Region Archives: United States

Business & Politics

Carney says there’s hope for trade deals with U.S. but ‘don’t expect white smoke’

By Kyle Duggan
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
September 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Marc Carney

Canada is making progress on “small” tariff deals with the US for key sectors, Prime Minister Mark Carney said after revealing he’d had a recent phone call with U.S. President Donald Trump. Carney said he spoke with Trump “at length” Monday on a wide range of issues, including trade, geopolitics and employment. He described it as a “good conversation” but also warned there is no guarantee Ottawa will secure any of the deals under discussion as the Trump administration works to squeeze the Canadian economy to obtain trade concessions. …While Carney did not specify which key sectors are the subjects of trade talks, the sectors targeted by US tariffs include steel, aluminum, forestry products and automobiles. …Carney’s cabinet met behind closed doors Wednesday at a Toronto hotel — part of its preparations for the upcoming fall sitting of Parliament and for continuing negotiations with the Americans on tariffs. 

Read More

Lumber Prices Buoyed by Big Sawmill Curtailment

By Ryan Dezember
The Wall Street Journal
September 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber prices that have dropped more than 20% over the past month are prompting one of North America’s largest producers to throttle back output by 12%. Interfor said Thursday that it would reduce hours and reconfigure shifts as well as lengthen holiday breaks and maintenance shutdowns at its mills in Canada and the US to reduce output by about 145 million board feet through year-end. Lumber futures, which had fallen 18 of the past 22 trading sessions rose in response. …Interfor, which has headquarters in BC, is among the big Canadian sawyers that have shifted operations into the US as duties and diminished log availability have put sawmills out of the money back home. About 50% of Interfor’s capacity these days is in the US South. Another 12% is Washington and Oregon, where mills compete fiercely with Canadian rivals to sell the same species of wood. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

Read More

Interfor Announces Lumber Production Curtailments Across All Regions of North America

Interfor Corporation
September 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

BURNABY, BC — Interfor Corporation announced plans to reduce its lumber production by approximately 145 million board feet between September and December of 2025, representing approximately 12% of its normal operating stance. The temporary curtailments will be through a combination of reduced operating hours, prolonged holiday breaks, reconfigured shifting schedules and extended maintenance shut-downs. The curtailments are expected to impact all of Interfor’s operating regions, with both the Canadian and US operations expected to reduce their production levels by approximately 12% each. The curtailments are in response to persistently weak market conditions and ongoing economic uncertainty. The Company will continue to monitor market conditions across all of its operations and adjust its production plans accordingly. [END]

Read More

Trump says he’s looking for swift Supreme Court ruling on most tariffs

By Kelly Malone, The Canadian Press
The Associated Press in Bloomberg
September 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON — US President Trump is indicating that he’ll ask the Supreme Court tomorrow to overturn a federal appeals court ruling that found many of his tariffs are illegal. Trump says he’ll ask the court for an expedited ruling and claims that if the duties are removed, it could be devastating for the United States. Last Friday, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit found that Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs and his fentanyl-related duties exceeded his powers under the national security statute he used to impose them. Trump used the International Economic Emergency Powers Act of 1977 to hit much of the world with duties, even though the statute does not include the word “tariff” or its synonyms. The appeals court said that the tariffs could stay in place while the Trump administration takes the case to the Supreme Court.

In related coverage:

Read More

More Than 400 Organizations Urge President Trump to Act on National Forestry Crisis

Forest Landowners Association
September 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Washington, D.C. — More than 400 associations, businesses, and landowners representing the forest products sector have signed a joint letter to President Donald J. Trump urging immediate action to address an escalating crisis threatening America’s timber supply, rural economies, and energy security. The effort, led by the Forest Landowners Association, the American Biomass Energy Association, and the American Loggers Council, underscores the urgency of stabilizing the American forest sector and its access to markets in the face of mounting mill closures, devastating natural disasters, and unfair foreign trade practices. The letter follows President Trump’s Executive Order directing federal agencies to boost domestic timber and wood product production. Signatories warn that without decisive action, the nation risks losing its forestland base, critical markets, and millions of [forest dependent] jobs. …The coalition stresses that America’s 3.9 million forestry-supported jobs, along with the nation’s housing supply, infrastructure, consumer products, energy independence, and national security, depend on strong working forests.

