Region Archives: United States

Business & Politics

Negotiators were taking ‘important steps’ before Trump halted talks, ambassador says

By Darren Major
CBC News
October 29, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Kirsten Hillman

Canada’s Ambassador to the US Kirsten Hillman told a Senate committee that negotiators were trying to ‘work out the contours of a first step’ for a trade arrangement before US President Trump abruptly ended trade discussions last week. Hillman was asked at the committee hearing where talks were headed before the sudden halt. While she indicated progress had been made since Prime Minister Mark Carney’s visit to Washington earlier this month, she said some sticking points remained. “I don’t want to suggest that we were on the verge of an arrangement. But we had made more progress, in my opinion, in those weeks than we had in a very long time,” Hillman said. …“The US expressed the desire to start with a few issues and try to move those along, while not jettisoning the others,” Hillman said.

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Industry leaders say new U.S. tariffs ‘unfortunate’ and ‘uncalled for’

By Robin Della Corte
CTV News
October 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Industry leaders say they are disappointed with the additional 10% tariff on Canadian goods announced Saturday by US President Trump… over Ontario ad. Jean Simard of the Aluminum Association of Canada said that this announcement is “very unfortunate and uncalled for.” …“I don’t think it’s going to add anything to the situation that the U.S. will be facing moving into the fall season with prices that will be increased by these stacked up tariffs on everything that moves into the U.S.” A $75-million television ad from the Ontario government, featuring remarks by former US President Reagan on tariffs is what prompted Trump to announce he was ending trade discussions with Canada. …“We might see the same phenomenon that unfolded in the course of the months of July and August, where our metal started moving towards Europe instead of the U.S,” Simard said. 

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Canada Believes Tariffs Will Continue Despite Upcoming Hearing

By Tom Robinson
Western Iowa Today
October 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

President Trump said that he, personally, wants to attend next month’s Supreme Court hearing on his tariff policies. The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments, beginning on November 5th, whether the president can unilaterally impose tariffs under emergency powers and is acting legally in his bypassing of Congress. The case involves the import tariffs against Canada, Mexico, and China, over allegations of fentanyl trafficking, as well as Trump’s reciprocal tariffs. …Canada is suffering under some of the toughest US tariff actions for some of its largest export sectors — the auto industry, along with steel, aluminum, and Canada’s softwood lumber. …John Weekes, one of the chief Canadian negotiators of the original North American Free Trade Agreement said a lot of Canadians seem to be holding onto hope that Trump’s tariff war will disappear when the USMCA is renegotiated next year. To that, John Weekes says don’t bet on it.

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Trump says trade talks with Canada terminated over anti-tariffs ad

By Osmond Chia and Maia Davies
BBC News
October 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

US President Donald Trump has announced an immediate end to all trade negotiations with Canada over an advert critical of the tariffs he has imposed on the nation. The advert, sponsored by the province of Ontario, quoted Trump’s predecessor, Ronald Reagan saying tariffs “hurt every American”. …In the minute-long advert published last week… the video excerpts a 1987 national radio address by Reagan that focused on foreign trade. …The Ronald Reagan Foundation said the advert “misrepresents” the former president’s address, without specifying why, and accused the Ontario government of not seeking permission to use and edit the remarks. The foundation said it was “reviewing its legal options”. Trump referenced this statement, and said the video was designed to “interfere with” the US Supreme Court’s upcoming decision in November on whether Washington’s sweeping tariffs on many nations’ products are legal.:

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USDA Announces 3-Point Plan to Increase Exports, Advance Rural Prosperity

By US Department of Agriculture
Southern Forest Products Association
October 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Luke Lindberg, U.S. under secretary of agriculture for trade and foreign agricultural affairs with the USDA, in conjunction with U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins, has announced a three-point plan to increase exports, advance rural prosperity, and chip away at the trade deficit. The three-point plan includes:

  • Launching the America First Trade Promotion Program. With $285 million authorized annually for trade promotion programs beginning in fiscal year (FY) 2027, USDA will kickstart that program one year early with $285 million in fiscal 2026 (October 1, 2025 – September 30, 2026). 
  • Supplementing current trade missions with a new model focused on trade reciprocity for U.S. manufacturers and producers — to complement the current model — laser-focused on reciprocal trade deal countries and new market access opportunities. The first mission was to the U.K. the week of September 15.
  • Revitalizing export finance opportunities. The GSM-102 credit guarantee program is authorized to offset $5.5 billion in market risk for purchasers of American commodities. 

