Region Archives: United States

Business & Politics

First USMCA negotiations to focus on content rules, economic security, Greer says

By David Lawder
Reuters
May 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Jamieson Greer

MANASSAS, Virginia, — US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said on ​Friday that the first round ‌of formal negotiations to update the US-Mexico-Canada trade agreement next week in ​Mexico City will focus on ​strengthening regional rules of origin ⁠and economic security provisions. He told ​reporters at a Micron Technology memory ​chip plant in suburban Washington that regional content rules needed to be changed ​to help re-shore U.S. manufacturing, ​adding: “If you’re going to get a special ‌deal ⁠on trade with the United States of America, we want to make sure that there’s U.S. ​content in ​that.” Greer ⁠added that he was aware of automakers’ calls ​to keep the six-year-old USMCA ​a ⁠trilateral trade deal. Next week’s talks will be between the ⁠U.S. ​and Mexico only and ​exclude Canada. [END]

Read More

Forest Resources Association Elects Kevin Hudson as Chairman of The Board

The Forest Resources Association
May 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Charleston, SCDuring the FRA 2026 Annual Meeting, the Forest Resources Association (FRA) Board of Directors elected Kevin Hudson, Senior Vice President, Forest Resources and Recycled Fiber at Smurfit Westrock Company, to serve as the Association’s Chairman of the Board for the next two years. Hudson thanked the Board and outgoing Chairman Josh Sandt of Canfor Southern Pine… During his remarks, Hudson noted, “We are an organization with a diverse membership — one of our greatest strengths — allowing us to hear and learn from perspectives across our industry and throughout the wood supply chain.” …Kevin Hudson is Senior Vice President of Forest Resources and Recycled Fiber for Smurfit Westrock, a role he has held since 2012. He is responsible for leading U.S. and Canadian teams focused on the sustainable procurement of virgin and recycled fiber, overseeing the sourcing of more than 31 million tons of virgin fiber and 6.5 million tons of recycled fiber annually. 

Read More

EU Parliament approves implementation of US tariff deal under pressure from Trump

By Peggy Corlin
Euronews
May 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

European negotiators agreed late on Tuesday to implement the controversial trade agreement concluded last summer with the US. However, the deal — signed in the Scottish city of Turnberry — remains fragile as long as US President Donald Trump continues to use tariffs as a tool of political pressure. Diplomats and MEPs reached an agreement late on Tuesday to implement the contentious EU-US agreement, which eliminates duties on most US industrial goods imported into Europe. …The so-called “Turnberry Agreement,” criticised by MEPs as unbalanced, raises US tariffs on EU goods to as much as 15%. …In the final compromise text, the Commission would be able to suspend the trade agreement — at the request of either Parliament or a member state — if the US fails to lift tariffs on European steel and aluminium products by the end of 2026.

Read More

Democrats make demands of U.S. trade representative ahead of U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement review

By Garrett Downs
CNBC News
May 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

A group of Democratic senators will issue a set of demands to U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer ahead of a mandatory joint review of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement this summer. In a letter led by Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., 15 Democrats wrote to Greer to “insist that any revised agreement must deliver meaningful and measurable gains for American workers.” The USMCA, struck during President Donald Trump’s first term, is up for review on July 1. While initially touted by Trump as “the fairest, most balanced, and beneficial trade agreement we have ever signed into law,” the president has soured on the pact lately — slapping Mexico and Canada with tariffs during his second term. Greer has also, in testimony to Congress in December, said that “a rubber stamp of the Agreement is not in the national interest,” meaning that significant changes may be required to reapprove the agreement or disapprove and enter into a cycle of yearly reviews.

Read More

Maine fire marshal says deadly Searsmont explosion will require ‘complex investigation’

By Susan Cover
Spectrum News
May 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

SEARSMONT, Maine — Investigators say they are still working to determine the cause of a deadly Friday fire and explosion at Robbins Lumber that drew 46 fire departments and 299 firefighters. Maine Fire Marshal Shawn Esler said “This remains a very active and complex investigation.” …Joel Davis, chief fire investigator for the state fire marshal’s office, said 30 ATF personnel are in Maine, working with 12 state investigators. They’ve interviewed 150 people so far. The briefing came five days after the fire and explosion killed a firefighter and injured 12 others, a mix of mill employees, firefighters and emergency medical personnel. Some are hospitalized in Boston and others are in Portland. The fire and explosion drew emergency crews from more than 45 departments, as water trucks streamed in and out of the lumber yard to help douse the flames. 

Related coverage by:

Read More

Finance & Economics

Is The Lumber-Gold Ratio Signaling Caution For Markets?

