Region Archives: United States

Business & Politics

International Paper Announces Agreement to Acquire DS Smith

International Paper
April 16, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

MEMPHIS, Tennessee — International Paper and DS Smith today announced that they have reached agreement on the terms of a recommended all-share combination, creating a truly global leader in sustainable packaging solutions. The terms of the Combination value each DS Smith share at 415 pence per share, and will result in IP issuing 0.1285 shares for each DS Smith share, resulting in pro forma ownership of 66.3% for IP shareholders and 33.7% for DS Smith shareholders, implying a transaction value of approximately $9.9 billion. The Combination is expected to close by the fourth quarter of 2024. …Mark S. Sutton, Chairman and CEO of IP said, “DS Smith is a leader in packaging solutions with an extensive reach across Europe, which complements IP’s capabilities and will accelerate growth through innovation and sustainability”.

Related coverage in the Guardian: IP settles all-share deal after tussle with British rival Mondi

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European Commission OKs Smurfit Kappa, WestRock merger

By Marissa McNees
Recycling Today
April 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The European Commission, under the EU Merger Regulation, has approved the merger between Irish paperboard and packaging company Smurfit Kappa and Atlanta-based WestRock. The decision was reached April 5. The commission concluded that the transaction between Smurfit Kappa and fellow paper and packaging company WestRock—the largest recovered paper consumer in North America—would not raise competition concerns “given the companies’ limited combined market position resulting from the proposed transaction.” …Smurfit Kappa and WestRock officially announced the merger agreement Sept. 12, 2023, and, at the time, expected the deal to close in the second quarter of this year. The combined company, Smurfit WestRock, will be incorporated and domiciled in Ireland with global headquarters in Smurfit Kappa’s current home, Dublin, and North and South American headquarters in Atlanta.

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Fourth Rural Oregon Mill Closes in Seven Months

By Garrett Andrews
Oregon Business
April 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

A mill in Riddle is the fourth to close in rural Oregon since October. The family-owned C&D Lumber Co., which shuts May 2, has operated since 1890, and in the same spot since the 1950s. The 78 positions eliminated bring the total cut around the state since fall to an estimated 300. (That’s out of around 23,000 people employed in wood products manufacturing in Oregon.) Operators offered similar accounts of economic challenges: fluctuating market prices, timber shortages, rising operating costs and a weak lumber market. A 2021 state law, the Private Forest Accord, is also said to be a factor. The new forestry rules… are said to have benefitted larger companies that own their own land while raising the price of timber available to smaller mills. The other shuttered facilities were the Rosboro stud mill in Springfield, the Hampton Lumber-owned mill in Banks and the Interfor-owned sawmill in Philomath.

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Forest owners file $225M lawsuit against PG&E for Dixie Fire damages

By Brandon Downs
CBS News
April 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

SAN FRANCISCO – A $225 million lawsuit was filed against Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) for damages caused in connection with the Dixie Fire that burned across five Northern California counties in 2021. The plaintiffs in the lawsuit, which was filed in the San Francisco County Superior Court, are the owners of the Collins Almanor Forest, located in Plumas and Tehama counties. The owners claim fire-related injuries and damages sustained by several forestland owners whose property and timber were charred in the fire. They are seeking an estimated $225 million in damages for property loss. They are also seeking environmental damages as they say their forestland that was burned “has been managed sustainably since 1902.” …Cal Fire said the fire started when a tree fell onto PG&E equipment near the Cresta Dam in Plumas County.

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Smurfit Kappa expands to Anderson County, North Carolina

By Greg Wilson
The Anderson Observer
April 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

NORTH CAROLINA — A global paper-based packaging company has purchased a 259,000 square-foot building in Anderson County at Exit 27 on I-85. Smurfit Kappa has committed to bring 200 new jobs and a $68 million investment as part of the new facility. The Irish firm currently operates at 350 sites in 36 countries, with 46,000 employees worldwide, and specializes in cardboard packaging manufacturing, producing 11 billion square meters of such products a year. The company is also active in the paper-making and recycling sectors. The company expects to acquire a new 259,000-square-foot facility. Burn said the building, an industrial spec building, is another example of the benefits if private investment is benefiting the county. The building is part of Hunt Midwest’s Evergreen 85 Logistics Park.