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​​$2.4B company to turn timber scraps into jet fuel in Washington struggles to launch

By Henry Brannon
The Chronicle
October 25, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

PORT OF LONGVIEW, Washington — If Northwest Advanced Bio-Fuels has its way, the Port of Longview may soon have a $2.4 billion sustainable aviation fuel plant. But the mega-project to turn timber waste into jet fuel has faced a slew of challenges on its way to landing at the giant riverfront Barlow Point site, a deal that’s still not inked after nearly four years. The people behind Northwest Advanced Bio-Fuels say the project is mere weeks away from finding the financing needed to lock in a site and build the plant — the first of a handful of additional facilities around the region to fulfill Delta Airlines’ immense need for sustainable aviation fuel. To port officials, however, the project is one of about 20 that have considered its flagship Barlow Point site, any one of which could put money down today and start the long process of realizing a mega-project there tomorrow. 

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Mercer Mass Timber to expand with $30M investment

By Karina Elias
The Spokane Journal
October 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

SPOKANE, Washington — A state investment aimed at adding and retaining high-value manufacturing jobs complements a $30 million private investment for an expansion at Mercer Mass Timber in Spokane Valley, a move local leaders say will anchor the company’s future in the region and strengthen Washington state’s manufacturing industry. The $250,000 award, from the Governor’s Economic Development Strategic Reserve Fund, will be administered through Greater Spokane Incorporated. …Joey Gunning, director of economic development at GSI, says the funding will help Mercer install assembly line infrastructure at its 270,000-square-foot Spokane Valley facility. The state grant, he adds, is intended to ensure the manufacturer remains in Washington state as it evaluates future production options and to support job growth in a sector viewed as central to the region’s clean-manufacturing economy. “These funds from the governor’s office need to meet specific industry requirements,” Gunning says. 

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International Paper closure leaves hundreds unemployed in Savannah

By Laura Finaldi
The Island Packet
October 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

SAVANNAH, Georgia — Right after Labor Day weekend, less than two weeks after International Paper announced it would close Savannah and Riceboro containerboard facilities, Sheron Morgan was on the ground at the Savannah mill. As she spoke in front of a group of employees, going through resources like training programs and resume help, Morgan, the executive director of WorkSource Coastal in Savannah, said the mood in the room was heavy. This wasn’t a surprise. After all, Morgan said, their lives had just been upended, and now someone with a job was standing in front of them, telling them they would make it through. …But over the next month, as Morgan, her team and partners from other workforce development organizations set up shop in the plant’s conference room, the employee’s mood softened. …But even though many resources were available, the plant closing was a major disruption for the workers and the broader Lowcountry economy.

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Arkansas’ forestry industry under strain from trade disputes, decreased demand

By Neal Earley
Northwest Arkansas Democrat Gazette
October 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

…Arkansas’ forestry industry is feeling the weight of a slowing housing market, a declining demand for many of its products and trade disputes and regulations that have closed off foreign markets. In recent years, several mills in Arkansas have closed — evidence of economic struggles for the industry. In September, Domtar’s sawmill in Glenwood announced a temporary shut down, affecting 150 workers. Shields Wood Products also shut down. Arkansas House Speaker Brian Evans signed on to a letter … calling on Congress to step in and help expand the export market for their states’ foresters. …the Arkansas Economic Development Commission said the state exported $6.45 billion in forestry products in 2023, the largest destinations being Canada, Mexico and Japan. The letter from the state house speakers to Congress makes specific mention of the Chinese market, which cut off the import of logs from the U.S. in March as part of retaliation for American tariffs, Reuters reported. [Access to the full story may require a subscription to the Gazette]

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Crayola recognizes Domtar’s customer support

By Domtar
Cision Newswire
October 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

FORT MILL, SC – Domtar has received Crayola’s 2025 CARE (Colorful Action for Renewable Energy) award. The company manufactures the paper used in Crayola coloring books and was selected for its customer support, including consistent attention to detail, as well as timeliness and accuracy in responding to sustainability-related data requests. Crayola, a subsidiary of Hallmark, presented the award at its headquarters in Easton, Pennsylvania, where Domtar senior account managers Bob Saxon and Danielle Sinclair, along with Jordan Bowers, customer relations coordinator on Domtar’s sustainability team, received the recognition. …In 2024, Domtar responded to more than 500 customer sustainability and regulatory requests.