By Alison Coughlin and Gregor Spilker
Seeking Alpha
May 21, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber is a strong proxy for economic health, as demand for the product, which is essential for housing and construction, is closely tied to economic growth. Gold has historically been seen as the ultimate safe-haven asset, which people buy when they fear volatility and stress in the financial ecosystem. By dividing the price of lumber futures by gold futures, a forward-looking gauge of risk appetite emerges.  Today’s lumber prices reflect a functioning, albeit cautious, housing sector. Builders are navigating a higher interest rate environment, but demographic demand for housing continues to provide a solid floor. The lumber market is simply reflecting steady, normalized demand. …Because lumber is steady while gold is surging, the lumber-gold ratio has fallen to levels that signal a more cautious market environment. …The relative prices of these two commodities seem to say that the economy’s base is holding up, but the need for financial safety has rarely been higher, signaling caution ahead.

Read More

Lumber Futures Hit 5-week High

Trading Economics
May 15, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures have been trading below $600 per thousand board feet since early April, as weaker consumer sentiment and uncertainty surrounding developments in the Middle East weigh on demand. At the same time, supply constraints in several regions have partially offset the decline in demand. Profitability for Canadian mills remains under pressure from elevated duties and tariffs. The US has recently outlined preliminary antidumping and countervailing duties on Canadian softwood lumber, with the antidumping rate reduced from 20.6% to 10.7% and the countervailing duty trimmed from 14.6% to 14.2%, bringing the combined rate to about 25.9%. Including an existing 10% Section 232 tariff, total effective duties on Canadian imports are expected to remain near 35.9% once they take effect in August. Despite these measures aimed at supporting domestic producers, US sawmill utilisation remains relatively weak at around 64%, with capacity use trending lower since 2017.

Read More

First Quarter 2026 Multifamily Construction, Custom Home and Single-Family Built-to-Rent Data

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
May 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

According to NAHB analysis of quarterly Census data, the count of multifamily, for-rent housing starts increased year-over-year during the first quarter of 2026. For the quarter, 107,000 multifamily residences started construction. Of this total, 103,000 were built-for-rent. This built-for-rent total was 21% higher than in the first quarter of 2025.

With overall single-family construction down 5% for the first four months of 2026, custom home building has been a relative bright spot. With spec home building down and the stock market up, custom building has expanded its market share. There were 36,000 total custom building starts during the first quarter of 2026. This is up 3% relative to the first quarter of 2025.

Single-family built-for-rent construction fell back in the first quarter of 2026, as a higher cost of financing, increased multifamily supply and policy concerns over Congressional legislation related to institutional capital froze parts of the development market. 

Read More

US Consumer Sentiment fell for the third month in a row

The University of Michigan
May 22, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

US consumer sentiment fell for the third straight month as supply disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz continue to boost gasoline prices. Sentiment is now just below the previous historical trough seen in June 2022. The cost of living continues to be a first-order concern, with 57% of consumers spontaneously mentioning that high prices were eroding their personal finances, up from 50% last month. …Year-ahead inflation expectations inched up from 4.7% last month to 4.8% this month. The current reading substantially exceeds the 3.4% reading seen in February 2026 prior to the start of the Iran conflict, along with all 2024 readings. Long-run inflation expectations climbed from 3.5% in April to 3.9% in May, notably higher than the 2.8% to 3.2% range seen in 2024.

Read More

US mortgage rates hit 9-month high

By Nicole Friedman
The Wall Street Journal
May 21, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Mortgage rates this week rose to the highest level since August, more bad news for home shoppers during what is usually the busiest time of the year for home sales. The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage rose to 6.51% this week, from 6.36% last week, Freddie Mac said Thursday.  Higher mortgage rates and expensive home prices are keeping many would-be buyers on the sidelines. Rising costs in many places for home insurance and property taxes have also spooked buyers.  The rise in mortgage rates this year marks a reversal from the second half of 2025. …But that brief momentum has stalled. The war in Iran and subsequent rise in oil prices have led to worries about inflation and dampened expectations for the spring home-buying season. Existing-home sales were flat in April, well below economists’ expectations. …Mortgage rates look poised to keep rising. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

Read More

House Approves Revised Housing Bill in Major Win for NAHB

By Evan Loukadakis
The National Association of Home Builders
May 20, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

In a significant victory for NAHB and the broader housing sector, the US House of Representatives approved an amendment to the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act that removes a build-to-rent (BTR) sales provision that would have hurt affordability and reduced much-needed housing supply. NAHB led the push to remove the provision, which would have required purpose-built single-family rental homes to be sold within seven years. According to NAHB and the Urban Institute, the measure could have cut rental housing supply by 40,000 to 72,000 units each year. It also would have displaced thousands of tenants annually, shrinking the rental market and putting further pressure on rents. At a time of severe housing challenges, BTR remains one of the few market segments adding tens of thousands of homes that otherwise would not be built. The amended House bill also includes several other NAHB-backed measures to boost housing production.

