second quarter of 2024. Over the last four quarters, custom housing starts totaled 184,000 homes, just more than a 2% increase compared to the prior four quarter total (180,000).  Currently, the market share of custom home building, based on a one-year moving average, is approximately 19% of total single-family starts. This is down from a prior cycle peak of 31.5% set during the second quarter of 2009 and the 21% recent peak rate at the beginning of 2023.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Real estate developer presents results of mass timber fire testing

By Dakota Smith
The Woodworking Network
August 20, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

MADISON, Wisconsin — Neutral, a real estate development company, has presented the results of a 3-hour fire test for a hybrid mass timber building assembly with standard connectors. Neutral conducted a series of fire resistance tests to determine a 3-hour fire-resistance rating (FRR), proving equivalent performance of the mass timber structure with IBC construction type I-A. Test results exceeded expectations: the assemblies performed exceptionally under loaded fire conditions. …The test was conducted in the Spring of 2025 at SwRI lab in San Antonio, Texas. It was prepared in collaboration with Forefront Structural Engineers. …Neutral is publishing the test results (report 1, report 2) for open use by industry researchers and practitioners around the world. This is the first successful implementation of the three-hour fire test of a mass timber assembly that illustrates the safety and potential of mass timber application in high-rise construction.

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Softwood Lumber Board Monthly Update – August 2025

The Softwood Lumber Board
August 22, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States
  • SLB-Funded NYC Mass Timber Studio Expands With Landmark Projects: Building on the success of its first round of projects in 2024, the NYC Mass Timber Studio announced a second cohort of selected projects this month to help catalyze deployment of wood construction throughout New York City. … After supporting successful accelerator programs in Boston, Georgia, and New York City, the SLB is now exploring collaborations with cities in Arizona, California, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Oregon, and Texas. 
  • Industry Leaders Highlight How the SLB Unites Manufacturers of All Sizes: This month, current and former SLB Directors Trey Hankins, CFO of Hankins, Inc., and J.D. Hankins, Co-Owner, highlight how the SLB unites manufacturers of all sizes and from each region.
  • WoodWorks Supports Growth in Student Housing Projects: Whether teams are interested in the economy of light-frame wood, the biophilic potential of mass timber, or a combination, student housing offers significant opportunities for wood.
  • Click the Read More for these stories and more!

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Paper and Paper-Based Packaging Industry Votes to End Its Marketing Program

Paper and Packaging Board
August 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

The paper and paper-based packaging industry’s national research and promotion program, administered by the Paper and Packaging Board (P+PB), will not continue following the results of the July continuance referendum vote. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) published the results where 74% of manufacturers and importers voting, who represented 90% of the volume of paper and paper-based packaging voted in the referendum, were not in favor of continuing the program. For the referendum to pass, the number of voting companies and the voting tons they represent must be over 50% in favor of continuing the program.  …“While I am very disappointed by the results, I am proud of all the progress we have made as an industry speaking with one voice and the positive improvements in industry reputation and preference for its products,” said Mary Anne Hansan, president of P+PB. 

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Why Maine Is Falling Behind in Race to Build Timber Buildings

By Lori Valigra
The Bangor Daily News
August 24, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

When Millard Dority came out of retirement to oversee the expansion of Jesup Memorial Library, he had one goal: to prove that Maine could produce its own cross-laminated timber. Instead, he uncovered a glaring hole in the state’s forest economy. …But with no CLT factories in Maine, the wood had to be trucked from New England to Illinois for processing, then hauled back to Bar Harbor—a headache in a state blanketed by forests. …The Jesup Library expansion is one of just 27 CLT projects in Maine, using spruce-pine-fir and eastern hemlock from New England. Forestry expert Andy Fast said these underused species are finding new life through CLT, but warned, “Supply chain efficiencies will determine whether it’s a viable product longer term.” Despite interest, Maine has failed to land a CLT manufacturer. LignaTerra Global and SmartLam both announced plans in 2018, only to back out. [to access the full story a Bangor Daily News subscription is required].

