Region Archives: United States

Opinion / EdiTOADial

Forestry Can’t Be Left Behind in Canada–U.S. Trade Discussions

Forest Products Association of Canada
October 8, 2025
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States

Derek Nighbor

With over 200,000 direct jobs at stake, sector calls on the government of Canada to bring the same urgency to lumber as it has to steel, aluminum, and energy.

Canada’s forest sector is disappointed that yesterday’s discussions in Washington concluded without relief for 232-affected sectors, including lumber, as the long-standing Softwood Lumber dispute and recently applied tariffs on Canada’s wood manufacturing industry continue to put operations and jobs at risk across the country. While we recognize that the talks were described as substantive and appreciate that these negotiations are complex, after eight years of escalating duties on softwood lumber, the lack of tangible progress for forest sector workers and communities is deeply concerning. With more than 200,000 direct jobs and hundreds of towns and cities across Canada depending on a vibrant forest sector, lumber and forest products must be treated as a greater priority in Canada–U.S. trade discussions.

Our industry continues to face unjustified duties and tariffs that harm forestry workers here at home and raise costs for American families building and renovating their homes. We urge the Government of Canada to ensure that lumber and forest products are clearly on the agenda as talks continue this week. “We simply want to see more urgency, and frankly, we were left wanting more in the post-meeting reports coming out of yesterday’s discussions,” said Derek Nighbor, President and CEO of the Forest Products Association of Canada.

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Business & Politics

If Trump Tariffs Are Ruled Illegal, Refund Chaos Is Expected

By Laura Curtis
Bloomberg News in Transport Topics
October 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

President Trump has warned of disaster if the Supreme Court overturns his signature tariffs. For starters, it would unleash a bureaucratic nightmare involving reams of refund paper checks. Should the court uphold a US Court of Appeals ruling that Trump’s country-based tariffs are illegal, the government could owe the bulk of the $165 billion in duties collected so far this fiscal year back to companies that paid them. But they won’t have an easy time getting their money back; refunds are typically issued slowly and while the administration could streamline the process, experts fear that’s unlikely. …That means Trump likely won’t part with the funds easily if the tariffs are struck down, and the administration is expected to move quickly to reimpose levies using other legal authorities if that happens. The Supreme Court is expected to hear arguments in November in the case.

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Carney set to return to Ottawa without a deal to end the U.S. tariffs

The Canadian Press in CTV News
October 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON — Prime Minister Carney is set to return to Ottawa today with no deals to remove US tariffs from Canadian goods, but he’s leaving his key minister on Canada-US trade behind to keep pressing the Canadian case. US President Trump lavished praise on Carney during a meeting in the Oval Office on Tuesday and said the prime minister would walk away “very happy.” The president showed no signs of relenting on tariffs, however, and no deal was announced. Carney was scheduled to have a working breakfast this morning with Joshua Bolten, CEO of the Business Roundtable, while Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand was set to meet with Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Canada-US Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc will be staying behind in Washington. LeBlanc told reporters Tuesday that substantial progress was made in the White House talks this week.

In related coverage:

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Canada Piles on New Multibillion Dollar Lumber Subsidies In Attempt to Scuttle President Trump’s Trade Law Enforcement

The US Lumber Coalition
October 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

“President Trump rightly chose to support U.S. forestry workers with a fair and measured Section 232 tariff to help address Canada’s ongoing and egregious unfair trade practices, which put U.S. jobs at risk and demonstrate Canada’s contempt for our country’s trade rules,” stated Andrew Miller, Chair and Owner of Stimson Lumber Company. “After repeated findings that Canada’s industry is heavily subsidized… what does Canada do? It doubles down on its unfair trade practices by announcing billions of dollars in subsidies in one program after another for its softwood lumber industry,” added Miller. …“For some reason, Canada feels entitled to access the US market while simultaneously engaging in egregious and harmful unfair trade practices proven to be detrimental to U.S. lumber producers,” said Zoltan van Heyningen. …“The US lumber industry applauds the President for his continued efforts to stop these harmful trade practices,” added van Heyningen.

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Steelworkers union urges Carney to defend Canadian jobs and industries in Trump talks

United Steelworkers
October 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

TORONTO – United Steelworkers union National Director Marty Warren issued the following statement as Prime Minister Mark Carney travels to Washington, D.C., to meet with US President Trump. …“Canada’s softwood lumber industry is on the brink of collapse. Thousands of workers and entire communities are hanging by a thread while Trump’s tariffs deindustrialize our economy and threaten good jobs across the country. We need urgent action – not more concessions. If free and fair trade in strategic sectors cannot be restored, the federal government must be ready to retaliate and take all necessary measures to protect the integrity of Canadian industrial production and employment. …We cannot allow foreign producers to use Canada as a back door for cheap, dirty, or diverted imports. …If Washington wants access to our market, it must come with respect for fair trade and for the workers who keep our economy running.”