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Arkansas timber industry in crisis as market demand plummets

By Andrew Mobley
KATV Arkansas
October 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

LITTLE ROCK — Arkansas’ leading industry, agriculture, is facing a crisis. But it’s not just row-crop farmers that are struggling — the forestry industry is as well. The market for timber has become so bad that mills are closing and loggers are getting out of the business. “This is devastating to the timber industry in South Arkansas. Eight of the last 11 weeks, we have experienced mill closures in Arkansas, some permanent, some temporary,” said John Dawson, president of Arkansas Pulpwood Co. in Camden. “We’re seeing loggers drop out. Lifelong families that are two, three, four generations of loggers are getting out of the business. Banks in South Arkansas are moving away from loaning money to loggers,” Dawson said. As you’d expect, demand for paper has plummeted. …But demand for lumber is down too. …There’s simply too much supply for the diminishing demand.

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Ribbon cut on first ever chip mill purchased by a logging co-op in the United States

By Cooper Wild
WAOW News 9
October 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

TILLEDA, Wis. – A groundbreaking moment in Tilleda, with the introduction of the first chip mill in the United States purchased by a logger co-op, marking the start of a new chapter for the industry. “Because it’s the first of its kind in the country there were a lot of hoops that we had to go through first to figure out what it all looked like legally and logistically,” said Dennis Schoeneck, president of Timber Professionals Cooperation Enterprises. Founded five years ago, Timber Professionals Cooperation Enterprises aims to sustain and grow the timber industry. The co-op is made up of loggers and truckers, and it was those groups who helped raise the $418,000 that went towards the purchase of the mill. They don’t want to stop here, the co-op has big plans for the future.

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Choctaw County, Mississippi celebrates Southeastern Timber Products mill expansion

By Veronica Mejia
WTVA.com
October 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

ACKERMAN, Mississippi — A major player in Mississippi’s timber industry is investing resources and capital in Choctaw County. Southeastern Timber Products—an STP-TOLKO Partnership—held a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Wednesday for an expansion at its facility in Ackerman. The $120 million expansion project included a new sawmill line, new dry kilns and storage facilities. This led to the creation of 40 new jobs. Gov. Tate Reeves attended Wednesday’s ceremony. “The great thing about these timber products businesses, they also buy a lot of timber from landowners…over 15 counties,” the governor explained. “So people all over north and north-central Mississippi are going to benefit from this capital investment made by Southeastern Timber Products. I couldn’t be more excited for the county, for the region and for our entire state.” Southeastern Timber manufactures southern yellow pine lumber, timber and decking products.

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Ohio hardwood industry asks Trump to include them in farmer tariff relief package

By Samantha Hendrickson
The Columbus Dispatch
October 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

The hardwood industry that crafts much of our homes’ interiors says it’s suffering under the Trump administration’s trade war and wants the same relief promised to the country’s farmers. Over 450 loggers, manufacturers and distrubutors of hardwood, including 54 from Ohio, are asking for inclusion of the U.S. hardwood sector in any tariff relief programs. The industry, they argue in a letter to the Trump administration, plays a “critical role” in rural economies and communities and has lost billions since the first trade war between the U.S. and China in 2018. …The Ohio forest products industry has a state economic impact of over $30 billion per year, according to the Ohio Forestry Association. There are approximately 8 million acres woodlands in Ohio, much of which is hardwood, and around 50,000 people are directly employed in forest products manufacturing and services in Ohio.

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Finance & Economics

Canadian Pacific profits leap despite U.S. tariff turmoil and looming merger prospect

By Christopher Reynolds
The Canadian Press in BNN Bloomberg
October 30, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Canadian Pacific Kansas City reported a big profit boost in its latest quarter despite US tariff disruption and fears over fallout from a potential merger of rivals down the line. The railway saw net income for the quarter ended Sept. 30 rise 10% year-over-year to $917 million. Revenues increased three per cent to $3.66 billion on the back of higher shipping volumes. Grain, potash and container volumes rose markedly year-over-year while forest products — struggling under a sectoral tariff imposed by US President Trump — and energy, chemicals and plastics sagged. …Cross-border steel shipments also dropped due to 50% US tariffs on imports of the metal, though CPKC helped make up the decline with domestic traffic and direct Canada-to-Mexico trade, said chief marketing officer John Brooks. A new item of concern crossed the CEO’s desk over the summer. Union Pacific announced in July it wants to buy Norfolk Southern, and potentially trigger a final wave of rail mergers.