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Two Rivers Lumber plans $115 million sawmill project in Coosa County, Alabama

By Jerry Underwood
Alabama News Center
April 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

ALABAMA — Governor Kay Ivey announced today that Two Rivers Lumber plans to invest $115 million to build a state-of-the-art sawmill in Coosa County as the company’s second operation in Alabama. Demopolis-based Two Rivers Lumber has committed to creating 130 jobs at the new Alabama sawmill, which will specialize in the production of Southern yellow pine dimensional lumber. …Two Rivers was established by the McElroy family, owners of McElroy Truck Lines in Cuba, Alabama, and Roy Geiger, owner of Sumter Timber in Jefferson, Alabama. The company opened its first sawmill in Marengo County in 2017. Today, the facility near Demopolis has an annual capacity of 200 million board feet and 145 full-time employees. …Peak North America is leading construction of the facility in Kellyton, with a start set for June.

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RoyOMartin Announces $30 Million Modernization of Timber Manufacturing Facility in Southwest Louisiana

Louisiana Economic Development News
April 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

OAKDALE, Louisiana – Martco, parent company for timber sourcing and manufacturing company RoyOMartin, announced it will invest more than $30 million to install technologically advanced production equipment at its Allen Parish plant that produces oriented strand board for the housing industry The RoyOMartin OSB plant is one of the parish’s largest employers, and as a result of this expansion, the company will retain its 232 full-time employees who earn an annual average salary of $75,000. Louisiana Economic Development estimates the project will also result in nearly 600 indirectly supported jobs in the state, for a total of 831 retained and indirectly supported jobs. …RoyOMartin has its headquarters in Alexandria and additional plants in Chopin, Louisiana, and Corrigan, Texas. To win the Oakdale project, Louisiana Economic Development offered a competitive incentive package that includes a performance-based Retention and Modernization Tax Credit valued at $455,400.

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Spearfish timber mill lays off quarter of its staff

By Lee Strubinger
South Dakata Public Broadcasting
April 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

The Black Hills’ largest sawmill is announcing layoffs and reductions at its Spearfish facility. Nieman Enterprises says it’s laying off 50 employees—roughly a quarter of its staff at Spearfish Forest Products. The timber mill says the layoffs are a “direct result of reductions to the Black Hills National Forest timber sale program.” “We have done everything possible to prevent this unfortunate outcome that will impact these employees, our community and ultimately the health of the forest,” said Jim Neiman, president of Neiman Enterprises, in the layoff announcement. Timber sales have dropped significantly since 2018. …Large wildfires in the early 2000s, the mountain pine beetle epidemic and aggressive timber harvesting as a result have led to a reduction in sawtimber. …This year, state lawmakers rejected a proposal to place $20 million in federal pandemic aid money into a grant for the timber industry.

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Southern Cypress Manufacturers Association elects 2024 officers

By Larry Adams
Woodworking Network
April 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Truss Beasley

PITTSBURGH — Members of the Southern Cypress Manufacturers Association (SCMA) elected officers for 2024 at the association’s Annual Meeting on March 25, in Charleston, South Carolina. Truss Beasley, Beasley Forest Products, Hazlehurst, Georgia, was elected SCMA president. He joined BFP in 2014 and is currently serving as vice president of business development for the Beasley Group sawmills and flooring plants. …Mike Shook, Norcross Supply Company, Peachtree Corners, Georgia, was elected vice president. Shook joined NSC in 1991, and currently serves as president and chairman of the board. For more information about the SCMA, visit CypressInfo.org.

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Former Allegheny Wood Products owner now facing criminal charges after plant closure

By Chris Lawrence
West Virginia MetroNews
April 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MOOREFIELD, West Virginia — The former president of the now defunct Allegheny Wood Products has been hit with criminal charges in Hardy County Magistrate Court over failed payment to a pair of independent loggers. A criminal complaint, filed March 25 by Hardy County Sheriff Steve Dawson, charged John W. Crites Jr. with two felony counts of obtaining goods by means of false pretense. Court documents indicated loggers Mark Rexrode and Victoria Dyer each delivered loads of logs to the Allegheny Wood Products yard. The checks used to pay both individuals bounced because the account with United Bank had been frozen. …Crites’ attorney said.. “The bank declared a default and froze AWP’s operating accounts. For valid reasons, people are angry. Yet, a company not paying bills after a bank seizes its money doesn’t rise to the level of a criminal case. This is a civil matter. …The criminal charges should be dismissed”.