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Pushed by Trump, Canada enters a new era of economic nationalism

By Mark Rendell
The Globe and Mail
October 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Mark Carney

As trade negotiations with the United States sputtered over the summer, Prime Minister Mark Carney started talking about a new, domestically oriented solution for Canada’s tariff-battered industries. …On the surface, this looks like a suite of emergency measures to help companies bridge a temporary loss of demand similar to those announced as the COVID-19 pandemic spread. Taken together, however, it represents a more fundamental shift in Canada’s political economy. If key Canadian industries can’t sell into the US market, the argument goes, perhaps the government can cultivate domestic markets to pick up the slack. …In effect, US President Trump’s America First economic vision is pushing Canada to follow suit. …And it unveiled a new “Buy Canadian” procurement policy for steel and lumber. …Derek Nighbor, of the Forest Products Association of Canada, said there’s an incremental opportunity to sell more lumber in Canada. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Statement by the Canadian Lumber Trade Alliance on the U.S. Section 232 Tariffs on Canadian Softwood Lumber

By Canadian Lumber Trade Alliance
BC Lumber Trade Council
October 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The Canadian Lumber Trade Alliance (CLTA) issued the following statement. …Luc Theriault, President, Wood Products at Domtar and Co-Chair of the Canadian Lumber Trade Alliance, said “The U.S. government’s decision to impose a further 10% tariff – on top of existing duties of 35% – is disappointing. These measures unjustly punish Canadian producers, while also driving up costs for our neighbors in the US.” …“Canadian lumber does not pose a national security risk to the United States. Our industry directly supports 200,000 jobs and sustains over 300 forest-dependent communities across Canada. We will continue to work closely with the Government of Canada to defend against these unfortunate trade actions and to safeguard Canadian forestry jobs.” …In its recent Section 232 proclamation, the US signaled a willingness to pursue negotiations. The Canadian industry is ready to engage. It is essential that the Government of Canada match this commitment and play an active role in defending our industry.

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Carney to meet Trump next week, potential movement on steel and aluminum tariffs expected

By Stephanie Ha and Judy Trinh
CTV News
October 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Prime Minister Mark Carney is set to head to Washington early next week to meet with US. President Trump. …Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand, Industry Minister Melanie Joly and Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc will accompany Carney. This latest visit comes as Canadian and U.S. officials try to reach a deal on punishing American tariffs, and as a review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement gets underway. …Over the summer, the U.S. hiked its tariffs on steel and aluminum imports to 50%, with Canada imposing a 25% counter-tariff on U.S. steel and aluminum. …The source says next week’s meeting follows weeks of groundwork by LeBlanc, Canadian Ambassador to the US Kirsten Hillman and Clerk of the Privy Council Michael Sabia, with the team being aware the discussions could go sideways.

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Announcing the 2025 John J. Mulrooney Award Recipient

North American Wholesale Lumber Association
October 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Donna Whitaker

The North American Wholesale Lumber Association (NAWLA) is thrilled to present the prestigious John J. Mulrooney Award to Donna Whitaker. Donna Whitaker brings more than 32 years of experience in the lumber industry, holding pivotal roles and building a legacy of leadership and mentorship. She began her career with Rayonier and was part of Interfor’s historic first acquisitions in the Southern U.S. As Vice President of Sales & Marketing at Interfor, Donna has also contributed her leadership to numerous boards, including the Southern Forest Products Association (SFPA). …Known for her strategic insight, collaborative leadership and tireless advocacy, Donna has helped pave the way for women in an industry long dominated by men. Entering her next chapter, she remains deeply committed to advancing women in the forest products industry, creating environments where they are empowered to grow, lead and thrive.

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APA – The Engineered Wood Association Names New Chair and Trustee to Board

APA – The Engineered Wood Association
October 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

John Beers

Brian Cullen

APA – The Engineered Wood Association has made two changes to its Board of Trustees. John Beers III of Georgia-Pacific has been elected board chair, and Brian Cullen of PWT has joined the board. Beers is president of the structural panels business at Georgia-Pacific. As an industry veteran, Beers has a wealth of knowledge and experience acquired over the past 25 years. He began his career in sales with Grant Forest Products in 2002, joining Georgia-Pacific in 2010 as part of the company’s Grant acquisition. …Cullen is senior vice president of operations at PWT. He began his career at Weyerhaeuser in 2002, spending more than 13 years there in plant management, process improvement and industrial engineering. From there, Cullen went to Amazon, where he was a senior fulfillment operations manager. In 2016, he returned to the wood products industry, joining Boise Cascade Co. as production manager for the Eastern region.