Read More

US housing starts fall 2.8% in April on drop in single-family homes

By Giuseppe Dellamotta
Investing Live
May 20, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

US housing starts declined in April as construction of single-family homes dropped by the most in nearly a year, suggesting builders are growing cautious amid higher mortgage rates. New residential construction decreased 2.8% last month to an annualised rate of 1.47 million homes, according to government figures released on Thursday. Starts of single-family homes declined 9%, the most since August, to an annualised 930,000 pace. Multifamily housing starts, however, rose more than 10% to the highest level since May 2023. The report also showed single-family permits, a leading indicator of future construction, fell 2.6% to the lowest level since August. The figures suggest home builders remain focused on working off a still-elevated inventory of new properties. …Numerous challenges remain for a sustained pickup in home building, including rising mortgage rates, flagging consumer confidence and stretched household budgets.

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

Organizations Around the Country Support EPA’s Science-Based Reassessment of Formaldehyde

The American Chemistry Council
May 22, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

The American Chemistry Council (ACC) applauds EPA’s updated draft risk evaluation, joining broad support from organizations that recognize the importance of science-based decision-making at EPA. …As the EPA continues its work under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), this support signals confidence in a more rigorous, evidence-driven approach; one that aligns with statutory requirements while protecting both public health and the industries and supply chains Americans depend on every day. Here is what they are saying:

  • American Wood Council: “The purpose of the Memorandum and Notice is to correct serious scientific misjudgments in the December 2024 risk evaluation…AWC appreciates EPA’s willingness to reexamine those and other scientific judgments. The changes now proposed by EPA better reflect the best available science and the weight of the scientific evidence.” 
  • American Forest and Paper Association: “AF&PA supports the Memorandum, the Notice, and many of the corresponding draft changes to portions of the 2024 risk evaluation. 

Read More

Safer wood for safer buildings

By the Forest Service
The US Department of Agriculture
May 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Wood is in most buildings you enter. But how do you know it’s safe? “The work we do at the Forest Products Laboratory is important for everybody’s everyday lives in terms of the buildings we live in, work in, and play in,” said Forest Products Laboratory materials research engineer Laura Hasburgh. Wood may be present in the structural part of the building, such as the wall or ceiling framing. Wood is also used for interior finishes, like trim, doors, furniture and cabinetry. That’s why the safety and durability of wood products are important for everyone—from the businesses making the products to the people using them. However, testing wood materials for durability and resistance to moisture, weight, and fire is largely unaffordable for industry and universities. The Forest Service’s Forest Products Laboratory work with partners to affordably test wood products for safer, stronger wood-based buildings. And the findings are shared with everyone.

Read More

Hyde-Smith encourages Department of Housing and Urban Development to use mass timber to accelerate affordable housing construction

Picayune Item
May 19, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

U.S. Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.) encouraged the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to tackle the nation’s housing affordability crisis by helping make mass timber a more mainstream building material. Mass timber usage was one issue discussed at a Senate Transportation, Housing and Urban Development (THUD) Appropriations Subcommittee hearing chaired by Hyde-Smith to review the FY2027 HUD budget request. …Hyde-Smith sought HUD Secretary Scott Turner’s commitment to engage with the U.S. Forest Service, state forest commissions, research universities, and builders to incorporate mass timber in home construction as one means to tackle housing affordability. …”Mass timber multifamily housing is demonstrating an ability to lower construction costs and reduce the time it takes to build, which makes it an ideal approach for helping increase affordable housing production,” Hyde-Smith said. 

Read More

Forestry

Sustainable Forestry Initiative positioned to meet global deforestation and degradation policies

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
May 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON, D.C. and OTTAWA, ON — The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI), along with others worldwide, shares the commitment to ensuring the health and resilience of forests. The European Union has identified the United States and Canada as low-risk countries for deforestation, and SFI has taken further action to reduce risk through the SFI Standards. With the European Commission’s recent release of its EUDR simplification review, we have yet to see a reduced burden for certified products from low-risk countries. We believe that SFI certification is well positioned to meet global deforestation and degradation policies, such as the European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR). We have also introduced new tools specifically to demonstrate compliance with EUDR. We encourage competent authorities to recognize forest certification like SFI and the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC) to help provide assurances of no deforestation and forest degradation in low-risk countries.