Read More

AF&PA defends U.S. pulp imports at Section 301 hearing on Brazil trade

The Lesprom Network
September 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Terry Webber

Terry Webber, VP of Industry Affairs at the American Forest & Paper Association (AF&PA), testified before the US Trade Representative during the Section 301 investigation hearing, urging the exclusion of Brazilian bleached eucalyptus kraft pulp (BEK) from potential tariffs. Webber emphasized that BEK is not produced at commercial scale in the United States and remains essential to domestic tissue manufacturing. He also stated that 99% of wood fiber sourced by AF&PA members comes from certified programs such as FSC and SFI. …AF&PA had previously warned that imposing duties on this material would raise costs for U.S. manufacturers, threaten domestic competitiveness, and risk shifting market share to foreign suppliers. …The Section 301 probe is examining whether Brazil’s practices in digital trade, electronic payments, ethanol access, intellectual property, and environmental enforcement are discriminatory or burdensome to U.S. commerce. The investigation may result in new tariffs depending on the findings.

Read More

Beyond a SCOTUS Tariff Bombshell: How Trump — and Canada — Could Double Down

By Lawrence Herman, senior fellow, C.D. Howe Institute
Canadian Politics and Public Policy
September 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Lawrence Herman

The cheering was fleeting last week after the US Federal Court of Appeals ruled many of Donald Trump’s broad-based “Liberation Day” tariffs illegal. The case is now headed to the US Supreme Court, the administration has asked the Court to fast-track its decision on whether to take up the case. …The default assumption is that SCOTUS will give Trump a victory. But if the Court were to rule against him on his use of the International Economic Emergency Powers Act (IEEPA) to justify his trade war, there’s a slew of other tariff weapons he can use. …This is a trade war, after all, unprecedented in nature and scope, waged by an administration battling not only other Western democracies but against the norms and precedents of its own country. …It’s worth taking a moment to look at the tariff weapons that Canada has available for use as possible countermeasures.

Read More

Trump Weighs Declaring National Housing Emergency to Tackle High Housing Costs, Bessent Says

By Skylar Woodhouse
Bloomberg Politics
September 1, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the Trump administration may declare a national housing emergency this fall as the White House looks to highlight key issues for midterm campaign voters. …Bessent said housing affordability would be a critical leg of Republicans’ 2026 midterm election platform. Bessent declined to list any specific actions the president may take, but he suggested that administration officials are directly studying ways to standardize local building and zoning codes and decrease closing costs. President Trump has repeatedly used emergency declarations to avoid having to send legislation to Congress for approval. Some of those, particularly the emergency law he cited to institute his tariff regime, have faced pushback in federal court. …Trump also spoke out on the issue during the campaign and said he wants to open up federal land for housing development and pledged to help with affordability by eliminating regulations.

In related coverage:

Read More

Georgia-Pacific acquires Anchor Packaging, expands food container business

By Georgia-Pacific
PR Newswire
September 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

ATLANTA — Georgia-Pacific and an affiliate of TJC announced that they have reached an agreement under which Georgia-Pacific would purchase Anchor Packaging, a manufacturer of rigid food containers and cling film for the food service, retail and processor channels. …Anchor Packaging is one of the largest thermoformers in North America, best known for its award-winning product designs and custom packaging development capabilities. Anchor innovates to empower restaurants, grocery stores, convenience stores, and all foodservice operators to serve the growing demand for meals-on-the-go. Closing of the acquisition, subject to regulatory review and customary closing conditions, is anticipated later this year. Financial details of the agreement are not being disclosed. …”Anchor Packaging will be a significant addition to Georgia-Pacific’s consumer products platform with capabilities that will especially complement our Dixie business,” said David Duncan, of Georgia-Pacific’s Consumer Products Group.

Read More

Pixelle Specialty Solutions Appoints Julie Schertell as CEO

By Pixelle Specialty Solutions
Globe Newswire
September 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Julie Schertell

SPRING GROVE, Pennsylvania — The Board of Directors for Pixelle Specialty Solutions announced the appointment of Julie Schertell as CEO of Pixelle. Ms. Schertell succeeds Ross Bushnell, who has stepped down as CEO to pursue new opportunities. …With more than 30 years of operational and commercial experience, Schertell has successfully built high-performing teams. During her time as President and CEO of both Mativ Holdings and Neenah, she repositioned each company for accelerated growth and improved profitability. The Board would like to thank Ross for his leadership during his tenure as CEO as he oversaw the successful sale of the Stevens Point, WI mill and led the business through the difficult decision to close the Chillicothe, OH facility. Ross will remain with Pixelle through September to serve as an advisor.