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SFPA/SLMA hosts 2024 Spring Meeting for Southern Pine Lumber Community

LBM Journal
April 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Southern Pine lumber was front and center during the Southeastern Lumber Manufacturers Association’s and Southern Forest Products Association’s 2024 Spring Meeting held March 20-22 at The Hotel Monteleone in New Orleans. The 2024 Spring Meeting brought 246 Southern Pine industry professionals together representing 154 companies directly involved with the production of Southern Pine lumber, from sawmills to equipment manufacturers to service providers. A trade expo was also held during the spring meeting, with 39 companies showcasing their services to support the manufacturing and delivery of Southern Pine lumber. “This was a can’t-miss opportunity to network within the Southern Pine industry,” said Bryan Smalley, SLMA’s president.

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Finance & Economics

U.S. Housing Starts Pull Back Sharply In March, Extending Recent Volatility

RTT News
April 16, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

After reporting a substantial rebound in new residential construction in the U.S. in the previous month, the Commerce Department released a report on Tuesday showing housing starts pulled back by much more than expected in the month of March. The Commerce Department said housing starts plummeted by 14.7% to an annual rate of 1.321 million in March after soaring by 12.7% to a revised rate of 1.549 million in February. …Multi-family starts led the pullback in March, plummeting by 21.7% to an annual rate of 299,000 after surging by 7.0% to a rate of 382,000 in February. The report said single-family starts also tumbled by 12.4% to an annual rate of 1.022 million in March after skyrocketing by 14.6% to a rate of 1.167 million in February. The Commerce Department said building permits also dove by 4.3% to an annual rate of 1.458 million in March after jumping by 2.3% to a revised rate of 1.523 million in February.

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US Building Material Prices Continue to Rise in March

By Jess Wade
NAHB – Eye on Housing
April 11, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Inputs to residential construction, goods less food and energy, increased for the fifth straight month, according to the most recent Producer Price Index (PPI) report published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The index for inputs to residential construction, goods less food and energy, represents building materials used in residential construction. The non-seasonally adjusted index increased 0.21% in March following a 0.54% increase in February and a 1.25% in January. While the index increases are slowing, the index continues to grow at a faster rate than 2023 as the average monthly change in 2023 was 0.15%. Additionally, the index increases for the first three months of 2024 mirrors previous years, showing consistent monthly increases for January, February and March. …The seasonally adjusted PPI for softwood lumber rose for the first time since July of 2023, up 1.90% in March from February. Softwood lumber prices were 6.76% lower in March 2024 when compared to 2023. 

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Remodeling Market Sentiment Remains in Positive Territory in First Quarter

By Eric Lynch
NAHB – Eye on Housing
April 11, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The NAHB/Westlake Royal Remodeling Market Index (RMI) for the first quarter of 2024 posted a reading of 66, down one point compared to the previous quarter. Demand for remodeling remains solid and an RMI of 66 is consistent with NAHB’s forecast for remodeling spending in 2024. Nevertheless, construction costs are still an issue in some places, as rising prices for labor and building materials continue to be major headwinds to faster growth for this sector. …The Remodeling Market Index (RMI) is an average of two major component indices: the Current Conditions Index and the Future Indicators Index. …The Current Conditions Index averaged 74, remaining unchanged from the previous quarter. …The Future Indicators Index was 59, which was also unchanged from the previous quarter.

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US Inflation Stays Hot as Housing Cost Growth Persists

By Fan-Yu Kuo
NAHB – Eye on Housing
April 10, 2024
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Consumer prices continued to rise in March, with shelter and gasoline prices driving over half of the total increase. This marks the third consecutive strong reading. Despite a slowdown in the year-over-year increase, shelter costs continue to put upward pressure on inflation, accounting for over 60% of the total increase in all items excluding food and energy. This ongoing elevated inflation is likely to keep the Federal Reserve on hold and delay rate cuts this year. …With respect to the aggregate data, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that the Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose by 0.4% in March on a seasonally adjusted basis, the same increase witnessed in February. In March, the index for shelter (+0.4%) and gasoline (+1.7%) continued to be the largest contributors to the monthly rise in the overall CPI. …During the past twelve months, on a non-seasonally adjusted basis, the CPI rose by 3.5% in March, following a 3.2% increase in February.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Hybrid mass timber high-rise nearly as cost-effective as concrete tower: Study