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APA – The Engineered Wood Association Honors Jim Enright as 2025 Bronson Lewis Award Recipient

APA – The Engineered Wood Association
October 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Jim Enright (centre)

PWT President and CEO Jim Enright has been awarded the 2025 Bronson J. Lewis Award. Now in its 20th year, the award recognizes individuals for their leadership and outstanding contributions to the engineered wood industry. Enright received the award October 6 at the APA Annual Meeting in Phoenix. … Enright devoted more than 28 years to the industry and is widely respected for his leadership, insight, and dedication. Beginning as an APA trustee in 2003, Enright went on to serve on APA’s board for more than 15 years… Over the course of his career, he has held key roles at organizations such as WoodWorks – Wood Products Council, Willamette Industries, Rosboro, Standard Structures and Murphy Company. “There’s really no one more deserving of this prestigious award than Jim,” said Jeff Wagner, former APA Board of Trustees Chair.

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Decorative hardwoods industry urges Trump to expand products under section 232 tariffs proposal

By Larry Adams
The Woodworking Network
October 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON, D.C. — On Oct. 1, 2025, nine presidents and CEOs representing American manufacturers of hardwood plywood, engineered wood flooring, and hardwood veneer asked President Trump to add their products to the recently announced Section 232 tariffs on wood products. The current 232 tariff proposal focuses on cabinets, vanities, lumber, upholstered furniture, and other products. Section 232 tariffs are trade restrictions, such as import duties, that the President of the United States can impose on goods that are found to threaten national security. According to the group of companies, more than 100,000 American manufacturing jobs are threatened by the “flood of dumped and subsidized decorative hardwood product imports from outside of North America.” The group pointed to the news that Roseburg Forest Products had closed its last hardwood plywood mill and exited the hardwood plywood market as a result of these imports, which the company said dominate 80% of the U.S. market.

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Intertribal Timber Council Appoints Cal Mukumoto As Executive Director

City Biz
October 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

The Intertribal Timber Council is proud to announce the appointment of Cal Mukumoto as its first Executive Director, effective October 1, 2025. Mukumoto brings more than four decades of experience in forestry, Tribal enterprise leadership, and public service to ITC. His distinguished career includes serving as Oregon State Forester, where he managed a $650 million annual budget and a workforce of more than 1,300 employees while advancing forest health, sustainability, and economic value for the state. He also served as CEO and Board Chair of the Coquille Economic Development Corporation, overseeing casino, broadband, and other Tribal business ventures, and leading them through critical periods of growth and stability. His professional roots date back to the 1980s, when he worked with the Makah Tribal Council to establish the Makah Forestry Enterprise, which improved the profitability of Tribal timber sales. 

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Erik Wilson Joins Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau as Executive Vice President

Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau
October 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Erik Wilson

FEDERAL WAY, Washington – The Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau (PLIB) has hired Erik Wilson as their new Executive Vice President. In this newly established leadership role, Erik will be working closely with PLIB President Jeff Fantozzi and the Board of Directors and staff directors to drive PLIB’s strategic objectives and reinforce relationships with its stakeholders, regulatory agencies, and industry partners. His responsibilities will also include staff development, brand enhancement both domestically and internationally, and the expansion of LIBs educational programs. “Appointing Erik to the EVP role accomplishes an important milestone in PLIB’s strategic and succession plans,” said PLIB President Jeff Fantozzi. His integrity and wide-ranging industry experience brings valuable depth and expertise to our already exceptional team. We are extremely excited about this new chapter in PLIB’s evolution.”

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Hancock Lumber sales leader named NeLMA chairman

The HBS Dealer
October 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Matt Duprey

Hancock Lumber’s Sawmill Chief Sales Officer, Matt Duprey, has been elected as the newest Chairman of the Northeastern Lumber Manufacturers Association (NeLMA). …Duprey has been with Hancock since 1994 after earning his Forestry and Wood Science + Technology degree. First starting in the yard at Hancock’s Casco Mill, Duprey eventually worked his way through various positions and into his current role as Chief Sales Officer of Eastern White Pine. Prior to his appointment as NeLMA Chairman, Matt also served as the chair of its marketing committee for a decade. …Current NeLMA President, Jeff Easterling said, “NeLMA is pleased to see Matt continue his ascent within the organization as he steps into the Chairman of the Board of Directors role.” Duprey said: “I feel quite proud of this appointment.”