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Forestry

The US should stop taxing Canadian lumber if it wants cleaner air

By Pedro Antunes, Chief Economist, Conference Board of Canada
The Financial Post
August 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Canada’s forests are burning. …Smoke from these fires has degraded air quality across Canada and the US. The situation has led some US policymakers to publicly blame Canada for failing to manage wildfires and to demand more active forest management. These critiques are hypocritical, given their record of climate change denial. …Yet beyond partisan politics, the US continues to impose tariffs on Canadian lumber, undermining our capacity to invest in stronger forest management. …Eliminating or reducing US tariffs would instantly raise the value of Canada’s standing forest stock, sending a price signal that makes forestry activity viable in regions that are currently too remote or costly to harvest. At the margin, higher returns would unlock investment in better forest management, including areas that are now left untouched because they are uneconomic to service. …Lifting tariffs would be the first step, but it would not be a cure-all. 

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USFS chief Tom Schultz outlines vision for more logging, mining and grazing and less wildfire in America’s national forests

By Amanda Eggert
The Montana Free Press
August 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

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WHITEFISH — U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Shultz on Tuesday said America’s national forests need less wildfire and more logging, mining, grazing and recreational activity. Schultz spoke at the Congressional Western Caucus conference where U.S. senators and representatives discussed policy with state officials, industry groups and prominent think tanks. Schultz said his approach will favor expedited review for natural resource development… He intends to aggressively suppress all wildfires and make more USFS land accessible for recreational use by motorized users and others. “America should mine, mill and manufacture more,” he said, adding that more of the country’s national forests will be available to log in the near and long term to comply with Trump’s executive orders and the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that Trump signed into law on July 4.  Schultz said implementing those directives will give companies more certainty to invest in lumber mills, which cost about $250 million to build. 

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Industry managed forests more likely to fuel megafires, study finds

By University of Utah
Phys.org
August 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The odds of high-severity wildfire were nearly one-and-a-half times higher on industrial private land than on publicly owned forests, a new study found. Forests managed by timber companies were more likely to exhibit the conditions that megafires love—dense stands of regularly spaced trees with continuous vegetation connecting the understory to the canopy. The research, led by the University of Utah, University of California, Berkeley, and the United States Forest Service, is the first to identify how extreme weather conditions and forest management practices jointly impact fire severity. Leveraging a unique lidar dataset, the authors created three-dimensional maps of public and private forests before five wildfires burned 1.1 million acres in the northern Sierra Nevada, California. …Although the study demonstrates that private industrial lands fare worse, both private and public agencies have much room for improvement to protect our nation’s forests.

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Forest Products EXPO 2025 Largest Show Since 2000

Southern Forest Products Association
August 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

EXPO 2025: Fine Tune Your Strategy. That was the agenda for the 38th Forest Products Machinery & Equipment EXPO from August 6-8, 2025, at the Music City Center in Nashville, and early feedback shows exhibitors and attendees alike were able to successfully collaborate to drive their operations forward. “The Southern Forest Products Association (SFPA) hosting the Forest Products EXPO in Nashville for a second time continued to far surpass our expectations,” said Eric Gee, SFPA’s executive director. “I’m beyond proud of our exhibiting companies, whose creativity and hard work transformed the exhibit hall into an outstanding hub of innovation, connection, and opportunity.” The event boasted 243 exhibiting companies and a record number of exhibitors since 2000, representing 185 product categories, and nearly 1,000 attendees, including 60 first-time exhibitors. Early survey responses from attendees were positive, with many lauding the location and Music City Center, the opportunities for networking with industry colleagues and meeting new vendors, and the variety of exhibits.