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Lumber Futures Drops to 7-Week Low

Trading Economics
October 28, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures tumbled toward $560 per thousand board feet, a seven-week low, as weakening demand, persistent oversupply, and trade-policy uncertainties converged. US tariffs are intensifying pressure on Canadian softwood, with existing antidumping and countervailing duties around 35%, plus new Section 232 levies of 10% on timber and 25% on wood products, lifting import costs above 45%. Weak demand compounds the decline, with US residential building permits at a seasonally adjusted 1.4 million units in July, the lowest since June 2020, and construction spending down 3.4% from May 2024. Housing starts remain near five-year lows, keeping retail price pass-through muted despite higher import costs. Export channels have narrowed, with Canadian softwood constrained by tariffs and hardwood exports to China dropping from 40% of volume in 2017 to 7% today. Temporary curtailments and mill closures are emerging, yet abundant inventories and sluggish construction sustain downward pressure. [END]

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What Lumber And Steel Futures Are Telling Flatbedders As We Wrap Up 2025

By Adam Wingfield
FreightWaves
October 27, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Let’s keep this simple: lumber and steel are two of the biggest drivers of flatbed freight in this country. …So where are we right now, closing out 2025? Lumber futures are sliding off their highs and steel demand is soft with some pockets still running hot. That combination is sending a pretty clear message to flatbed haulers: expect mixed demand instead of broad “every lane is on fire” demand. Some regions will stay busy. Some will get quiet. …Lumber futures have fallen back into the $590–$610/mbf range, down double digits from that August spike, and recently touched the lowest levels in weeks. …There are two main reasons for that weakness: Housing affordability is still brutal. Inventory is sitting. So instead of steady flatbed freight — lumber from mill to yard, yard to jobsite, jobsite to next jobsite — you get pauses. …Lumber and steel tell the truth before the broader market does. 

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Lumber futures tumbled toward $590 per thousand board feet

Trading Economics
October 23, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures tumbled toward $590 per thousand board feet, a near one-month low, as weakening US housing activity and pre-tariff front-loading left wholesalers awash with stock while stacked US duties on Canadian imports and trade uncertainty pushed prices lower. US homebuilding has slowed, with housing starts falling 8.5% in August to a 1.307 million annualized pace and building permits drifting lower. Many US buyers front-loaded inventories ahead of expected import tariffs earlier this autumn, leaving distributors to work down excess stock before fresh order flow returns. On the supply side, a 10% Section-232 tariff added in mid-October atop roughly 35% in existing duties lifted border costs above 45% for many Canadian shipments, forcing sellers to find new markets or accept lower domestic prices. Producers like Interfor have trimmed output since mid-October, but the cuts are too recent to significantly reduce inventories or regional log supply.

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The Fed Cuts amid Partly Cloudy Conditions

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
October 29, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

With the government shutdown limiting the quantity of economic data available to markets and policymakers, the central bank’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) enacted a widely anticipated 25 basis point cut for the short-term federal funds rate. This marks the second consecutive cut this Fall, and the move decreases the policy rate to an upper rate of 4.0%. Reflecting that the market anticipated this policy move, long-term rates were relatively unchanged after the FOMC announcement. …With respect to housing supply, in contrast to movement for long-term rates, the reduction of the federal funds rate will have a direct, beneficial effect on interest rates for acquisition, development and construction (AD&C) loans, the key financing channel for private builders who build more than 60% of single-family homes. This will reduce lending costs for builders across the nation and enable more attainable supply.

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Home builders are struggling, and it’s not just because new houses aren’t affordable

By Tomi Kilgore
Market Watch
October 28, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Shares of D.R. Horton took a hit Tuesday, as the home builder confirmed that the market for new houses was still weak, and it wasn’t just because prices and mortgage rates were too high — people are afraid to shell out so much for a new house when they’re worried about the economy and their jobs. …But even with lower prices and mortgage rates, the number of homes closed fell 1.2% to 23,368, which was below the average analyst estimate. And that weakness comes despite higher incentives to home buyers to boost sales, which pushed profits below what Wall Street was expecting. …Chief Executive Paul Romanowski said affordability was certainly still an issue. But consumers were also concerned about the “volatility and uncertainty” in the economy, which may be leading to worries about the job market. It certainly won’t help matters to see large layoff announcements from high-profile companies.