Read More

‘It got ahead of us’: More than 1 million gallons of water used to fight Lebanon County sawmill fire, chief says

By Rachael Lardani
WGAL8 News
September 9, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

SOUTH ANNVILLE TOWNSHIP, Pa. — A three-alarm fire ripped through Weaber Lumber in Lebanon County. Crews responded to the fire in South Annville Township around 10 p.m. on Monday. Flames could be seen leaping from the burning building. The blaze was upgraded to the third alarm, prompting a large firefighter response. According to Lawn Fire Company Chief Dillon Wilson, approximately 1.1 million gallons of water have been used from the on-site hydrant system to combat the fire. Tankers also brought in additional water to the scene. Chief Wilson said most of the building was engulfed in flames when crews arrived. “It got ahead of us,” Wilson said. The chief believes this building might have the most combustible materials under one roof in the state. Weaber Lumber has experienced multiple fires over the years. …For 80 years, Weaber has been proudly committed to the lumber industry and is one of the nation’s leading hardwood manufacturers.

Read More

Hood Industries expanding operations in Waynesboro

Mississippi Development Authority
September 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

JACKSON, Mississippi –Hood Industries is expanding its sawmill operations in Wayne County. The project is a $245 million corporate investment. The company’s strategic expansion involves the construction of a new advanced sawmill in Waynesboro. The mill will be built in multiple phases on a site adjacent to the company’s existing mill. Mississippi Development Authority is providing assistance through the Mississippi Flexible Tax Incentive program. MDA also is providing assistance for road and infrastructure improvements. Wayne County and AccelerateMS are assisting with the expansion, as well. …Hood Industries has been manufacturing wood products in Mississippi for nearly over 40 years. The company currently operates three southern yellow pine sawmills, including two in Mississippi. The new Waynesboro mill is expected to be complete by October 2026.

Read More

Greif Completes Sale of Containerboard Business

Greif Inc.
September 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

DELAWARE, Ohio — Greif announced it has completed the previously announced sale of its containerboard business to Packaging Corporation of America. …“This transaction unlocks immediate value for our shareholders and allows Greif to deliver stronger and more consistent earnings power, enhances our capital efficiency, and accelerates debt reduction.” said Ole Rosgaard, President and CEO of Greif. As a result of this divestment, Greif is also adjusting its 2025 full-year guidance. …The revised guidance, which comprises only continuing operations for the full fiscal year 2025, is $507 million to $517 million of Adjusted EBITDA.

Read More

Finance & Economics

Lumber Prices Are Flashing a Warning Sign for the U.S. Economy

By Ryan Dezember
The Wall Street Journal
September 8, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Falling lumber prices are sounding an alarm on Wall Street about potential problems on Main Street. Wood markets have been whipsawed of late by trade uncertainty and a deteriorating housing market. Futures have dropped 23% since hitting a three-year high at the beginning of August and ended Friday at $535 per thousand board feet. The price drop might have been greater—but two of North America’s biggest sawyers said last week that they would curtail output, slowing the decline. Crashing wood prices are troubling because they have been a reliable leading indicator on the direction of the housing market as well as broader economic activity. …Analysts and traders say there will have to be further cuts to ease the glut of wood. That might not be a problem, given how higher duties have pushed up Canadian sawmills’ break-even prices while demand wanes. “We anticipate further closures or curtailments,” said Truist Securities analyst Michael Roxland. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is require]

Read More

Lumber Prices Are in Free Fall

By Ryan Dezember
The Wall Street Journal
September 3, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures fell again Wednesday, dropping to their lowest prices since last autumn. …Futures for September delivery shed $6 or about 1.1%, to end at $524 per thousand board feet. Futures have now declined 18 of the past 22 trading sessions. The selloff—about 25% over the past month—is reminiscent of the wild trading in lumber during the Covid-19 pandemic [but this time] …the continuing gyrations have been driven by trade policy. Lumber buyers stocked up ahead of a big increase in the duties levied on Canadian imports. …President Trump’s threats for additional tariffs on imported wood added incentive to hoard lumber. …The $54 difference in price between lumber futures for delivery this month and those for November in midday trading was well above the cost of warehousing wood for two months and a sign that traders’ demand outlook is bleak, Stinson Dean said. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

Read More

Weyerhaeuser Completes Sale of Princeton, BC Lumber Mill to Gorman Group

By Weyerhaeuser Company
PR Newswire
September 2, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

SEATTLE — Weyerhaeuser announced the completion of the sale of its lumber mill in Princeton, British Columbia, to the Gorman Group. The transaction, which was announced in May, also includes Weyerhaeuser’s associated British Columbia timber licenses, which will transfer separately. That transfer is expected to be completed over the coming months and is subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory review. Weyerhaeuser received approximately $60 million USD upon the sale of the lumber facility, with the remainder of the transaction proceeds to be received in conjunction with the transfer of the timber licenses. 