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Old forests, new fires, and a scientific standoff over active management

By John Cannon
Mongabay
August 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Photographs of forests in the western U.S. from the mid-1800s show a starkly different reality compared to today, says Paul Hessburg, an ecologist at the University of Washington. …Today, many of these forests are overgrown and dominated by younger trees. Back then, they were typically more open — “park-like”. …Fire played an integral role — perhaps the integral role — in shaping these ecosystems. …Hessburg and others see the rejection of active management in part as a response to the “legacy” of commercial, industrial-scale logging of natural forests. Those rampant harvests often took the oldest and largest trees in the U.S., before a mix of science, policy and advocacy for species like the northern spotted owl caused a shift away from the practice in the 1990s. …“We created a climate that’s hostile to people and health and forests,” he says. What’s critical now is finding ways to adjust, for both ourselves and our forests. 

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Missoula County, forestry experts push back against consolidation

By Martin Kidston
KPAX Missoula & Western Montana
August 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MISSOULA – Missoula County has drafted a letter headed to the U.S. Department of Agriculture stating the value of the U.S. Forest Service’s Region 1 office in Missoula while raising concerns about the agency’s proposed consolidation. …“It seems intuitive that Forest Service management and leadership is best located close to the public lands they manage,” said Mike Burnside with Conservation Matters – a group of retired land managers. “It doesn’t seem workable to have everyone reporting to the D.C. office or five offices somewhere else. We don’t see that as being workable.” The Forest Service operates 10 regional offices across the country. Under the proposal released by the Trump administration last month, those offices would close and consolidate into five hubs located in Utah, Colorado, Indiana, North Carolina and Missouri. The Northern Region Headquarters in Missoula — one of the nation’s oldest and most storied — would close.

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US Forest Service and Oregon Department of Forestry partner to restore oak forests

By The Forest Service
US Department of Agriculture
August 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

PORTLAND, Oregon — The USDA Forest Service and the Oregon Department of Forestry are investing $750,000 to restore oak habitat and reduce wildfire risk in the southern Willamette Valley. The project will reduce the risk of uncharacteristic wildfire and restore fire-adapted oak ecosystems that are important to wildlife, water quality, and rural communities. Work includes treating 150 acres of hazardous fuels while supporting partner efforts to treat an additional 1,200 acres — for a total of 1,350 acres restored. Landowners will receive assistance to implement oak management activities, including hazardous fuels mitigation, that promote resilient and fire-adapted forests. This investment is part of the Forest Service’s Landscape Scale Restoration (LSR) program, a nationally competitive grant program that supports collaborative, science-based projects across state, tribal, and private forestlands. The Forest Service invested $7 million to fund 19 projects nationwide, including $300,000 to this project in Oregon.

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Clearing the air: It’s time to fix Washington forests

By Todd Myers, Washington Policy Center
The Seattle Times
August 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Once again, communities across Washington face smoky skies as wildfires stretch across the state. …there is broad agreement that to reduce the intensity of fires and habitat destruction, we must treat forests using controlled burns and harvests. Forests across the West are particularly fire-prone because they have not been thinned and harvested after fire was removed from the ecosystems decades ago. Washington’s native tribes are already acting. The Colville Confederated Tribes have taken steps to make reservation forests more fire-resistant. …Good Neighbor Authority was developed to allow state, county and tribal forestry programs to partner with the federal government to conduct forestland, rangeland and watershed restoration to address areas of high fire risk. … It is time to use the important tool of Good Neighbor Authority to get the work done and make our forests healthier and more resilient.

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With less federal funding, Oregon ranchers forced to delay wildfire resilience projects

By Alejandro Figueroa
Oregon Public Broadcasting
August 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Wildfires are a natural part of the landscape in much of Central and Eastern Oregon. James “Jim Bob” Collins has seen the damage a wildfire can cause and the effects it has on the land after the smoke clears. His district had worked for months to receive a $21 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture that would have gone to wildfire mitigation in forests and rangelands. But this summer, just as wildfire season was starting, the government walked back on its offer in Wheeler County and across the state. All told $90 million worth of conservation work is on hold across Oregon. That’s left ranchers like Collins and his neighbors, whose land bears the scars of last year’s fires, hoping the rest of this year’s wildfire season is uneventful, as he and the conservation district he serves explore new ways to pay for the work.