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US inflation picks up in September showing tariff pressure on prices continues to materialize gradually

By Fan-Yu Kuo
NAHB Eye on Housing
October 24, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Inflation increased in September to the fastest pace since the start of the year, showing tariff pressure on prices continues to materialize gradually, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) latest report. …Meanwhile, shelter inflation remained unchanged from last month and continued its downward trend, though it remains higher than pre-pandemic levels. Though inflation is likely to remain elevated this year, the Fed is expected to continue easing given signs of labor market weakening. …During the past twelve months, on a non-seasonally adjusted basis, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose by 3.0% in September, the highest reading since January 2025. Excluding the volatile food and energy components, the “core” CPI increased by 3.0% over the past twelve months. A large portion of the “core” CPI is the housing shelter index, which increased 3.6% over the year, the lowest reading since October 2021. 

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Fannie Mae Publishes October 2025 Economic and Housing Outlook

Fannie Mae
October 24, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The Fannie Mae Economic and Strategic Research (ESR) Group revised its forecast for real gross domestic product (GDP) growth to 1.9% in 2025 and 2.3% in 2026 on a Q4/Q4 basis, up from 1.5% and 2.1%, respectively, in the last outlook. The ESR projects the Consumer Price Index to rise 2.9% in 2025 and 2.7% in 2026 on a Q4/Q4 basis, down from 3.1% and up from 2.6% in September’s forecast, respectively. Core CPI is expected at 3.1% and 2.6% on the same basis, both slightly lower than prior forecasts. Mortgage rates are expected to end 2025 at 6.3% and 2026 at 5.9%, compared to 6.4% and 5.9%, respectively, in the prior forecast. Total home sales are projected at 4.74 million units in 2025, up from 4.72 million in the prior forecast, and 5.16 million in 2026, unchanged from before. The ESR now expects home prices to rise 2.5% in 2025 and 1.3% in 2026, compared to 2.8% and 1.1%, respectively, in its prior outlook.

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US cabinet sales of were down 5.6% for September 2025 compared to 2024

Kitchen Cabinet Manufacturers Association
October 24, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Cabinet manufacturers in the US.reported total sales of $190.9 million in September 2025, marking a 5.6% decrease from $202.2 million in September 2024. The largest decline came from semi-custom cabinet sales, which dropped 6.7% to $107.4 million. Custom cabinet sales fell 5.5% to $53.8 million, while stock cabinet sales edged down 1.2% to $29.7 million. Total cabinet quantity shipped fell to 492.4 thousand units, an 8.7% year-on-year decrease, according to the Kitchen Cabinet Manufacturers Association. Cumulative sales for the first nine months of 2025 reached $1.76 billion, down 6.5% from $1.88 billion in the same period of 2024. Stock cabinet sales recorded the sharpest year-to-date drop at 12.7%, totaling $280.9 million. Custom sales decreased 5.8% to $476.8 million, while semi-custom sales declined 4.9% to $1 billion. …The association estimates the overall market for September at $1.83 billion in sales and 4.8 million cabinets.

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Billerud reports positive Q3, 2025 earnings

Investing.com
October 23, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

Swedish paper and packaging company Billerud reported Q3, 2025 earnings of SEK1,058 million, exceeding consensus estimates by 27% and showing improvement from the SEK912 million in the first quarter of 2025. The European segment delivered EBITDA of SEK652 million, surpassing analyst expectations of SEK481 million despite challenging market conditions, downtime, and oversupply issues. Third-quarter shipments totaled 624,000 tons, which represents a 9% decrease compared to the five-year average.North American operations contributed SEK467 million to EBITDA, beating consensus of SEK434 million, supported by solid conditions in graphic and label paper markets. U.S. tariffs have provided additional support for domestic producers.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Four Winners Announced for the 2025 Mass Timber Competition: Building Sustainable Schools

The Softwood Lumber Board
October 30, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

The Softwood Lumber Board (SLB) and the USDA Forest Service (USDA) announced the winners of the 2025 Mass Timber Competition: Building Sustainable Schools. This year’s competition awarded $1.8 million to support projects that accelerate the adoption of mass timber in the United States, with a dedicated focus on K-12 educational environments. The winning projects demonstrate how biophilic design with mass timber can strengthen academic performance, improve teacher and staff well-being, and create healthier, more resilient learning spaces for students. This marks the third cycle of the competition, which has already advanced a range of innovative mass timber projects nationwide. …This year’s winning proposals included:

  • Cleveland High School, Portland, Oregon
  • New Lawton Elementary School, Ann Arbor, Michigan
  • New Central Maui School, Waikapu, Hawaii 
  • Whittier Elementary School, Washington, D.C.