Read More

Lumber futures continue to fall, shed more that 20% in August

By Ryan Dezember
Wall Street Journal
September 2, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber prices, which shed more than 20% in August, have continued to fall to start September, hitting their lowest price this year thanks to a glut of wood that was piled up ahead of a big increase in duties on Canadian imports. “There has clearly been a speculative inventory accumulation at every level from mills to single location lumber dealers,” said Matt Layman, who publishes Layman’s Lumber Guide “For the first time in my 40-plus year career there is indeed a wall of wood that must be liquidated.” As with many raw materials, the lumber market has been whipsawed by President Trump’s tariff threats. The White House is studying tariffs on imported lumber in the name of national security. …Any lumber tariff will come on top of duties on Canadian softwood lumber that rose to about 35% for most producers, from 15% last year.  [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

Read More

U.S. construction spending falls 2.2% through July, led by drop in residential sector

US Census Bureau
September 2, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Construction spending in the United States reached $1,232.7 billion during the first seven months of 2025, a 2.2% decrease from $1,259.9 billion in the same period of 2024. Residential construction accounted for $524.7 billion, down 4.0%, while nonresidential construction declined 0.8% to $707.9 billion, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Private construction dropped 3.8% year-to-date to $946.5 billion. …Public construction increased 3.8% to $286.2 billion over the same period. …For the month of July 2025, construction spending was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $2,139.1 billion, down 0.1% from June and 2.8% below July 2024. Private sector construction decreased 0.2% from the previous month, while public construction rose 0.3%.

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

Why Builders Are Swapping Lumber for Rice Husk Boards

By Sara Kitnick
The Los Angeles Times
September 2, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, International

The construction industry accounts for nearly 40% of global carbon emissions, which has builders rethinking the materials they use. One unlikely source keeps coming up in those conversations: rice husks. What used to be burned or buried is now pressed into a wood alternative that looks the part and often outlasts traditional lumber. Husks are milled into composite boards that resist water, release very low VOCs, and can be recycled. The manufacturing is lighter on energy, turns a waste stream into something useful, and gives homeowners a material that behaves like wood without the constant upkeep. …Globally, rice husk composites are gaining ground in regions where rice is grown, and research is exploring structural uses such as engineered members. Certification programs, including LEED, are recognizing the category, and analysts expect it to claim a meaningful share of certain wood product markets over the next decade.

Read More

Lab to develop future of timber construction getting closer to reality in Northwest Portland

By Tristin Hoffman
The Oregonian
August 29, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

A marine terminal that once shipped Oregon’s wood and steel will soon research and manufacture mass timber in an effort to ease Oregon’s housing costs and address the state’s housing shortage. The Port of Portland’s Terminal 2, a 39-acre concrete lot sitting largely empty in the city’s Northwest Industrial District, is being readied for at least $15 million worth of soil treatments next year to ensure the riverfront site is on stable ground before it transforms into a mass-timber research and manufacturing campus. While the campus’ first phase of construction should finish in 2028, the Port of Portland told U.S. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici, D-Oregon, at a site visit Monday, millions in funding gaps muddy the campus’ second phase. …The facility is set to house Switzerland mass-timber company Zaugg Timber Solutions, the University of Oregon’s acoustic research laboratory and small industry-related companies to expand mass-timber development, research and uses.