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Oregon timber counties flail, awaiting Congress to renew key funding

By April Ehrlich
Oregon Public Broadcasting
August 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A budget crisis a century in the making is coming to a head as Oregon’s rural counties. The crisis originates with a compromise from the era of President Teddy Roosevelt and was prolonged by piecemeal solutions made during the Timber Wars of the 1990s. Now the president’s signature One Big Beautiful Bill removes a key funding source for Oregon’s timber counties. If nothing is done, rural counties could find themselves with no money to pay for sheriff’s departments or other essential needs. …Many rural Oregon counties once relied on a portion of revenue from trees logged on federal lands to cover the costs of essential services. That federal land doesn’t generate local property taxes… So the federal government started sharing a portion of its logging revenues with those counties. When those declined, federal lawmakers came up with the Secure Rural Schools program. …But Congress needs to regularly re-authorize the program.

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CAL FIRE invests $5M to expand biomass use and train forestry workers

By Debbie Sklar
Times of San Diego
August 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection has awarded $5 million in grant funding to eight projects aimed at creating jobs, training future forestry workers, and helping small businesses expand their role in protecting forests and communities from wildfire. The funding comes through CAL FIRE’s Business and Workforce Development Grant program, which supports innovative approaches to reducing wildfire risk and promoting rural economic growth. Since its launch in 2022, the program has awarded over $100 million to more than 100 projects statewide. “From hands-on training for young adults to new mass timber production right here in California, these projects are helping build a more resilient future for our forests and our communities,” said Assistant Chief John McCarthy of CAL FIRE’s Wood Products & Bioenergy Team.

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Wisconsin researchers listen to forests to learn more about protecting them

By Bridgit Bowden
Wisconsin Public Radio
August 25, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Once a month, researchers hike through the woods in the Baraboo Hills to check on small boxes strapped to tree trunks. The boxes hold microphones that are running 24 hours a day, capturing the soundscape of the forest. But for a research team at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, they could be an important way to learn about the health of forests. The Soundscape Baselines Project is an effort to record a full year of audio in untouched forests all over the world. Bioacoustics enable researchers to get a fuller picture of the forest, the species that inhabit it and how they change over time, said Zuzana Burivalova, the project’s founder. …Burivalova’s team and their partners are recording in six locations around the world: Ecuador, Peru, Gabon, Germany, Brunei and Wisconsin. …“These new technologies, like bioacoustics, artificial intelligence … they’re finally enabling us to really understand what is out there and how it’s changing,” she said.

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US Forest Service invests in four projects to restore state and private forests across the South

By Forest Service
US Department of Agriculture
August 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

ATLANTA — The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service announced it is investing more than $2.1 million in four projects across nine states in the Southern Region to restore state and private forestlands. These investments directly support the agency’s efforts to reduce wildfire risk, increase timber production, and expand rural economies, while providing critical support to landowners across management jurisdictions as they work to promote healthy, productive forests that benefit rural communities. The investments, totaling more than $7 million nationwide, are being delivered as competitive grants through the Landscape Scale Restoration program. Of the total funding, $600,000 will support two projects for federally recognized tribes. …In the Southeast, protecting wildlife habitat and restoring important forest ecosystems such as longleaf pine and oak are important priorities to ensure continued economic productivity of rural working lands.