World Construction Network
April 10, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Constructing a hybrid mass timber high-rise is now nearly as cost-effective as constructing a comparable concrete tower, states a study co-authored by PCL Construction, DCI Engineers, and Weber Thompson. The Hybrid Tall Timber: Mass Timber Residential High-Rise Study highlights the potential of mass timber to expand residential space in densely populated urban areas. The study suggests that mass timber construction could pave way for developing more buildings in the intermediate tower height range. Intermediate high-rise towers are said to be often not built to their full potential due to cost and code constraints. The study indicates that mass timber, a renewable material made from fast-growing lumber, could be more economical under certain conditions.

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Critics call out plastics industry over “fraud of plastic recycling”

By Ben Tracy
CBC News
April 14, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Jan Dell, a former chemical engineer, has spent years telling an inconvenient truth about plastics. “So many people, they see the recyclable label, and they put it in the recycle bin,” she said. “But the vast majority of plastics are not recycled.” …Only 5 to 6 percent of it is actually recycled, according to the Department of Energy. The rest ends up in landfills or is burned. …Davis Allen, with the Center for Climate Integrity, said the industry didn’t need for recycling to work: “They needed people to believe that it was working,” he said. …A new report, called “The Fraud of Plastic Recycling,” accuses the plastics industry of misleading the public about the viability of plastic recycling,” despite knowing the “technical and economic limitations”. …The American Chemistry Council called the report “flawed” and “outdated,” and says “plastic makers are working hard to change the way that plastics are made and recycled.”

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Mass timber construction reaching new heights in Ontario

Timmins Today
April 11, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, US East

Ontario’s forest products industry is welcoming the government’s move to allow mass timber buildings to reach greater heights. The Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing said it will be amending Ontario’s Building Code in the coming months to permit for construction of these buildings to be upsized from its current 12 storeys to 18. Steven Street, the executive director of WoodWorks Ontario, applauded the decision. …“The move will support greater adoption of industrialized approaches, utilizing factory-built benefits that can expedite the supply of critical infrastructure in a sustainable way.” …Approximately 150 mass timber projects have been completed, are under constructed, or are being planned. …Rick Jeffery, Canadian Wood Council president-CEO, congratulated the government for taking a leadership role to supporting the industry. …Natural Resources and Forestry Minister Graydon Smith said Ontario’s abundant natural resources and the skill of the industry’s workforce will meet the current demand for housing.

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Forestry

Update on old-growth forest amendment

By Chris French, Deputy Chief, National Forest System
US Department of Agriculture
April 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Chris French

In Chief Moore’s January message, he talked about the notice of intent to prepare an environmental impact statement to amend all 128 forest land management plans. This proposed national amendment would create a framework that can be applied to local ecosystems to conserve and steward old-growth forest conditions. I know many of you have questions about what’s being accomplished and what this means for your forest or region. A national old-growth amendment website is now available to serve as a resource for those who may have questions. …While I acknowledge change can be challenging, we are actively improving our integration of Indigenous knowledge as a source of best available science. …Throughout this process of developing a national amendment, we are working closely with forests, states, counties, tribes and Alaska Native Corporations. I cannot emphasize enough the value we place on grassroots-level input and the recommendations of those who are closest to the land.

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Forecasters expect slow start to U.S. wildfire season

By Grace Van Deelen
Yale Climate Connections
April 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

After a wet winter, forecasters predict a slow start to the 2024 wildfire season in much of the United States. The Great Basin and Southwest may see elevated activity starting this summer. However, a likely midsummer shift in the El Niño–Southern Oscillation, or ENSO, a global climate pattern marked by changes in Pacific Ocean temperatures, adds significant uncertainty to the forecast. That outlook is a four-month forecast produced monthly by the National Interagency Fire Center, or NIFC, a group of wildland fire experts from eight federal agencies that supports and coordinates wildland fire resources across the country. The report focuses on the occurrence of significant fires — usually, those that require an NIFC management team to be dispatched — compared to the average number of such fires per year since 2000. The outlook helps fire managers determine where to allocate resources.