Read More

Forestry

We Must Protect our Public Lands from Trump

By Ryan Gellert, CEO of Patagonia
Time Magazine
September 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Ryan Gellert

For 25 years, the Roadless Area Conservation Rule has kept vital forests and grassland safe… But now the more-than 58 million acres of pristine national forest it protects are at risk of being exploited for profit. In June, the Trump Administration announced its intent to rescind the 2001 law, a hard-fought policy that prohibited the building or reconstruction of roads and timber harvesting in certain areas in national forests. At the time of its signing, it was the most commented-on rule in U.S. history, with 95% in support of protecting forests and grasslands from development. Since enactment, it has become one of the country’s most consequential conservation policies ever. The U.S. Department of Agriculture is attempting to paint rescinding the Roadless Rule as a way to protect us from wildfire and encourage responsible forest management. We should know better than to take the administration’s statements at face value

Read More

Hearings offer outlet for unease with Forest Service revamp

By Marc Heller
E&E News by Politico
September 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

National forests and wildfire will return to the congressional agenda this week with a pair of House subcommittee hearings on Forest Service programs. The Trump administration’s challenges in managing the 193-million-acre forest system with a sharply reduced workforce — and a big agency reorganization still to come — are likely topics for both the Agriculture and Natural Resources subcommittees. In the Natural Resources hearing, the Subcommittee on Federal Lands will take testimony on the state of national forests, picking up on a hearing that was initially scheduled for July 9.  In the Agriculture hearing, the Subcommittee on Forestry and Horticulture will focus on improved active forest management, such as increased thinning of national forests to reduce potential wildfire fuel. [to access the full story an E&ENews subscription is required]

Read More

US Department of Agriculture Announces Forest Health Resilience Projects to Improve Timber Production

The US Department of Agriculture
September 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Washington, D.C. – The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is investing more than $8 million for five new projects to reduce wildfire risk, protect water quality, and improve forest health across the nation. This expands President Trump’s mission to improve the lives of American families, support rural communities, and expand domestic timber production. Today’s announcement builds on Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins’ commitment to wildfire preparedness and President Donald J. Trump’s vision to safeguard American families. USDA and its agencies are working together to take action to protect people, communities, and the natural resources on which this country depends. The Joint Chiefs’ Landscape Restoration Partnership Program is a collaborative effort between USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and Forest Service to work across public-private boundaries and at a landscape scale. The $8 million investment in new projects is in addition to $32 million for 24 existing three-year-long Joint Chiefs’ projects.

Read More

We can do something about stressed-out forests

By Robert Bonnie, University of California, Berkeley
The New York Times
August 31, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Under the 2001 Roadless Rule enacted by President Bill Clinton, millions of acres of roadless areas on national forests across the country are conserved, protecting vital habitats and watersheds. A “blank spot on a map,” in the words of the naturalist Aldo Leopold, is increasingly valuable in our urbanizing society. …The current administration is right to look for ways to address the growing wildfire threat in these areas. But instead of doing away with the Roadless Rule, the White House should look to a simple way to make our forests more resilient to wildfire without compromising the other benefits. …One way to allow forest thinning and prescribed burns to reduce the wildfire threat is to amend the roadless rule… to permit temporary roads in roadless areas that are near neighborhoods along the wildland-urban interface to allow for forest thinning or other ecological restoration. [to access the full story a NY Times subscription is required]

Read More

The Tongass is not ‘overstocked’— it’s irreplaceable

By Ariel Hasse-Zamudio, Executive Director, Alaskan Energy Infrastructure Project
The Alaska Beacon
September 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

©USForestService

In 2001, the United States recognized the … significance of over 58 million acres at the heart of our national forests and granted them additional protections known as the Roadless Rule. Last month, the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced plans to advance reversing the Roadless Rule, which would open millions of acres of federal lands to industrial development. … Reversing the Roadless Rule would open up 9.3 million acres of the Tongass National Forest, and 5.4 million acres of the Chugach National Forest to development, allowing for roads and structures that will have negative impacts that could last many lifetimes. …With a government focused on putting profits over people, it is no surprise that Sec. Rollins would prefer to use the 58 million acres for short term commercial interests. The American public should be outraged at the prospect of tarnishing our national forests and potentially depleting their resources forever. 

Read More

Can California Forestry Become More Fire Resilient?

By Zeke Lunder
The Lookout
September 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Today’s Lookout Livestream looks at economic, institutional, and physical constraints to California’s timber industry becoming more wildfire resilient. Topics include: The role of private timberland owners, the impact of climate change, long-term supply challenges for logs and woodchips, need for fire in dry forest ecosystems, and the challenges of prescribed fire implementation. The conversation highlighted the need for comprehensive forest management strategies that are focused on what the fuels look like after the logging is complete. Zeke Lunder discusses the complexities of forestry and biomass energy, highlighting the economic challenges of financing new power plants, and the need for long-term sources of fuels to keep the plants running over the life of the investment in the plant. He notes that biomass power plants don’t pencil out without subsidies being paid to the operators. Lunder emphasizes the need for sustainable logging practices to manage fuel loads and reduce fire hazards.