Read More

U.S. Forest Service still prepared to support Canada with wildfire assistance, officials say

By Jacqueline Gelineau
CBC News
May 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Despite budget cuts and extensive restructuring, the US Forest Service says it is ready to support Canada with any requests for wildfire assistance. The British Columbia Wildfire Service is also prepared to do the same, irrespective of strained trade relations, said BC Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar, who is responsible for the province’s wildfire service. …”Let me be very clear when it comes to fighting fires, we will always be there to support Americans in their time of need.” Parmar said that despite strained trade relations, he expects Americans will respond if called upon for support. …The US and Canada have a long history of supporting one another during difficult fire seasons, but this year the US Forest Service is facing budget cuts and restructuring. …”Any budget changes do not affect our firefighting capacity or limit our ability to provide support under our long-standing agreements,” the US Forest Service said.

Read More

Trump directives stymie wildfire funding for Western forests ahead of difficult season

By Marc Heller
E&E News by Politico
May 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The Forest Service is withholding tens of millions of dollars in wildfire and forestry assistance from states that haven’t signed onto Trump administration directives prohibiting diversity initiatives and climate change programs. As weather forecasters predict an especially severe wildfire season, the Forest Service is in talks with Western states about the holdup on the wildfire mitigation grants and cooperative agreements on forest management, according to state and federal officials. …The new requirements are a particular problem with Democratic-led states, which won’t sign onto the new requirements, in some cases because state laws conflict with the restrictions like the ban on diversity, equity and inclusion programs. But forestry leaders in Idaho have also raised concerns, saying requirements to make sure subcontractors are also following the Trump directives put an undue burden on states. [to access the full story an E&E News subscription is required]

Read More

Could changes at the U.S. Forest Service impact wildfire response in Oregon?

By Vasili Varlamos
KATU 2 News
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

With Oregon facing what state leaders say could be another difficult wildfire season, questions are emerging about whether major changes inside the U.S. Forest Service could eventually impact how quickly fires are detected and attacked across the West. “All indications suggest a more challenging fire season ahead of all of us,” said Oregon Governor Tina Kotek… The warning comes after a historically warm winter, low snowpack levels, and worsening drought conditions across parts of Oregon. At the same time, the Forest Service is undergoing major national restructuring efforts, including consolidating research facilities and closing its nine regional offices nationwide. …Still, federal firefighters and local fire leaders say they do not expect major disruptions to wildfire response this season. “I think there’s just a growing amount of apprehension about what it’s gonna look like on the ground level in a couple of years’ time,” said Kieran Evans, a squad leader with the Forest Service.

Read More

Changes could be coming to Alaska’s Tongass forest. Some are putting the forest service on blast

By Julien Greene
CBC News
May 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Tlingit and Haida recently harvested totem trees in the Tongass National Forest in Southeast Alaska whose rings suggest they are 500 years old. Members of those nations don’t often take saws to those giants — if they do, it’s done with the utmost care and gratitude. …The president of the Craig Tribal Association, which represents Tlingit and Haida, is unequivocal. “We are the people of the Tongass,” he said. …It’s been a decade since the federal government last updated the management plan for the region, which covers roughly 80 per cent of the Alaska panhandle. …The Forest Service states that with younger trees approaching harvestable age, it proposes increasing the sale of timber to 72 million board feet every year during the next decade. That’s an increase of roughly 56 per cent. …While the tribes are concerned about the impact of logging on their lands and practices, some conservation and fisheries advocates say they’re concerned about its impact on fish and their habitats.

Read More

AccuWeather releases 2026 Oregon fire forecast and it’s … not great

By Ginnie Sandoval
The Statesman Journal
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

AccuWeather has released its latest outlook on what Oregon could expect for the 2026 fire season, forecasting another active year for wildfires for much of the western half of America. Experts said that 2026 may see fewer fires overall, however, drought conditions, dry vegetation and extreme heat are likely to cause fires to spread more quickly and grow larger before crews are able to contain them, resulting in more land burned. According to the company’s newly released wildfire forecast, between 65,000 and 80,000 wildfires are expected nationwide this year, burning an estimated 5.5 million to 8 million acres. That compares to 77,850 fires that burned 5.1 million acres in 2025. …Forecasters said the highest wildfire risk this year is expected across the Southwest, Rockies, Great Basin and Interior Northwest, including parts of Oregon and Washington. AccuWeather meteorologists said drought and prolonged heat are continuing to intensify wildfire conditions across much of the west.