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Weyerhaeuser to Invest $1 Million in West Virginia Community

Weyerhaeuser Company
October 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

BUCKHANNON, West Virginia — Weyerhaeuser announced a commitment to invest $1 million in Buckhannon, West Virginia, through the company’s THRIVE program. The investment will be made over the next several years with input from local elected officials, business leaders, nonprofits, employees and other community partners. …”Rural operating communities like Buckhannon are so important to the success of our business and to the greater health of the forest products industry,” says Devin W. Stockfish, CEO. “We want to make sure these communities remain great places to live, work and do business for years to come.” …Weyerhaeuser’s THRIVE program goes far beyond the financial investment. In selected communities, Weyerhaeuser leaders engage deeply with local stakeholders to identify and prioritize the challenges to be addressed through long-term collaboration, investment and advocacy. Potential opportunities in Buckhannon include youth education and workforce development.

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EPA to look into wood-industry pollution in Missoula’s rivers

By Laura Lundquist
The Missoula Current
October 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MISSOULA, Montana — The US Environmental Protection Agency has agreed to analyze samples from local rivers to see how much contamination is from wood-processing plants, including the Smurfit-Stone pulp mill site. During Thursday’s meeting of the Frenchtown Smurfit-Stone Citizens Advisory Group, a few group members hit the highlights of a brief tour of the Smurfit mill site they took with Congressman Ryan Zinke and his staff on Sept. 24. During the tour, Zinke was told about a new development where the EPA has agreed to have some of their “displaced scientists” analyze several years’ worth of fish-tissue and water data collected from the Clark Fork, Bitterroot and Blackfoot rivers. …However, Smurfit isn’t the only source of contamination. Wood-processing businesses exist in several places along the Clark Fork, Blackfoot and Bitterroot rivers, and they all likely pollute the rivers with dioxins, furans and dioxin-like PCB contaminants. 

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Finance & Economics

North American Lumber: Production Outpaces Demand Amid Housing Headwinds

ResourceWise Forest Products Blog
October 8, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

North America’s softwood lumber market looks likely to end 2025 no more settled than it was at the beginning. Producers and buyers alike continue navigating a landscape shaped by fluctuating demand, shifting trade patterns, and an uncertain housing outlook. Despite modest production declines in early 2025, the lumber market remains oversupplied. Mills across the US and Canada are contending with high inventories built up earlier in the year. Expectations of tariff hikes spurred an early rush of exports from Canada to the US, flooding the market while demand was soft. However, in the first half of 2025 softwood lumber exports from Canada to the US declined, while US imports from Europe in the first seven months of 2025 increased by 6% year-over-year. Underlying these supply pressures is a US housing market stuck in the doldrums. August saw an 8.5% decline in overall housing starts, with single-family construction down nearly 7%.

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Trump’s Wood Tariffs Are Coming. Who Will Be Hit Hardest

By Ilena Peng
Bloomberg Economics
October 9, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

President Trump unveiled sweeping tariffs on imported lumber and wood products that his administration says are needed to protect the US economy and boost domestic manufacturing. Starting Oct. 14, softwood lumber will face 10% duties, while kitchen cabinets, bathroom vanities, and other finished wood goods will be hit with 25% tariffs that rise further in January. The biggest blow will fall on Canada, the US’s top lumber supplier, whose lumber exports are already subject to separate duties totaling 35.19%. …Though Canada dominates exports of lumber to the US, many other countries export wood products to the US. The Section 232 tariffs on lumber and wood products affect them in varying ways; some countries benefit from trade deals with the US that cap the rates, and others bear the full brunt. …Though lumber accounts for less than 20% of building costs, the National Association of Homebuilders has long said that restrictions on Canadian lumber translate to higher construction costs. [to access the full story a Bloomberg subscription is required]

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Lumber Futures Ease from Near 2-Month Highs

Trading View
October 7, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures fell toward $600 per thousand board feet, easing from the near two-month high of $615.50 on October 3rd as the prior speculative rally reversed amid softer demand, looming tariff implementation, and inventory rebalancing. Demand has weakened as homebuilders and material buyers pull back amid higher construction costs and tighter mortgage affordability that curb new housing starts. At the same time, many market participants had frontloaded purchases ahead of the US 10% Section 232 tariff on softwood lumber and higher duties on wood furniture and cabinets effective October 14th, creating a short-term inventory overhang that reduced fresh order flow. On the supply side, domestic sawmills have ramped up shipments to cover earlier shortages, while Canadian exporters remain constrained by heavy anti-dumping and countervailing duties that limit flexibility, easing prompt tightness. [END]