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From tape measures to space lasers: Quantifying biomass of the world’s tallest forests

By Marie Antoine and Stephen Sillett
Phys.Org
April 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

In this era of accelerating climate crisis, accounting for all aspects of Earth’s carbon cycle is a crucial task. The magnitude of atmospheric carbon burden means trees and forests are limited but important instruments among a suite of mitigation options. …Understanding the role of forests requires accurate quantification of biomass, approximately half of which is carbon. Technological advances and the urgency of the problem have motivated international efforts toward biomass mapping. Airborne and spaceborne laser scanning hold great promise, and remote sensing is tempting to rely upon given its efficiency in covering large areas. However, these endeavors are of questionable value until their estimates are validated by direct measurements. A new article published in Forest Ecology and Management embraces this challenge for the world’s tallest forests. …While technological advances continue to enhance the scope of forestry research, boots-on-the-ground measurements remain essential and will provide meaningful work for generations to come.

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Prescribed fires will send smoke drifting

By Peter Aleshire
Payson Roundup
April 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Forest Service crews and contractors are scrambling to set as much forest on fire as possible. The increasingly narrow window of the season for prescribed fire is upon us. The time between when the forest is dry enough to burn but wet enough to contain those burns has grown increasingly compressed. The Tonto, Coconino and Apache Sitgreaves forests all sent out notices warning communities to expect smoke from nearby controlled burns to smudge the sky and maybe even send smoke drifting through town. ……None of those communities were built with Wildlands-Urban Interface codes. …So thinning projects followed by prescribed burns remain the best tool for protecting those communities, which rank among the most fire-menaced in the country. …However, figuring out how to cover the cost of thinning some 4 million acres of Ponderosa pine forest in Northern Arizona is just the start of the policies needed to restore the forest.

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Catching fire: University of Montana forestry student awarded prestigious Truman Scholarship

By ABigail Lauten-Scrivner, University of Montana
The Missoulian
April 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Jaiden Stansberry

The day before Jaiden Stansberry submitted her Truman Scholarship application — an involved process that includes 14 essays, a policy proposal and multiple interviews — she spent hours alongside her classmates razing a makeshift logging town constructed in the University of Montana’s Schreiber Gym for the 105th Foresters’ Ball. …“After deconstruction, the next day I was at the library fixing all my Truman Scholarship essays,” Stansberry said with a laugh, noting with pride that her team tore down the timber in record time. …Truman Scholars demonstrate outstanding leadership potential, commitment to a career in government or the nonprofit sector, and academic excellence. After a rigorous application, those selected receive $30,000 in funding for graduate studies, leadership training, career counseling and special internship opportunities within the federal government. …Stansberry’s application focused on the topic at the nexus of her education, professional work and heart: wildland fire.

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Environmental groups call on Interior Secretary Deb Haaland to stop southern Oregon logging project

By Alex Baumhardt
Herald and News
April 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — Three dozen environmental groups are calling on the U.S. Secretary of the Interior to cancel a timber sale on federal land near Medford where activists say centuries old trees are slated to be cut. Organizers from Pacific Northwest Forest Defense have been sitting in old-growth trees for a week and set up a camp blocking Boise Cascade from cutting up to 516 acres of trees within an area owned by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. …Activists are concerned that the bureau is allowing Boise Cascade and the other companies to cut old-growth and mature trees at the site… that are more than 180 years old and up to 400 years old. Lisa Tschampl, for Boise Cascade, said there are no 400-year old trees at the site and that the trees at least 150 years old have been marked not to be cut. She said the company is “thinning” the area selectively, not clearcutting it.

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Montana is in a forest health crisis

By Zach Volheim
KPAX TV
April 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MISSOULA, Montana is in a forest health crisis. …And this is because of prior years of mismanagement and fire mitigation that has allowed large amounts of overgrowth, which in turn acts as fuel for wildfires. And with a complex system to manage the forest, the decline of the lumber industry has further complicated the situation. “We are dealing with a forest health and wildfire crisis. …Overtime our forests have become overgrown, more diseased, more fire prone, and we’re all familiar with the smoke we’re all breathing all summer from these catastrophic wildfires,” said Shawn Thomas, for the Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation. …The timber sales that he oversees in large part come from mills including Pyramid Mountain and Roseburg Forest… whose upcoming closures are creating economic concerns. But besides the economic concerns, there is also the worry about how this will affect the forests health. 