Read More

Lake Tahoe Community College breaks ground on 100,000-square-foot public safety training complex

By Brenna O’Boyle
KOLO 8 NewsNow
May 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif.  – On Wednesday, May 20, Lake Tahoe Community College broke ground on a nearly 100,000-square-foot Tahoe Basin Public Safety Training Complex, the first facility of its kind in the Tahoe Basin dedicated to training firefighters, forestry professionals, emergency medical technicians, and other first responders. …The facility is scheduled to open in fall 2027. The complex will include a multi-story training tower with live-fire capability, more than two acres of training tarmac, a 7,000-square-foot equipment storage facility, and multiple training hydrants with a water reclamation system. It will support the college’s Fire Academy, Fire Science, Forestry Education, Emergency Medical Services, and Search and Rescue programs. The project is funded through $17 million in state, federal, and local support, including California Community Colleges’ Fire and Forestry Pathways funding, its voter-approved Measure F bond, and federal appropriations.

Read More

Bark beetle outbreaks expand during another warm, dry year

Colorado State University
May 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Colorado’s top forest health concern is a mountain pine beetle outbreak on the Front Range that has expanded by nearly 150% from 2024 to 2025, according to a Colorado State Forest Service report. The report shows the continued spread of mountain pine beetles and other forest insects during the second consecutive year of above-average temperatures and below-average precipitation. Trees in forests across Colorado are stressed following a record warm winter and low snowpack, and infestations of bark beetles and western spruce budworm are expected to intensify and expand. “Heat and drought are stressing our forests, turning many areas into tinderboxes and making it harder for trees to fight off bark beetles and other insects,” said Matt McCombs, state forester and director of the CSFS. …Trees killed by drought, insects or disease can potentially alter wildfire behavior should there be ignition from lightning or other sources. 

Read More

Merkley, Wyden Announce Over $9.3 Million to Support Working Forestlands in Oregon

Ron Wyden Senator for Oregon
May 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Washington, D.C. – Oregon’s U.S. Senators Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden announced today the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) is awarding $3.75 million to Lostine Forest in Wallowa County and $5.56 million to Madrone Ridge Forest in Jackson County. The Senators secured this federal funding in the Fiscal Year 2026 Interior-Environment Appropriations Act through the Land and Water Conservation Fund for the Forest Legacy Program. These Oregon projects will help conserve nearly 12,000 acres of working forestland, improve wildfire resilience, protect fish and wildlife habitat, and expand public recreation opportunities. …Through its Forest Legacy Program, the USFS partners with states, Tribes, and local organizations to conserve privately owned working forestlands through conservation easements and land acquisitions. These two awards in Oregon are part of a larger $80 million investment provided by Congress in the Fiscal Year 2026 Interior-Environment Appropriations Act to support 15 projects conserving more than 34,000 acres of working forests in 11 states.

Read More

Ruling halts logging project in Southern Oregon

By April Ehrlich
Oregon Public Broadcasting
May 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Environmental groups have successfully stopped a series of logging projects in coastal Southern Oregon after scoring a win in federal court. On Thursday, a U.S. District Court judge ruled the U.S. Bureau of Land Management broke environmental laws when it approved a plan to log about 2,400 acres of forests near Yoncalla in Douglas County. …The court ordered BLM to throw out the entirety of the logging plan it called the Blue and Gold project. If the bureau wants to log this area in the future, it will need to come up with a new plan — and it will have to study these forests more closely to assure the public that it won’t kill large, ancient trees. …Timber industry representatives and local county politicians have long argued that federal law requires extensive logging in this region — namely in forests once owned by the Oregon and California Railroad company.

Read More

Conservationists claim old-growth Oregon forest was logged

By Alan Torres
The Register-Guard
May 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A group of Oregon conservation organizations allege old-growth trees are illegally being logged near Yoncalla in Douglas County, about 50 miles south of Eugene. …The organizations previously sued to try to block the sale, alleging it violated federal environmental laws. That lawsuit is in process and the sale has gone forward for now, but the conservationists now believe they’ve found evidence the sale included federally protected trees. According to the plaintiffs, volunteers documented trees over 40 inches in diameter and older than 170 years being logged in the area. …The BLM’s analysis concluded the oldest trees were only 140 years old, but conservationists say that analysis is wrong. The plan calls for logging 2,400 acres over eight years, with sales beginning in 2024. …Cascadia Wildlands claims some of the trees set for logging are 600 years old, according to reporting by Oregon Public Broadcasting.