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Study looks at capacity of wildfire chars to suppress methane

By Kathy Atkinson
University of Delaware
August 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

…a University of Delaware professor has found that there is something of value to be learned from what’s left behind in the remnants of a wildfire. The charred debris left in the wake of wildfires … is known as wildfire char. UD’s Pei Chiu, professor of civil, construction and environmental engineering, studies wildfire chars and the ways they just might prove useful in reducing methane, a powerful gas that traps heat in the atmosphere. Methane emissions come from many different sources, ranging from livestock manure to landfills and wastewater treatment plants. This work also informs his research on biochar — man-made chars created from leftover wood chips, rice husks, corn stover and other agricultural biomass — that can be used in soil amendments, stormwater treatment and other applications. Chiu shares five important facts about char — both natural (wildfire char) and manmade (biochar). 

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Poplar tree discovery could help shape the future of energy and biomaterials

By Eric Stann, University of Missouri
Phys.org
August 19, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: US East

A new study, led by the University of Missouri, has uncovered how poplar trees can naturally adjust a key part of their wood chemistry based on changes in their environment. This discovery … could help create better biofuels and other sustainable products. The study, “Factors underlying a latitudinal gradient in S/G lignin monomer ratio in natural poplar variants,” was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. …”Understanding how plants make lignin could help us improve its conversion into high-value biomaterials and improve the competitiveness of U.S. biorefineries,” Jaime Barros-Rios, an assistant professor of plant molecular biology, said. Poplars are used in the paper and pulp industry. Now, they’re being explored as a source of bioenergy—fuels, plastics and other bioproducts. They are useful for scientific research because their genome has been fully mapped.

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Forest Fires

Wildfires threaten homes in Oregon and California, prompting hundreds of evacuations

Associated Press in CNN
August 25, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

©NationalFireCenter

Thousands of homes in Northern California wine country and central Oregon were under evacuation orders and warnings Sunday as firefighting crews battled wildfires in dry, hot weather. The Pickett Fire, which had charred about 10 square miles of Napa County, was just 11% contained by Sunday evening, according to the California Department of Forestry & Fire Protection, or Cal Fire. About 150 people were ordered to leave their homes, while another 360 were under evacuation warnings as the fire threatened 500 structures near Aetna Springs and Pope Valley, 80 miles north of San Francisco, said Cal Fire spokesperson Jason Clay. Some evacuation orders were later lifted. In Oregon, the 29-square-mile Flat Fire in Deschutes and Jefferson counties had about 4,000 homes under various levels of evacuation notice, including 1,000 with orders to leave immediately, according to the state Fire Marshal’s Office.

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Western Wyoming fire explodes to 600 acres, closing Green River Lakes Road and prompting evacuations

By Angus Thuermer
The WyoFile
August 21, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

©KendallValleyLodge

A fast-moving wildfire along the Bridger-Teton National Forest road to Green River Lakes exploded to 600 acres in about four hours Thursday, closing the road and forcing the evacuation of campers in the area. First reported at 2:16 p.m. Thursday, the Dollar Lake Fire quickly sent up a thick column of smoke. Sublette County emergency managers issued an emergency evacuation notice within an hour of the fire’s detection. …Dollar Lake is about eight miles north of the community of Kendall. The evacuation notice appears aimed at campers. …Officials placed restrictions on campfires in the area on Aug. 12.

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One of the tallest trees in the world is burning near the Oregon Coast

By Riley Martinez
Oregon Public Broadcasting
August 18, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

©Coos FPA

Firefighters from the Coos Forest Protective Association are trying to save one of the world’s tallest Douglas fir trees, a 325-foot behemoth in the Oregon Coast Range known as the Doerner Fir. At 2:30 p.m. on Aug. 16, the association received a call alerting them of the fire on U.S. Bureau of Land Management land east of Coquille, Oregon. Firefighters have set up a containment line with sprinklers to prevent the fire from spreading near the ground. While helicopter teams were able to douse the flames engulfing the canopy above, there’s still a fire burning inside the trunk of the tree about 250 feet up. However, due to fallout from the treetop, the BLM said in a press release Monday that “fire managers have ruled out the possibility of utilizing tree climbing crews to reach the remaining fire activity within the tree.”

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