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Logging of forests releases more carbon, even if replanted

Letter by Kathy Johnson
The Everett Herald
April 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A recent letter to the editor responding to a commentary objecting to timber sales in Snohomish County, promulgated outdated ideas about forest ecology that have been categorically disproven by scientists. The author states that there is no shortage of old growth forest. I suppose that is a matter of opinion, but according to the 1993 Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team report, historically 65 percent of westside Pacific Northwest forests were mature and old growth. In 2004, 70 percent of those westside forests were less than 80 years old. Furthermore, these calculations don’t account for the carbon emissions generated by the activities of road construction, logging, transporting the trees to mills, and milling of lumber. …Mature forests are next in line to become old growth, and are invaluable for this reason, but also provide essential ecosystem services in their present state.

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South Oregon tree sitters protest old-growth logging from 100 feet above the forest floor

By Justin Higginbottom
Oregon Public Broadcasting
April 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

In dense forests off I-5 in Josephine County, Oregon, up a few miles of winding dirt roads, a handful of tents, a hammock and an acoustic guitar mark the camp of those describing themselves as “forest defenders.” … The square of thick forest where activists have been camping for a week is managed by the Bureau of Land Management, part of the agency’s 11,000-acre Poor Windy project that includes areas slated for commercial timber harvest as well as forest thinning to prevent wildfires from getting out of control. At the top of one of these trees, a massive Ponderosa pine with a thin band of orange paint around its trunk, a big banner reads: “No Old Growth Logging in a Climate Crisis.” …A spokesperson with the BLM’s Medford office, meanwhile, said that old-growth logging isn’t the goal for these projects.

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U.S. Senate spending panel calls for extending pay boost for Forest Service firefighters

By Jacob Fischler
The Alaska Beacon
April 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

WASHINGTON — Members of a U.S. Senate Appropriations subcommittee said at a hearing Wednesday they were focused on keeping pay for wildland firefighters at the higher level set in a 2021 law and urged Forest Service Chief Randy Moore to focus on ways to maintain a healthy timber industry. Senate Interior-Environment Subcommittee Chair Jeff Merkley, an Oregon Democrat, and ranking Republican Lisa Murkowski of Alaska said they were committed to funding Forest Service programs to prevent wildfires and to maintain healthy forests. As the temporary additional funding to the agency appropriated in the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law and Democrats’ 2022 climate, taxes and policy law approaches an end, lawmakers and the agency must work on a way to continue strong funding for an agency that is on the front lines of a changing climate, Merkley said. “Those are one-time investments,” Merkley said of the additional spending passed in recent years. “And those funds are running out.”

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Washington forestry leaders talk 50 years of forest practices

By Clayton Franke
The Daily Chronicle
April 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Those who make that their livelihood, and others with a stake in Washington’s forests, are looking back at the successes and failures of 50 years of environmental protection and what lies ahead for the next five decades. …Grays Harbor College hosted the annual meeting of the Washington State Society of American Foresters April 3-5. Attended by about 130 people including state forest and wildlife managers, representatives from private timber companies and tribal natural resource managers, the meeting orbited around the anniversary of the important forest law. …Washington’s earliest forestry laws date back to 1946, when the state first started requiring the industry to replant harvested trees. …The collaborative approach to solving natural resource conflicts when it comes to logging practices continues today. But it’s not without ups and downs. Court Stanley, who has spent nearly 40 years in the wood products industry, likened the collaborative relationship to a marriage.

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Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest Hosts Job Corps Students for All-Female Assignment

By Joshua Boisvert
The US Department of Agriculture
April 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

For the second year in a row, the Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest in Georgia welcomed women from the Forest Service Job Corps Civilian Conservation Centers as they participated in an all-female fire assignment. The varied skill levels among the crew allowed everyone to learn from one another as the 10-person module conducted a prescribed fire assignment. “Having all women creates a different culture and environment that is really supportive,” said Rebecca Roller, lead firefighter of the Cabin Lake Wildland Fire Module, with the agency’s Pacific Northwest Region. “it was a very different experience that I will cherish and will be a very important experience in my career for the rest of my life.” Women in the Forest Service have a long and dedicated history of stewardship on public lands. Coupling them with students in the Forest Service Job Corps Civilian Conservation Centers encourages and trains women from diverse backgrounds to excel in the traditionally male-dominated field of wildland firefighting. 