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Trump has his eye on Canadian forestry stocks. You should, too

By David Berman
The Globe and Mail
October 3, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

It’s hard to find anything good to say about Canadian forestry stocks right now. Some of the biggest names in the sector have been on a downward slide for the past three years. … But the onslaught of grim news has highlighted some bargains. …Okay, the definition of attractive rests on an assumption that risk-averse investors might not want to embrace just yet: Despite Mr. Trump’s bluster, the US still needs Canadian lumber in a big way to feed its lumber-intensive home construction industry. Says who? The National Association of Home Builders, for one. …Some analysts believe that US forestry companies will struggle to replace Canadian softwood. Ben Isaacson, at Bank of Nova Scotia, estimates that US producers would have to build 50 new mills to become fully independent of Canadian lumber. Just two companies build the specialized equipment required in mills. They would struggle to supply even two mills a year. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Fannie Mae Publishes September 2025 National Housing Survey Results

Fannie Mae
October 7, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON, DC – Fannie Mae published the results of its September 2025 National Housing Survey, which includes the Home Purchase Sentiment Index® (HPSI), a measure of consumer sentiment toward housing. Month over month, the HPSI remained unchanged at 71.4. Year over year, the HPSI is down 2.5 points. The HPSI is constructed from answers to six NHS questions that solicit consumers’ evaluations of housing market conditions and address topics that are related to their home purchase decisions. The questions ask consumers whether they think that it is a good or bad time to buy or to sell a house, what direction they expect home prices and mortgage interest rates to move, how concerned they are about losing their jobs, and whether their incomes are higher or lower than they were a year earlier.

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Consumer Watchdog Urges Supreme Court to Rein In Presidential Tariff Powers Driving Up Consumer Prices

By Consumer Watchdog
PR Newswire
October 8, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — Consumer Watchdog filed an amicus curiae brief in the US Supreme Court urging the Justices to strike down President Donald Trump’s sweeping “emergency” tariffs, warning that unchecked presidential power under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) threatens both consumers’ pocketbooks and the Constitution’s separation of powers. The brief argues that:

  • Tariffs act as a regressive tax that raises prices on consumer household essentials and disproportionately burdens families and small businesses.
  • IEEPA lacks an “intelligible principle”—it provides no limits on the President’s ability to impose, vary, or lift tariffs, no standards for rate or duration, and no provision for judicial review.
  • Recent precedent underscores that Congress must set clear boundaries when delegating economic power; IEEPA, by contrast, contains none.

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Forestry

Domtar Releases First Post-Integration Sustainability Report, Marking a Milestone Toward 2030 Goals

Domtar
October 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

FORT MILL, South Carolina — In a major stride towards its ambitious 2030 sustainability strategy, Domtar released its sustainability report. The report, entitled Building on Strong Legacies, is the first comprehensive release since the successful operational unification of Domtar’s three legacy companies last October under the Domtar brand. “This report delivers an initial view of our unified company’s performance across a comprehensive set of sustainability indicators,” said John D. Williams, Non-Executive Chairman. “It marks a pivotal milestone following the May 2025 release of our 2030 sustainability strategy.” …Qualitative content within the report is structured with reference to the three strategic pillars of Environmental Stewardship, Our People and Communities, and Responsible Business. …”We are consolidating our sustainability report and unifying our CDP submissions, ensuring everyone can evaluate our environmental performance holistically as an integrated company,” said Sabrina de Branco, global chief sustainability officer.

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National Loggers Day: Honoring the Backbone of the Wood Supply Chain

By Jeff Jenkins
The Forest Resources Association
October 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

As we prepare to celebrate National Loggers Day on October 12, it’s a perfect time to recognize and thank the hardworking men and women who harvest and deliver the timber that keeps our forests, communities, and economy moving. Logging is one of the nation’s oldest industries, but today’s loggers are far more than tree cutters. They are highly trained professionals who operate sophisticated, high-tech equipment, follow strict safety standards, work closely with landowners to ensure that the timber harvest meets their expectations, and promote forest regeneration for future generations. …Today’s logging blends time-honored skills with modern techniques, focusing on responsible forest management and sustainability. …National Loggers Day is a time not only to celebrate the work they do, but also to honor those who have been injured or lost their lives in the woods. …logging touches our daily lives in ways many of us don’t realize.