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Studio Gang exposes mass-timber structure of Rubenstein Treehouse at Harvard

By Ben Dreith
Dezeen Magazine
October 29, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US East

An exposed mass-timber structure designed to resemble a tree gives a “distinct architectural identity” to this Harvard University student centre, designed by American architecture firm Studio Gang. Rubenstein Treehouse is a social hub at Harvard’s Allston Enterprise Research Campus, which sits across the Charles River from the university’s main facilities in Cambridge, outside Boston. Studio Gang designed the two-storey structure with a central core made of a low-carbon concrete mix, combined with branching mass-timber ceiling supports and columns on the exterior. “The building’s exposed mass-timber structure creates its distinct architectural identity and reinforces it as a destination for innovation,” said the studio. “On the facade, canted timber columns branch outward like a tree to support a cantilevered upper floor.” Rubenstein Treehouse’s wood-clad facade is “strategically inflected”, creating a faceted appearance.

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Forestry

Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) to vote on new traceability rules amid fraud allegations

By Philip Jacobson
Mongabay.com
October 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, International

The world’s largest green timber label will vote next week on whether to begin work on new traceability rules, amid renewed scrutiny and accusations over whether the body is doing enough to prevent fraud within its supply chains. The Bonn-based Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) bills itself as “the world’s most trusted mark for sustainable forestry.” …But forestry experts and whistleblowers have alleged for years that the FSC lacks a proper control system, allowing bad actors to fraudulently pass off timber that was illegally or unsustainably logged as FSC-certified. Phil Guillery, who was the FSC’s integrity director from 2011-21, said in early October said that he believed “20-30% of claims in the system were false” during his tenure.” The FSC issued a swift rebuttal, calling them unsubstantiated and “based on outdated information that does not reflect the system today.” …However, a senior FSC official said that they believed the figure was actually an underestimate.

From FSC’s Statement on Recent Criticism: “References to widespread false FSC claims are based on outdated information that does not reflect the system today. …The article relies on a broad estimate of false claims without providing verified evidence to substantiate it.”

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Forest Stewardship Council General Assembly opens with a call for shared responsibility

Forest Stewardship Council International
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, International

The 2025 FSC General Assembly opened on 26 October in Panama City, uniting members from around the world for joint decision-making on the future of forest stewardship. …Panama’s Minister of Environment, His Excellency Mr. Juan Carlos Navarro, announced the country’s plan to formalize FSC certification across Indigenous territories, a milestone in national environmental policy. 174,000 hectares are in process of being certified today in Panama. “Stop blaming the FSC,” he stated. “Each of us must in our own countries guarantee sustainable development and guarantee with our actions, our strength and our passion, the survival of life around us.” FSC Board Chair Stuart Valentine provided a business report from the Board, reflecting on FSC’s new leadership, governance and strategic priorities, and what is coming in the future – including a new Global Strategy, revision of FSC’s Principles and Criteria, incorporation of risk-based approaches, and increased demonstration of FSC’s impact.  

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The only constant is change, but new forestry rule ignores that

By Elaine Oneil, Washington Farm Forestry Association
The Chronicle
October 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Elaine Oneil

It makes no sense that Washington’s Department of Ecology has decided there can be no measurable temperature change at no time in no place on our forested headwater streams after timber harvest. They are willing to force a vote on a new rule at the Forest Practices Board. …Small forest landowners have been arguing against this proposed taking of private assets for nearly a decade. The Department of Ecology says it’s just enforcing the Clean Water Act, but the Clean Water Act doesn’t say that there can be no change at no time in no place — that is an interpretation by the Department of Ecology, and not a reasonable one. They also say it’s to protect the fish; there are no fish in these headwater streams. …Please join me as the Forest Practices Board takes their final vote on this matter on Nov. 12.

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Tribal Leaders Applaud Senate Rejection of Barred Owl Resolution Threatening Forest and Wildlife Health

Intertribal Timber Council
PR Newswire
October 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

PORTLAND, Ore — The Intertribal Timber Council (ITC) is a nonprofit nation-wide consortium …dedicated to improving the management of natural resources of importance to Native American communities. ITC strongly opposes S.J.Res.69, a measure that would involve the Congressional Review Act to invalidate a federal wildlife management plan intended to prevent the extinction of the Northern Spotted Owl (NSO) in the Pacific Northwest. The ITC is grateful to Senators who helped vote to defeat a bill that would have severely impacted federal forest management in the Pacific Northwest. The invasive barred owl poses a direct threat to the ecological integrity of tribal, federal, and private forestlands. The federal barred owl management strategy is a critical tool to protect the NSO, which is listed as “threatened” under the Endangered Species Act. …ITC and many of its member tribes support barred owl removal as a humane and effective measure to recover the NSO and restore ecosystem integrity.