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Forest fires: From research to resilience

The US Department of Agriculture
April 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

NEW JERSEY—Amidst escalating risks posed by wildfires in the eastern United States, fire researchers at Silas Little Experimental Forest are making significant contributions to better understand the relationship between fuels and the way fires spread across the landscape. With over a century of data for reference and a mature culture of wildland fire management that spans federal and state agencies and private landowners, the Silas Little Experimental Forest is the “model landscape” for scientific fire research.

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Loggers and top Democrat decry Maine alliance with biggest landowners

By Billy Kobin
The Bangor Daily News
April 14, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

AUGUSTA, Maine — Loggers behind one of Maine’s heritage industries claim the state and its biggest landowners are sharing confidential information about them through a forest certification program. Tension between logging contractors and the state forest service along with the influential Maine Forest Products Council has existed for years but flared more publicly in Augusta this month through a bill from Senate President Troy Jackson, D-Allagash, a fifth-generation logger. The loggers say the state and forest products group use a certification program to exchange information about them — such as names, locations and potential violations — if they face investigations but have not yet been notified of the probes. Loggers said it has added to the pressure they face. The Maine Forest Service pays dues to Maine Forest Products Council to remain in the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, one of several certification programs the state uses. [to access the full story a Bangor Daily News subscription is required]

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University of Florida program breeds, improves pine trees over decades

By Seth Johnson
Maine Street Daily News
April 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

With rows of trees stretching for more than 2,000 acres, individual pine trees blur into the next at UF’s Austin Cary Forest off Waldo Road in Alachua County. But on roughly 10 acres nestled in the middle, Aaron Smith keeps track of each tree, individual branches on the trees and the specific strobili on each branch. From January through March, Smith gets face-to-needle with the trees using a mechanical lift. He carefully selects a labeled bottle of yellow pollen, covers a branch with a special-made hood and fertilizes the strobili with the pollen. The male pollen and female strobili were matched long before Smith climbed the lift as part of the Cooperative Forest Genetics Research Program (CFGRP). The program has worked to enhance the quality and quantity of loblolly and slash pines through genetic breeding since 1953. The CFGRP now estimates that 99% of southern pine seedlings planted in Florida are products of the program.

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Forest products industry gathers for Spring Celebration

By R.R. Branstorm
Daily Press
April 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

HARRIS, Michigan — The Great Lakes Timber Professionals Association — the same organization that unites members and aficionados for the Great Lakes Logging and Heavy Equipment Expo — brought its Spring Celebration to the Island Resort and Casino Tuesday. The convention featured speakers, 50 exhibitors, a luncheon, an award presentation and prizes. …With the industry in a slump, the gathering of loggers and truckers discussed the state of the sector. Marty Ochs from the Green Bay Innovation Group addressed the perceived need to bring saw mills and logging jobs back to local hands. Ochs spoke specifically about Wisconsin, mostly, but the American Loggers Council (ALC) said the problem isn’t restricted to the Great Lakes Region. Nationally, within the last 15 months, 50 mills have closed, resulting in the loss of 10,000 jobs, reported Scott Dane, executive director of the ALC. “We’re not having any less demand for wood products; we’re just importing it from other sources,” Dane said.

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Prescribed Burns, more than just a wildfire management technique

By Liam Healy
Rochester First
April 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Despite the recent rain it still is fire season in New York State, and crews from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and other agencies remain hard at work managing forests – performing what are known as prescribed burns. Forest Rangers with the DEC, like Captain Ryan Wickens, use these controlled burns as they’re also referred, to maintain forests and remove excess burnable material that could help a wildfire spread. That’s not always the primary goal. In many cases these burns can help pave the way for a healthier ecosystem. “What that fire does is, right before those warm season native grasses start to grow, we set fire to the old organic material. And any weeds that would have popped up early in that cooler weather, they get burnt,” said Captain Wickens. “It dumps the nutrients back into the soil. So you get a lot of nitrogen. Phosphorus, things like that.”