Read More

A ‘Roomba for the forest’ could be SoCal’s next wildfire weapon

By Noah Haggerty
The Los Angeles Times
September 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CALIFORNIA — The giant, remote-controlled vehicle — somewhere between a tractor trailer, a tank and a Zamboni in appearance — slowly rolled across the dry, brittle grass growing between the tangle of freeways making up the 101 and 23 interchange in Thousand Oaks. Inside the beast, fire churned. And as it rolled over the land, that fire incinerated any brush it encountered, leaving only a thin smoke cloud billowing from the top of the machine, some flashes of orange and red from behind its metal skirt and, in its wake, a desolate, smoldering black line. BurnBot isn’t the fastest way to rid a landscape of dangerously flammable vegetation (it tops out at around 0.5 mph) but it can do something that traditional vegetation management techniques cannot: with almost surgical precision, it can kill the flammable brush sitting within feet of homes and highways with virtually no safety risks or disruptions to daily life.

Read More

Colorado roadless rule to remain as national rule faces rescission

By Dennis Webb
The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel
September 2, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Colorado’s state-specific rule for largely protecting roadless areas in its national forests will be spared from a Trump administration effort to remove such protections on a broader basis. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said in a news release on Wednesday that a public comment period is opening on her previously announced proposal to do away with the 2001 national roadless rule. But the Agriculture Department also said in the news release that state-specific rules in Colorado and Idaho won’t be affected by the proposal. Altogether, the proposal would apply to nearly 45 million acres, the release said. Eliminating the rule would open roadless areas to road-building. The existing rule has limited activities such as logging in those areas, and was instituted at the end of the Clinton administration.

Read More

How the Rapid Spread of Misinformation Pushed Oregon Lawmakers to Kill the State’s Wildfire Risk Map

By Rob Davis
Oregon Capital Insider
September 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A year after Oregon endures its most destructive fire season on record in 2020, state lawmakers order a map estimating the wildfire risk for every property in the state. It’s the kind of rating now available on real estate sites like Zillow. The state wants to use the results to decide where it will apply forthcoming codes for fire-resistant construction and protections around homes. Around the same time, insurance companies start dropping Oregon homeowners’ policies and raising premiums to limit future losses, much as they have done in other disaster-prone states. Insurers have their own sophisticated risk maps to guide them, but some brokers instead tell homeowners the blame lies with the map. The belief gets treated as fact both on social media and in mainstream news — even though insurers and regulators say it’s not true. …By the time the state pulls back the map, the myths about it have gained so much momentum there’s no stopping them. 

Read More

North Carolina to be home to new USDA forest project

By Katherine Zehnder
The Carolina Journal
September 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced it would invest more than $8 million in five new projects, including one in North Carolina. These projects will improve forest health by reducing wildfire risk and improving water quality. …North Carolina has two primary wildfire seasons, one in the spring and one in the fall. …The five new projects include efforts across several states to restore and protect essential landscapes. The National Forest is launching the “Alabama Chattahoochee Fall Line Restoring Longleaf” project in Alabama. Colorado and Wyoming will see work in the Medicine Bow-Routt National Forest through the “Headwaters of the Colorado” initiative. Montana’s Lolo National Forest is beginning the “Blackfoot River Valley Landscape Mosaic” project, while North Carolina’s National Forests are moving forward with “Uwharries to Sandhills, Phase 2.” Finally, Oregon’s Mt. Hood National Forest will focus on “Hood River Wildfire and Watershed Resilience.”

Read More

Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Netflix Partners With American Forest Foundation In Landmark Carbon Credit Deal

By Theodora Stankova
Carbon Herald
September 5, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

The American Forest Foundation (AFF) has announced a 15-year agreement with Netflix to purchase verified carbon credits through AFF’s Fields & Forests program—an initiative aimed at converting underused fields into productive forests across the U.S. South. Launched to support family landowners and combat climate change through afforestation, reforestation, and revegetation (ARR), the Fields & Forests project received a significant boost from Netflix’s early-stage financing. This investment will help launch the first 6,000 acres of reforestation and expand access to underserved landowners across the region. …The streaming giant utilized a unique financing structure—milestone prepayments—tying funding to tangible achievements like acres enrolled. This allows AFF to offer robust technical and financial support to small-acreage landowners, many of whom face barriers to participating in the voluntary carbon market due to high upfront costs.