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US groups urge Brussels not to bow to Washington on deforestation law

By Sofia Sanchez Manzanaro
EURACTIV
October 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

US civil society groups are urging the European Commission to resist Washington’s pressure to delay the EU’s deforestation regulation (EUDR) or tweak the rules to grant the country preferential treatment, according to a letter seen by Euractiv. The missive, sent this morning to Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and the Commissioners responsible for green rules, the economy and trade, warns against any backtracking. “We are particularly concerned by the Commission’s apparent willingness to offer the U.S. special treatment under the EUDR as part of ongoing EU-U.S. trade negotiations,” the letter reads. The organisations refer to the joint statement issued by Brussels and Washington in September, which labels the US as posing “negligible risk to global deforestation.” Rick Jacobsen, senior manager for commodities policy at the US NGO Environmental Investigation Agency, told Euractiv that US interests have “ramped up the pressure campaign” to weaken the law before it even comes into force.

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Forest Stewardship Council US Announces Revised Forest Stewardship Standard Approved

By Forest Stewardship Council – US
EIN Presswire
October 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

ATLANTA — Forest Stewardship Council US announced the approval of the revised Forest Stewardship Standard 2.0. “The revision aligns the U.S. standard with FSC International’s updated Principles & Criteria (V5) and International Generic Indicators (IGIs), while also addressing key stakeholder priorities,” says Amy Clark Eagle, FSC US Director of Science and Certification. Key updates under the new FSC US Forest Stewardship Standard include: At least 10% of every FSC-certified forest will need to be in a conservation area – this means more than 3.61 million acres being managed with a focus on conserving environmental or cultural values. …January 1, 2026 will be the official publication date for Version 2.0 of the FSC US Forest Stewardship Standard and the revised standard will become effective April 2, 2026. This will be followed by an 18-month transition period in which both the current (Version 1.1) and revised standards (Version 2.0) will be valid.

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Proclamation: Fire Prevention Week, 2025

The White House
October 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

During Fire Prevention Week, we call on every household and community to prioritize fire prevention by taking steps that reduce risks and strengthen safety.  Americans honor the steadfast courage and dedication of firefighters and first responders across our Nation who protect our lives, property, and natural resources from the devastation of fire. …In recent years, our Nation has seen the staggering costs of poor fire prevention and disaster preparedness.  When wildfires erupted in California earlier this year, sparked by arson and exacerbated by the Green New Scam agenda and disastrous forest management, State and local leaders were left totally unprepared to safeguard our fellow citizens. …This week, we offer our sincere thanks to all the dedicated firefighters and first responders who do not flinch in times of crisis.  …That is why, earlier this year, I was proud to sign a bill into law for permanent pay increases for Federal wildland firefighters.  

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Outcry as Trump plots more roads and logging in US forests: ‘You can almost hear the chainsaws’

By Oliver Milman
The Guardian
October 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

VIRGINIA — Today, this site in George Washington national forest, along with other near-pristine forests across the US that amount to 58m acres, equivalent to the size of the UK, could soon see chainsaws whir and logging trucks rumble through them amid a push by Donald Trump to raze these ecosystems for timber. The Trump administration has said it will rescind Clinton’s roadless rule, more than two decades after its introduction appeared to mark the end of the bitter battle between environmentalists and loggers over the future of America’s best remaining woodland. …Yet advocates of the roadless rule argue these areas should not be viewed as mere sources of timber, pointing to their crucial ecological role in protecting and filtering the streams and rivers that provide clean drinking water to millions of Americans. …The American Forest Resource Council called the roadless rule removal “a long-overdue correction”.

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Forest Service falls behind on wildfire prevention

Center for Western Priorities
October 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Despite the Trump administration’s pledge to aggressively clear overgrowth from national forests, the U.S. Forest Service is falling significantly short on wildfire mitigation work. By mid-September, the agency had only treated about 2.2 million acres through thinning and prescribed burns. That’s far short of the over 4 million acres treated during the last year of the Biden administration, and it’s also behind the agency’s annual average over the past decade. Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz blamed “operational challenges” and said agency resources were diverted to help battle blazes in Canada. However, Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon is blaming the slowdown in fuel treatments on the Trump administration firing thousands of Forest Service employees earlier this year. …the government shutdown has stopped wildfire prevention efforts across the country’s entire 193 million acres of national forest land [at] the ideal time for the agency to conduct safe prescribed burns across the West.