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Montana logging project hits dead end over illegal road use in grizzly habitat

By Monique Merrill
Courthouse News Service
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A Montana logging project in grizzly habitat in the Kootenai National Forest will remain on hold until federal officials reassess how road use — particularly illegal road use — impacts the bears, a federal judge ruled on Monday. “This court has repeatedly held that it is arbitrary and capricious to not include illegal motorized use that it knows to occur into calculations, regardless of whether the use is chronic and site specific,” U.S. District Judge Dana Christensen wrote in the 40-page opinion. The Center for Biological Diversity led environmental groups in suing the U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2022, seeking to block the Knotty Pine Project, and Christensen granted the environmentalists’ motion for a preliminary injunction the following year. …Christensen found the Forest Service violated the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to take a hard look at the impact of unauthorized road use on grizzly bears.

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Forest rule change threatens steep tax losses

By Jeff Clemens
The Chinook Observer
October 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SOUTH BEND, Washington — Pacific County Commissioners Jerry Doyle, Lisa Olsen and David Tobin sent a scathing letter on Oct. 20 to the Washington Forest Practices Board (FPB) regarding a proposed increase in timber-harvest buffer zones along streams. Rural counties and forestry groups are mounting a vigorous push against bigger setbacks away from small non-salmon-bearing streams, arguing that over the course of time the loss of timber acreage will add up to billions in lost local economic activity and millions less taxes that currently support government services. Washington state established the Forest Practices Act and the FPB in 1974. It is tasked with establishing laws to “protect salmon, clean water, and the working forest economy.”

Related coverage in the Chinook Observer, by Elaine O’neil is executive director of the Washington Farm Forest Association: Stream setback plan violates ‘the Washington Way’

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Climate dollars eyed to backfill Washington wildfire funding

By Bill Lucia
The Washington State Standard
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Washington’s lands commissioner, Dave Upthegrove, is on a mission to secure $60 million of additional wildfire funding in next year’s legislative session, despite a tightening budget outlook. On Monday, he and a leading Democratic House lawmaker indicated that they want to tap revenue from the state’s cap-and-trade program for at least some of that money. The maneuver would mean turning to a steady-flowing stream of cash at a time when the state’s operating budget is squeezed. “Climate Commitment Act dollars are going to be on the table,” said state Rep. Larry Springer, D-Kirkland, who is deputy House majority leader. Lawmakers this year already started dedicating some of the climate dollars to the wildfire programs in question. At issue is funding provided under a 2021 law known as House Bill 1168, which passed with broad bipartisan support. With that legislation, lawmakers committed to direct $500 million over eight years to wildfire programs.

Related coverage, in KOMO News by Stella Sun: Washington wildfires burn 250K+ acres, budget cuts may affect fire prevention efforts

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Some Oregon wildfire mitigation projects stalled by government shutdown

By Justin Higginbottom
Oregon Public Broadcasting
October 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Fall is the busy season for forestry work, like fuels reduction. Summer fire restrictions have ended, and winter snow has not yet arrived. But Armando Lopez, owner of DL Reforestation in Jackson County, said the federal government shutdown has put his work on hold. Inspectors can’t visit project areas, and he’s waiting on hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments. Every day, he eagerly checks whether the government has reopened. …Lopez employs around 40 workers, most of them on temporary H-2B visas. If the shutdown doesn’t end next week, Lopez said, he won’t be able to pay them. …The Oregon Department of Forestry said in a statement that payment delays for contractors like Lopez are varied, depending on the federal agency and funding source. …But U.S. Forest Service, state, private and tribal forestry awards are continuing.

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Bureau of Land Management Seeks Public Input on Proposal to Rescind Public Lands Rule Affecting Western Oregon Forests

By John Oliver
Grants Pass Tribune
October 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — The Bureau of Land Management is seeking public comments on its proposal to rescind the Conservation and Landscape Health Rule, adopted in 2024. The rule was designed to elevate conservation as a recognized use of federal lands, placing it on equal footing with traditional uses such as grazing, recreation, and timber harvesting. …The Rule aimed to modernize how the BLM manages its 245 million acres nationwide, emphasizing ecological health, habitat restoration, and the use of science and Indigenous knowledge in planning decisions. Supporters of the rule have described it as an effort to ensure the long-term sustainability of public lands amid growing challenges such as wildfire risks. However, its implementation drew opposition from some state and local officials in the West, including timber industry representatives and rural county leaders, who warned that the new policy could restrict economic activities on public lands and diminish local control over forest management.