Read More

From Mill Closures to Energy Innovation: How Biomass Can Revitalize U.S. Forests

By Peter Madden, President and CEO
US Endowment for Forestry and Communities in LinkedIn
September 3, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

Peter Madden

When International Paper announced recently that it is closing its Savannah and Riceboro mills at the end of September, it sent shockwaves through Coastal Georgia, stripping away an estimated 1,100 jobs, disrupting supply chains and underscoring a larger truth—the pulp and paper industry that has long defined the South is in steep decline. And this is not just a Georgia story. Nearly 50 mills have closed nationwide during the past decade, dismantling infrastructure and supply chains that cannot easily be rebuilt. In the past three years alone, major facilities have shut down in Charleston and Georgetown, SC, Orange, TX, Campti, LA, Cedar Springs, GA and Chillicothe, OH. Much of the decline reflects broader shifts in demand for certain paper products… So, what if the byproducts of our forests, once used to make paper, were redirected to meet the very energy needs created by the decline of certain paper products? Biomass energy offers that pathway. 

Read More

What the EPA’s plan to deregulate greenhouse gas emissions means for Washington State

By Conrad Swanson
The Seattle Times
September 2, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

The federal government is attempting to abandon years of climate science and regulation, and officials from Washington state are warning those efforts will drastically slow the country’s ability to cut greenhouse gas emissions. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency no longer wants to classify greenhouse gas emissions as dangerous and, therefore, something that must be regulated. The agency is now in the middle of a public comment process to reverse its long-standing course. Public officials and climate change experts from across the country are testifying against the federal government’s new direction. Among those in opposition is Joel Creswell, who manages the climate pollution reduction program with Washington state’s Department of Ecology. He said the EPA’s process is built on unscientific research and cherry-picked data. It’s also likely illegal, Creswell said. The federal government is trying to provide the “appearance of a science-based reason” not to regulate greenhouse gases, Creswell said.

Read More

Forest Fires

Crews make gains on Root Fire, sparked by campfire that escaped control in Shasta-Trinity

By Jessica Skropanic
Redding Record Searchlight
September 4, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

©USForestService

A campfire that escaped control in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest is being blamed for starting the Root Fire that erupted on Labor Day and ballooned to 759 acres west of Castella, prompting evacuations in the area. Flames jumped beyond the campfire’s perimeter about 3 miles west of Interstate 5 at Castella. The fire was reported on Sept. 1 and quickly spread through dry grass and trees… Forest service officials did not release any other information about the incident, which occurred just over two weeks after they activated fire restrictions at Shasta-Trinity due to the hot and dry conditions. Crews attacked the fire from the air and made strong gains. As of Thursday, firefighters had built containment lines around 45% of the fire, up from zero on Wednesday morning. Firefighters expressed hope that several days of cooler weather will help calm Root and other fires, and stop them from spreading through extremely dry forestland.

Read More

Root Fire burns west of I-5. Evacuations and warnings in place in Shasta, Siskiyou counties

By Jessica Skropanic
Redding Record Searchlight
September 2, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

Firefighters are battling the uncontained 300- to 350-acre Root Fire and other lightning-ignited fires on Tuesday morning after the blaze forced evacuations and warnings in communities along the Shasta and Siskiyou counties. Crews fighting the blaze from the air reported a few spot fires burning along the wildfire’s perimeter Tuesday morning, but no new fire starts outside of the burn area. The fire started just before 12:34 p.m. on Monday in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest 3 miles west of Castella and Interstate 5 — at Forest Road 25 and Castle Creek Road, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. …While firefighters are investigating the cause, the U.S. Forest Service reported lightning from thunderstorms ignited multiple fires in the area over the Labor Day weekend.