Read More

Restoring Virginia’s lost longleaf pine trees, one seed at a time

By Katherine Hafner
WHRO Public Media
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

©VirginiaForestryDept

Longleaf is a crucial part of Virginia’s natural and economic heritage… At the Department of Forestry’s nursery in Sussex County last week, a small group of staff and volunteers formed an assembly line along a large machine, manufacturing longleaf pine seeds. About 200,000 of them, which will eventually be planted throughout southeastern Virginia. The annual “seed sowing” is part of a long-term effort to restore longleaf pines to the region. The iconic species once dominated the Southeast landscape… But longleafs were decimated by years of logging and development. The Longleaf Cooperators of Virginia, a coalition of state agencies, nonprofits and universities, has been working to bring back the trees. “It’s amazing to see those seeds and know some of them could become trees for 400 years,” said Brian van Eerden, director of the Nature Conservancy’s Virginia Pineland Program. “We have the ability to control the fate of the forest.”

Read More

Logging industry faces challenges following Searsmont fire

By Drew Peters
News Center Maine
May 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Brian Bell

SEARSMONT, Maine — Support is growing across Maine for the Robbins family and workers injured in the May 16 fire and explosion at the Robbins Lumber mill, as investigators continue working to determine what caused the incident. The fire forced the family-owned mill in Searsmont to temporarily close, leaving logging contractors, carpenters, and other businesses that depend on Robbins Lumber facing difficult questions about what comes next. …Brian Bell, owner of Balance Forestry in Montville has supplied white pine logs to Robbins Lumber for more than a decade, said his relationship with the family has been strong since it began. Now, Bell said contractors who normally send wood to Robbins may have to look towards other mills. That comes with added trucking costs at a time when diesel prices and other expenses are already putting pressure on Maine’s logging industry. For Bell and many in the industry though, the emotional impact is even heavier than the financial uncertainty.

Read More

Trump to eliminate US Forest Service research, and close four facilities in Pennsylvania

By Julie Grant
The Allegheny Front
May 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

The Trump administration is drastically cutting the budget, and reorganizing the U.S. Forest Service, moving its headquarters and research facilities to western states. In Pennsylvania, four research sites are on the chopping block. As forest ecologist Richard Bowden walks through an old growth section of the Allegheny National Forest, he points toward the ground. It’s barren of young trees. “There’s nothing,” said Bowden, a professor of environmental science and sustainability at nearby Allegheny College. “And that’s because of deer.” Deer overpopulated this area, called Heart’s Content, and much of the Allegheny Plateau, for decades; they eat whatever vegetation they can reach. …While the ideas behind this deer management demonstration might seem simple, it’s taken decades of research to understand the problem, and do the work to actually keep the deer population in balance with the forest. 

Read More

Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Carbon Markets Underestimate Risks U.S. Forests Face From Climate Change

By University of Utah
NewsWise
May 20, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: US West

William Anderegg

…Many corporate, national and state climate policies rely on forests’ ability to store carbon—often tracked and funded through a system of “carbon credits” issued to polluting industries in exchange for protecting and restoring forests. But when trees die suddenly—from wildfire, drought or insect infestation—vast amounts of greenhouse gases are released, exacerbating ongoing climate change. And the warming climate is accelerating this problem by making such disturbances more frequent and severe. New research led by University of Utah scientists in collaboration with international experts sought to determine the likelihood that forests will release their stored carbon over the next 100 years. Along the way, they documented how current carbon-credit systems fail to accurately account for that risk in U.S. forests, particularly the parched U.S. West. But the research points out ways this problem can be corrected, according to William Anderegg, senior author on the study published in Nature.

Read More

Pennsylvania Awards Funding To 6 Bioenergy Projects

By Erin Krueger
Biomass Magazine
May 19, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US East

Josh Shapiro

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro on April 28 awarded more than $267 million to 31 manufacturing projects under the Reducing Industrial Sector Emissions in Pennsylvania (RISE PA) program. Five biogas projects and one biomass combined-heat-and-power (CHP) are among those to receive funding.  The funding… aims to help Pennsylvania companies lower emissions while creating good-paying jobs and supporting the state’s economy.  The RISE PA grant program is a decarbonization initiative funded through the US EPA’s Climate Pollution Reduction Grants. …Recipients include: 

  • Alouette Cheese: $45M, an anaerobic digester and wastewater treatment plant
  • Walmoore Holsteins: $4M, an anaerobic digester and CHP system for power 
  • Jubilee Dairy: $1M, an anaerobic digester with a 0.2 MW CHP system. 
  • Nestle Purina Petcare:$26M, an anaerobic digester and heat recovery system
  • Keystone Potato Products: $0.8M, an anaerobic digester with a CHP system   
  • Wheeland Lumber: $3.8M, a biomass steam boiler and CHP system