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Gov. Kotek issues executive order placing climate lens on farms, forests, waterways

By Gosia Wozniacka
The Oregonian
October 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Tina Kotek

Gov. Tina Kotek wants Oregon to go full force on harnessing the potential of forests, farms, wetlands and waterways to reduce emissions, preserve wildlife habitat and help communities withstand the threat of climate change. That’s the focus of a sweeping executive order Kotek issued on Thursday to prioritize conservation on both natural landscapes such as forests or wetlands as well as on so-called working lands – farms, ranches and commercial timberlands. It also includes waterways and state-managed ocean waters. Kotek’s order calls on state agencies to collectively protect or restore 10% more land and waterways over the next decade, based on current baseline conditions, with a focus on safeguarding the most climate-resilient landscapes. …Kotek said the order is one of a series of actions she’s taking to push the ball forward on preventing and responding to global warming. 

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Land managers use fire to help maintain forest health but some environmentalists are wary

By Sophie Hartley
Indianapolis Star
October 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

The question of how to manage Indiana’s forests sparks some of the livelier and more contentious debates among local environmentalists. Many Midwestern forest managers want to utilize prescribed burning to root out invasive species, prevent wildfires and move forests toward what they see as ideal conditions. …Already the United States Forest Service and The Nature Conservancy use pre-planned, controlled burns set by professionals to alter the array of plants in Indiana ecosystems. …Yet, some environmentalists, who believe that forests should be left to their own devices, have in recent years mounted a protest against intensive forest management techniques like prescribed burning. …The practice of prescribed burning is far from new. …Many eastern hardwood forests were razed for agriculture, and Indiana forests have seen little fire over the past 100 or so years.

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Grant program funds Indigenous forest research in the Northeast

By Adiah Gholston
New England Public Media
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Ash trees are an important part of the basket weaving tradition, which has long played a significant cultural, spiritual and practical role in the lives of tribal citizens across the country, including John Daigle, a citizen member of the Penobscot Nation in Maine. But the emergence of the emerald ash borer beetle …has posed challenges for Indigenous basket makers. A grant awarded to Daigle, a professor of forest recreation management at the University of Maine, could help preserve and advance the craft. It’s part of the Indigenous Forest Knowledge Fund, a program run by the Northeastern States Research Cooperative to support projects related to tribal homelands or ancestral territories of the Northern Forest region… Daigle’s project was one of three winners this year. His team will also develop technologies to support the processing and storage of ash splints before widespread ash mortality, which could help sustain basket-making supplies.

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Ice storm decimated Michigan’s ‘wood basket,’ meaning tough years ahead

By Ellie Katz
Bridge Michigan
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

…An ice storm impacted about 3 million acres of forest in 30 counties in northern Michigan early this spring. Hardwoods like maple and oak were shredded while softwoods like pine snapped in half. Foresters, loggers and sawmills in the region worked around the clock to salvage as much of that downed timber as possible. Now there’s a new concern: Much of northern Michigan’s “wood basket” — worth about $2.2 billion — has been emptied. The glut of timber after the storm had to be harvested quickly, flooding the market and leading to a good year for Up North foresters. But now there’s little left to harvest that the storm didn’t destroy, and foresters worry what the next several years will look like until newly planted trees can replace what the storm took away. The sudden shortage could ripple throughout the supply chain, crippling an important sector of northern Michigan’s economy, foresters say.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Bill Gates makes a stunning claim about climate change

By David Goldman
CNN Business
October 28, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

Bill Gates

In a stunning and significant pushback to the “doomsday” climate activist community, Bill Gates, a leading proponent for carbon emissions reductions… argued resources must be shifted away from the battle against climate change. Instead, Gates argues, the world’s philanthropists must increase their investment in other efforts aimed at preventing disease and hunger. Climate change is not going to wipe out humanity, he argued, and past efforts that strive for achieving zero carbon emissions have made real progress. But Gates said that past investments fighting climate change have been misplaced, and too much good money has been put into expensive and questionable efforts. Although Gates said investment to battle climate change must continue, he argued that… a more urgent problem, inflicting potentially lasting global damage to the fight against famine and life-threatening preventable sickness. …“We should deal with problems in proportion to the suffering they cause.”

In related coverage by David Gelles, NY Times: The Two Big Questions Surrounding Bill Gates’s Climate Memo

  • Is this going to change the way people talk about climate change?
  • Will this change how climate efforts are funded?

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