Read More

Emigrant Fire grows to 23,400 acres as red flag warning issued for Oregon Cascades

By Zach Urness
Statesman Journal
September 2, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

©Emigrant Fire Facebook

A red flag warning was issued for Oregon’s Cascade Mountains on Sept. 2, including for the area of the 23,400 acre Emigrant Fire. The forecast calls for a 20-30% chance of thunderstorms, with little rainfall, that could ignite new fires with lightning strikes. Hot, dry and unstable winds could fuel the growth of Emigrant or other blazes. It’s the beginning of a dangerous period for wildfires across the state before a cooling trend could help moderate fires for the remainder of the season. …“The dry and unstable air may contribute to development of pyrocumulus clouds,” fire crews warned in a Sept. 2 morning report. “These conditions may result in rapid fire growth where slopes and winds align. Similar hot, dry, unstable weather is anticipated to last at least through Thursday, before a cooling trend begins.”

Read More

Flat Fire in Oregon, Update for September 1, 2025

Central Oregon Fire Info
September 1, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

©Govt of Oregon Flickr

SISTERS, Ore.  — The Flat Fire, approximately two miles northeast of Sisters, Oregon, is estimated at 23,346 acres and is 52% contained. Despite critical fire weather, established fire lines have remained secure and suppression repair objectives continue across the incident. The Red Flag Warning is no longer in effect due to a lower chance of strong gusty winds. Hot, dry conditions persist. Today, firefighters will focus on restoring areas impacted by fire response efforts, such as repairing dozer lines and reducing erosion risks. These initiatives strengthen containment and protect the landscape to support long-term recovery. With a unified mission across the fire line, crews continue to make steady progress, bringing the incident closer to full suppression. Oregon State Fire Marshal (OSFM) resources have demobilized from the Flat Fire. Cooperative firefighting efforts from structural, wildland, and air resources protected homes through extreme fire activity and critical weather conditions. 

Related Content in the Register-Guard by Miranda Cyr: Oregon wildfires: Emigrant Fire continues to grow, conditions expected to worsen

Read More

Crews make progress battling sprawling New Jersey wildfire

By Pat Battle and Jennifer Millman
NBC New York
September 4, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US East

©Facebook

Authorities are making progress as they battle a wildfire that broke out in New Jersey’s Passaic County earlier this week, chewing through 160 acres in a matter of hours as firefighters fought to douse the flames. New Jersey’s Forest Fire Service said Thursday that the so-called Buckabear Wildfire in West Milford Township was 50% contained, a marked improvement from their announcement the previous evening. The 160-acre fire hadn’t grown, acre-wise anyway, since the last announcement either. As of Thursday, no evacuations had been ordered and no structures are threatened. …Firefighting efforts intensified in earnest Wednesday, with a state Forest Fire helicopter dumping water onto the remote wooded area to halt the spread. Deep inside the forest, other crews were armed with shovels, garden hoes and specialized ignition devices — deliberately igniting the dry brush on fire in a controlled burn, They literally fought fire with fire.

Read More

Forest History & Archives

Forestry and logging museum seeking potential property in Nevada County, California

By Jennifer Nobles
The Union
September 4, 2025
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: United States, US West

CALIFORNIA — There’s a new museum proposed for Nevada County, this time focusing on the timber, logging, and forestry industries that have put the area on the map aside from the more well-known Gold Rush. A group—including Nevada County Historical Society, forester Robert Ingram, Economic Development Director Kimberly Parker, Tim Robinson, Landon Haack of Cal Fire, and author Cindi Anderson—have been meeting up for over a year now to ensure the history of timber in Nevada County will not be forgotten. …Anderson said the purpose of the museum is to preserve the culture and pay homage to the many forest men and women, as well as educate and preserve the past and encourage the future for our forests and to be involved in the future of the industry. …Stroh added: “This is going to be probably the biggest timber museum in the western United States.

Read More

From bustling lumber mill to ghost town: New cruise unearths Lake Michigan’s buried history

By Lindsay Moore
Michigan Live
September 4, 2025
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: United States, US East

SAUGATUCK, Michigan — The folklore goes that there’s an entire town buried beneath the sand dunes of Saugatuck, dubbed “Michigan’s Pompeii.” Do you need to see it to believe it? This new cruise through history will lead you back in time, 150 years ago to the day, to when the town of Singapore was no more. The new event, Cruise Through History – A Singapore Ghost Story, will bring passengers along the Kalamazoo River to hear the lumber legend. …The story begins 189 years ago when Singapore was established and the first mill went up three years later. By 1869, sawmills crowded the Kalamazoo River. The town of Singapore boasted a population of several hundred and was looking to become one of the “grand cities of the west.” The bustling lumber town made a name for itself after the Great Chicago Fire in 1871, when the Singapore sawmills supplied much of the wood used to rebuild the city. 

Read More