Read More

Health & Safety

From Forest to Pharmacy: An Insider’s Account of the Race to Bring Taxol to Market

By Burt Rosen
American Council on Science and Health
May 26, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States

©BCGov

Here’s a rare treat. It’s one thing to read about Taxol, one of the most important breakthroughs in modern cancer treatment. It’s another thing to hear the story from someone directly involved in the effort to bring the drug from Pacific yew trees to cancer patients. Burt Rosen, former Director of Government Affairs at Bristol-Myers Squibb, recounts the scientific, political, and environmental battles behind Taxol’s path to market. In the annals of medical and political history, few episodes better illustrate the conflict between environmental conservation and medical necessity than the effort to bring Taxol to patients. Derived from the bark of the Pacific yew tree—one of the slowest-growing trees in the world—Taxol emerged in the late 20th century as a promising new treatment for ovarian and other cancers. However, its path from the old-growth forests of the Pacific Northwest to the patients who desperately needed it required navigating an acute supply crisis, a sudden shift in clinical trial ethics, and an extraordinary legislative rescue mission within the halls of Congress.

Read More

Understanding and Preventing Combustible Dust Explosions

By Alex Ing
National Fire Protection Association
May 21, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States

Combustible dust is a significant yet often poorly understood industrial hazard. NFPA published its first-ever standard related to combustible dust, and the hazard has continued to claim lives and destroy property in the 100-plus years since… NFPA Journal reported in a 2023 article. Less than a decade later, a similar series of dust explosions would occur at the Didion Milling facility in Wisconsin, killing five and injuring 14, highlighting the ongoing risk that combustible dust represents. …Simply put, combustible dusts are created by finely divided solids. …A study published by the Fire Protection Research Foundation (FPRF), the research affiliate of NFPA, found that dust collectors are where the majority of dust explosions occur. “The qualitative analyses showed that friction sparks and self-heating are the primary causes of ignition, whereas ineffective housekeeping and design problems of the dust collection system are the biggest contributing factors for the occurrence of the explosion events.”

Read More

The Paper and Packaging Safety Association Announces 2026 Safety Award Winners and Finalists

Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry (TAPPI)
May 19, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, International

The Paper and Packaging Safety Association (PPSA) announced the recipients of its 2026 individual and mill safety awards, along with the finalists for the Safety Committee/Team and Innovator categories. The awards recognize outstanding leadership, innovation, and commitment to safety excellence across the paper and packaging industry. The awards will be presented during the Awards Luncheon on June 9, 2026, at noon as part of PPSA’s 82nd Annual Safety and Health Conference. 2026 PPSA Award Winners: Executive Eagle Award, Rick Parris – Smurfit Westrock; Safety Leader of the Year, Joel Mann – International Paper; Award of Safety Excellence, Smurfit Westrock – Hodge Mill, Louisiana. …The Innovator Award recognizes companies and facilities that are developing creative and impactful approaches to workplace safety. Finalists include: Smurfit Westrock – Cincinnati, Shredder Fire Mitigation, Domtar – Johnsonburg Mill, Effluent Treatment Plant: Sludge Press H2S Toxicity, International Paper – Prattville, Roll Quality Management (RQM) System, Smurfit Westrock – Huntsville, and Hogger Clamshell Improvement.

Read More

Recognizing emergency medical support providers during National Emergency Medical Services Week

By Robert Ehrlich, Office of Safety and Occupational Health
US Department of Agriculture
May 18, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States

Robert Ehrlich

The Forest Service is proud to recognize National Emergency Medical Services Week from May 17 to 23. We honor not only our current Forest Service EMS providers, but those who came before us, especially those who challenged the status quo, recognized the need for organized EMS, and raised the bar for all of us. We will continue to build upon their efforts. As we enter a new paradigm in wildland fire’s organizational structure, we pledge to keep committed to forging a future for the next generation of EMS professionals serving the Forest Service community. EMS Week, established in 1974, celebrates our emergency medical personnel for their important work. This is the perfect time to honor the dedication of Forest Service EMS employees who provide the day-to-day lifesaving services to their colleagues during medical emergencies. 