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‘All the trees are dead’: An ancient California forest has been wiped out

By Julie Johnson
The San Francisco Chronicle
October 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Roughly 500 years ago in California’s High Sierra, pine cones dropped to the ground and a cycle began. …Half a millennia later, US Forest Service scientists began testing strategies to save these now ancient and massive trees in the little-known area east of Fresno called the Teakettle Experimental Forest. They had plans to light a huge prescribed burn to clear overgrowth next year.  But then the Garnet Fire ignited and scorched all 3,000 federally protected acres on its path through the Sierra National Forest. …Scott Scherbinski, a biologist at the Climate & Wildfire Institute, said “It will be a start-over event for this forest.” …Malcolm North, a Forest Service ecologist said…fires with less intensity can be beneficial in California’s fire-adapted landscapes, but the Garnet Fire, when it burned through in September, may have killed most trees and sterilized the ground — making it unlikely the forest can rebound without intervention. [to access the full story a San Francisco Chronicle subscription is required]

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Oregon’s Douglas fir trees in crisis with widespread, ‘unprecedented’ dieback

By Zach Urness
The Register-Guard
October 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Drought and insects have killed an unprecedented number of Oregon’s Douglas fir trees during the last decade, costing billions in timber value, damaging infrastructure and ramping up wildfire danger. Beginning in 2015 and accelerating with the 2021 heat dome, roughly 635,000 acres of forest have been impacted by what’s known as Douglas fir “dieback” in southwest Oregon and the Willamette Valley. “It’s hitting trees of all sizes, but it’s hitting larger and older trees the hardest,” Max Bennett, a retired forest researcher with Oregon State University, told members of the Oregon Legislature on Sept. 30. “What we’re seeing now is unprecedented.” The dieback has led to $1.1 billion in lost timber value, $500 million in potential road hazard costs and created a tinderbox of forest fuel capable of spawning the West’s most destructive wildfires, a group of foresters and researchers told the House Committee on Agriculture, Land Use, Natural Resources and Water.

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Wqwhington’s stream buffer rule: Big economic impact, little environmental evidence

By Jacob Vail, Hampton Family Forests
The Cascadia Daily News
October 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Jacob Vail

I work for a local forest products company and in this line of work, it can feel like we live and breathe forest policy. …Unfortunately, major changes to forest policy have recently been proposed without adequate analysis or justification. The state Forest Practices Board is currently grappling with an ongoing debate surrounding the regulation of non-fish perennial streams, essentially streams without fish that flow year-round. The Washington Department of Ecology is proposing a new rule that would create additional tree buffers on these streams, taking another 200,000 acres of private forestland out of timber production. If passed, this rule would reduce harvests on private lands by 4–8%. …Washington’s private forestlands are already sustaining salmon habitat and clean water, and there’s no evidence current temperatures are harming fish or that the new rule will improve fish recovery. The Forest Practices Board should restart the adaptive management process to determine the best path forward.

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To fight rising wildfire danger, New Jersey turns to tree thinning in the Pinelands

By Jeff Pillets
The Jersey Vindicator
October 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Last April, a pair of teenage boys … set fire to wooden pallets someone had dumped in the woods. Within a few hours it became one of the fastest-moving and most destructive wildfires on record in the New Jersey Pinelands. By the time it was brought under control three weeks later, about 15,000 acres of preserved forest were destroyed, and thousands of people were forced to flee their homes and businesses. Most official accounts of what became known as the Jones Road Fire attribute its ferocious power to the intensifying cycles of drought and heat linked to climate change that continue to affect coastal areas. But forestry experts in New Jersey point to another cause. …On Sept. 18, the New Jersey Pinelands Commission took a big step toward more aggressive management of the state’s Pinelands National Preserve voting to thin out a 12,000-acre stretch of pine and oak woodland adjacent to the wildfire site.

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27th annual wildfire academy begins next week at Camp Swift

Texas A&M Forest Service – Texas A&M University
October 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

The 27th annual Capital Area Interagency Wildfire and Incident Management Academy begins at the Camp Swift National Guard Facility in Bastrop, Texas, next week. The academy will take place Oct. 7-20, 2025. Each year, federal, state, local and private firefighters travel from across the state and nation to attend the academy to continue their education and earn National Wildfire Coordinating Group training qualifications. This academy is one of two Texas Interagency Wildfire and Incident Management Academies, which aim to enhance wildland firefighters’ knowledge, utilizing National Wildfire Coordinating Group standards, while promoting safe and cost-effective operations. …Academy partners include the Texas Army National Guard, Texas A&M Forest Service, Texas Parks & Wildlife Department, USDA Forest Service, National Park Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service, Texas Department of Emergency Management, Federal Bureau of Prisons and Texas Intrastate Fire Mutual Aid System.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Connecting sunlight and forests to curbing climate change

By Meredith Woodward King
Clark University News
October 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