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National Alliance of Forest Owners executive presents 2024 Carlton Owen Lecture

By Vanessa Beeson
Mississippi State University
April 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Carlton Owen

Kate Gatto

STARKVILLE, Miss.—The chief strategy officer for the National Alliance of Forest Owners presents the 2024 Carlton Owen Lecture, an annual event presented by Mississippi State’s College of Forest Resources held in anticipation of Earth Week. Kate Gatto will lead the April 16 public program “It’s Not Easy Being Green: Forestry as a Bipartisan Solution” at 2 p.m. in Tully Auditorium, Thompson Hall. “Forestry is one of the unique areas of society where economic and environmental values are inextricably linked,” Gatto said. “No other sector of our economy has such a strong story to tell about what happens when economic and environmental values align.” …The Owen Lecture Series was established more than 30 years ago in MSU’s CFR by Carlton Owen, a Greenville, South Carolina, resident and 1974 MSU graduate. The program focuses on natural resource conservation issues.

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Forest supervisor seeks to set record straight on water quality and management practices

Mike Chaveas, Shawnee & Hoosier National Forests
The Herald-Times
April 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

You deserve to have the facts about how the Forest Service cares for our public forests and wildlife. That’s why I’m compelled to set the record straight concerning some recent inaccurate claims about the scale of our management, the reasons for it and its impacts. In this column on water quality — part two of a series — I’ll share information on laws, facts and scientific data and consensus that help us determine how to manage our public lands. We’ve heard concerns about how forest management may affect water quality. The Forest Service was founded with a mission to protect water quality, and we continue that mission by managing for diverse, healthy forests and restoring stream health in and around the Hoosier National Forest. For example, we remove under-sized culverts and restore stream flow with future sustainability in mind. This decreases sedimentation and improves aquatic wildlife habitat.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

CO2 Watchdog Approves Carbon Credits for Value Chain Emissions

By Frances Schwartzkopff, Natasha White and Alastair Marsh
Bloomberg Investing
April 10, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

The world’s main verifier of corporate climate targets will let companies use carbon credits to reduce the broadest scope of their emissions, relaxing earlier guidance and galvanizing a controversial market for green finance. The United Nations-backed Science Based Targets initiative said it will allow the use of credits to cut emissions from value chains, otherwise known as Scope 3. The market for carbon credits is still reeling from a period of turbulence, following revelations of projects that failed to deliver on emissions cuts. At the same time, the finance industry and carbon credit providers are positioning themselves to reap the monetary benefits of the growing market for offsetting reported emissions. The decision could help boost the market, currently valued at $2.0-$2.5 billion, to more than $1 trillion a year by 2050. …Stephannie Galdino, a voluntary carbon market analyst with Veyt, warned of a “high risk of greenwashing” as a result of SBTi’s decision.

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Keeping track of carbon in the Adirondacks’ forests

By Chloe Bennett
Adirondack Explorer
April 11, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US East

Nearly five years ago, New York state passed an ambitious climate law intended to reduce and counteract fossil fuel emissions contributing to climate change. Storing carbon dioxide, a gas released from burning fuel, is key to achieving the goals outlined in the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act. Much of that can be accomplished through protecting carbon-absorbing forests across the state. Although the Adirondacks has millions of acres of forest, most land in the state is privately owned. Which puts a critical network of interconnected properties at risk of development. To achieve goals set in the climate act, experts say the state needs to roughly double the size of its carbon sink by fostering new forests and avoiding further loss. Researchers with the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry developed an accounting system with detailed satellite imagery to help agencies identify where forests are most vulnerable.

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Forest History & Archives

The comeback of Notre Dame: American builders help to restore iconic Paris landmark

By Keir Simmons, Laura Saravia and Henry Austin
NBC News
April 15, 2024
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: United States

PARIS — Five years ago a fire brought Paris’ Notre Dame Cathedral to its knees, destroying the vaulted wooden ceiling and spire. In Hatfield, Massachusetts, carpenter Hank Silver watched in horror as flames shot into the air and rapidly spread over the fabled Gothic building’s roof, known as “The Forest” because of its long planks of 800-year-old wood. Soon, Silver joined an army of skilled craftsmen from around the world and went to the building’s aid. Now Paris’ soaring medieval landmark is ready to serve as a symbol of the French capital. “It’s a once in a millennium experience,” he said in an interview. …Silver, who is part of Carpenters Without Borders, a team of volunteers who restore historical structures the world over, is one of a handful of craftsmen from around the world who are trained to carry out the work of rebuilding Notre Dame.

Related coverage: Notre Dame Restoration Nears Completion

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