Read More

Multiple fire trucks and equipment destroyed in Searsmont lumber mill explosion

By Grace Blanchard
Fox 22 Bangor
May 19, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

MAINE — According to the Fire Marshal’s Office, multiple departments sustained damage to their fire trucks and equipment during the Searsmont incident, impacting departments that are already limited on resources. “Seeing the ploom of black smoke, it immediately puts a lump in your throat,” said Belmont Fire Chief Ron Harford, as he reflected on Friday’s fire and explosion at Robbins Lumber. In the aftermath of the Searsmont fire, the Belmont Fire Department is supporting injured firefighter Katherine Paige and navigating the loss of a critical tank truck. …”Searsmont’s going to be hugely affected because they’ve lost two of their immediate mutual aid town’s trucks, plus their tank truck,” said Harford. On top of that, Chief Harford says the department lost between $50 to $60 thousand worth of equipment that was on the truck. …”Mr. Cross [Fallen Firefighter Andrew Cross] is our biggest loss. He was a tremendous firefighter a tremendous person,” said Harford.

Read More

Maine’s lumber mills, like the one in Searsmont, have known fire risks

By Kelley Bouchard
The Press Herald
May 20, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

MAINE – Fires and explosions have long been threats to Maine’s lumber and paper mills. In April 2020, a pulp digester exploded at the Androscoggin Mill in Jay. Some people were treated for respiratory issues, but no casualties were reported. The paper mill closed permanently in 2023. At Irving Forest Products in Dixfield, an explosion and fire in May 2021 damaged a machine used to move wood chips. No injuries were reported in either incident. “The fuel load at a lumber mill is exceedingly high,” said James Graves, director of the Maine Fire Service Institute, which provides and certifies firefighter training programs. “There are so many variables, they happen regularly all over the state and beyond.” But Graves said relatively few are as tragic as the fiery explosion at Robbins Lumber Inc. in Searsmont that injured 12 people and killed Andrew Cross, 27, a member of the Morrill Volunteer Fire Department. Eight were still hospitalized Tuesday.

Read More

Officials give update on Maine first responders, lumber mill workers injured in fire

By Susannah Sudborough
MassLive.com
May 18, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

SEARSMONT, Maine — Four people who were injured Friday in a fire and explosion at a lumber mill in Maine have been released from hospitals, while eight are still receiving treatment. The mass casualty event happened at Robbins Lumber. Andrew Cross, a 27-year-old Morrill firefighter, died while battling the massive fire. As of Monday afternoon, Searsmont Fire Chief James Ames, Lincolnville Firefighter Aaron Heald, Appleton Fire Chief Clifton Marriner and mill worker John Ward had been released from hospital. Searsmont Assistant Fire Chief Wayne Woodbury, Searsmont EMS Chief Sarah Tompkins, Belmont Firefighter Katherine Paige, Montville Firefighter Jacob Spaulding and mill worker Thomas Wolf remain hospitalized. Robbins Lumber owners Alden and Jim Robbins, as well as their family member, Lily Robbins, were also injured in the fire, according to a message posted to the company’s website. They are receiving treatment at Massachusetts General Hospital’s burn center and “have a long road to recovery ahead.” …Investigators have determined that the fire began inside a silo at the mill, but are still investigating what caused the fire and explosion.

In related coverage by:

Read More

Experts speculate that Searsmont explosion may have been caused by sawdust

WGME.com
May 18, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

PORTLAND, Maine – Federal investigators with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms were at the Robbins Lumber Company Mill in Searsmont Monday, assisting the State Fire Marshal’s Office in the investigation. At this point, the cause of the fire has yet to be determined. A select board member from Searsmont says sawdust may be behind the explosion. …Richard Meier is the principal expert at Meier Fire Investigations. He’s researched hundreds of fires all over the world, including in mills like Searsmont. “this has the hallmarks of possibly being a dust explosion, in which case the cleanliness and housekeeping at the mill may be a major contributor.” He stresses the investigation is still in the early stages and no conclusions have been drawn yet.

Read More

Forest Fires

Cooler, damper weather boosts efforts to battle Flanders Fire in Crow Wing County

By Kirsti Marohn
Minnesota Public Radio News
May 19, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US East

Minnesota — Residents of northern Crow Wing County who were forced to leave their homes due to a wildfire this past weekend were allowed to briefly return to their properties Monday, as crews made progress containing the fire. The Flanders Fire started early Saturday afternoon southeast of Crosslake, and about 10 miles east of Breezy Point. It quickly erupted due to dry, windy conditions and grew to more than 1,600 acres. Higher humidity, cooler temperatures and lighter winds are helping the firefighting efforts, officials said. “The fire is really not actively burning along the edge,” said Tim Engrav, public information officer for the Minnesota Incident Command System team managing the fire response. “So it’s allowing fire crews to really work directly along that fire edge … to cool that edge and work towards containment.” As of Monday evening, authorities said the fire is 60 percent contained. 

Additional wildfire coverage from Minnesota, in Bring me the News, by Adam Uren: Properties destroyed, businesses close as North Shore wildfire nears 400 acres

Read More