Christopher Williams

WORCESTER, Massachusetts — To curb the effects of climate change, private and public organizations across the world manage carbon projects to plant or restore forests, aiming to remove CO2 from the atmosphere. In turn they sell carbon credits to companies aiming to offset their greenhouse gas emissions. But the climate benefits of some carbon projects may be overestimated because they don’t account for changes in albedo — the percentage of sunlight that a forest reflects or absorbs, making it cooler or hotter — in their calculations, according to an Oct. 6 Nature Communications article co-authored by Geography Professor Christopher Williams of Clark’s School of Climate, Environment, and Society. “Nearly half of all reforestation credits issued in these projects would not have been issued if albedo had been used as a threshold for project siting and deducted for remaining projects, canceling about $8 billion of credits at an average price of $20 per tonne [a metric ton],” Williams says.

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Supreme Court shoots down challenge to Washington’s carbon market

By Conrad Swanson
The Seattle Times
October 7, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

WASHINGTON — The US Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear a high-profile challenge to Washington’s Climate Commitment Act, marking yet another victory for the state’s keystone climate policy. The lawsuit started with the private operator of a natural gas power plant in Grays Harbor County. The plant is required to buy pollution allowances to pay for the many tons of greenhouse gasses it emits into the atmosphere under the 2021 “Cap and Invest” law. The plant’s owner, Chicago-based Invenergy, sued Laura Watson, then-head of Washington’s Department of Ecology, in late 2022, arguing that the state’s carbon market is unconstitutional. The lawsuit claimed that the state law discriminated against privately operated natural gas plants. In 2023, US District Court Judge Benjamin Settle dismissed the case. The company appealed. …The Supreme Court on Monday denied Invenergy’s petition outright. The justices did not publish any written justification for their decision.

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Health & Safety

50 Years of Answering the Call

Logan Health
September 25, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: US West

The first rural hospital-based air ambulance program in the country was born out of tragedy 50 years ago near the Hungry Horse Reservoir. In July 1975, a 27-year-old logger named Dennis Buck was severely injured in a workplace accident. His crew worked with a nearby forest service helicopter to form a makeshift rescue operation. Unfortunately, Dennis died before he could reach the hospital, an all-too-common occurrence in the logging industry at the time. Recognizing the need for change, Clyde Smith, co-founder of the Montana Logging Association, put his own logging business up as collateral and worked with Kalispell General Hospital, now Logan Health Medical Center, to form an air-ambulance program to rural workers across northwest Montana. Today, 50 years later, ALERT has evolved into a comprehensive emergency medical transport program. In addition to more than 21,000 helicopter flights in its history, the service now includes a fixed-wing aircraft transport service, a specialty pediatric and neonatal flight nurse team and dedicated ground ambulances…

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As attention on the issue grows, major wildfire smoke conference kicks off in Colorado

By Murphy Woodhouse
Boise State Public Radio News
October 6, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: US West

In recent months, concern about the health risks wildland firefighters face has been growing. Now a major conference exploring that issue has started in Colorado. Over the summer, the New York Times published a series of stories documenting what it called an “occupational health crisis” due to the heavy smoke that wildland firefighters breathe without respiratory protection. During a U.S. House oversight hearing last month, members pressed the U.S. Forest Service chief on the issue. Certain masks are now available for voluntary use, and federal officials are studying further changes. “A lot of moving parts,” said Luke Montrose, who runs a lab at Colorado State University that focuses heavily on smoke and firefighter health. He’s the organizer of the Rocky Mountain Wildfire Smoke Symposium, which started Monday in Loveland, Colo. Its theme this year: Working to Protect Those Who Work in Smoke.

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Chemical Safety Board investigation focuses on combustible dust

Safety and Health Magazine
October 7, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

FREMONT, Nebraska — Confined and concentrated combustible dust can ignite and generate secondary dust explosions “powerful enough to destroy buildings,” the Chemical Safety Board warns. CSB issued the warning as part of its ongoing investigation into a fatal explosion and fire on July 29 at the Horizon Biofuels facility in Fremont, Nebraska. Preliminary findings show that the blast was triggered by a combustible wood dust explosion, “a well-known – and completely avoidable – hazard,” CSB Chair Steve Owens said. …CSB says combustible dust, when shaken loose and dispersed into an “explosive concentration in the confinement of a closed space” after a primary event, can explode when exposed to an ignition source. The agency says it’s continuing to: Examine the facility’s design, process flow, dust handling and dust control systems. …The agency said that “complete findings, analyses and recommendations, if appropriate,” will be part of a final investigation report.

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