Region Archives: US West

Business & Politics

Drax selects Houston, Texas as headquarters for bioenergy carbon capture business

Drax Group Inc.
May 24, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Drax announced it will establish its North American headquarters for Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) in Houston, Texas. The new office will serve as the hub for Drax’s team focused on bringing BECCS projects to fruition throughout the United States and Canada. “With the growing global demand for high-quality carbon removals, Houston was a natural fit for our BECCS headquarters as it is the energy capital of the world with a proven, highly skilled workforce that will be needed to lead the world’s clean energy transition,” said Drax CEO Will Gardiner. “Additionally, the U.S. Gulf Coast has emerged as a major hub for carbon capture and sequestration investment and technology, a key component of the company’s plans to expand clean electric generation from renewable resources.” BECCS is the only technology that can deliver reliable, dispatchable renewable power while permanently removing millions of tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

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Eastern Washington paper mill idled, hundreds of workers laid off

By Wendy Culverwell
The Seattle Times
May 10, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Packaging Corporation of America has notified its Wallula mill employees the plant will be idled and won’t resume operations until later this year. Packaging Corporation, based in Lake Forest, Illinois, confirmed the layoffs in a statement. It attributed the decision to idle the plant to “economic conditions.” “We expect to resume operations at the mill later this year,” the statement said. Corrugated products facilities in Richland and Wallula are not affected and will remain open. It appears the decision will affect about 300 of the 450 Packaging Corporation employees at Wallula, many of whom commute from the Tri-Cities. According to the Washington Department of Ecology, Packaging Corporation employs about 300 people at the pulp and paper mill and 155 at the unaffected container plant.

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Finance & Economics

Timber Producers Expecting Stronger Demand for Lumber, California Farm Bureau Reports

By Christine Souza
Sierra Sun Times
May 22, 2023
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

Timber and forest products sector leaders and market analysts say warmer temperatures mean a return to a more typical seasonal demand as construction and home improvement projects resume after the winter slowdown. They say the timber market should fare reasonably well this year, despite rising interest rates affecting new home purchases. Lumber market analyst Rocky Goodnow, of Forest Economic Advisors, said… “We’re starting to see positive signs for demand in housing starts, and we continue to see strong numbers on the repair and remodeling side.” Goodnow said he expects the U.S. economy to enter a recession in late 2023. But he said the timber sector may be able to withstand a potential downturn. …After three years of drought and devastating wildfires, Steven Brink, California Forestry Association vice president of public resources, said snow and rain this winter is positive for improved forest health.

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The Future of Pulp and Paper Investments in the Pacific Northwest

Forest2Market Blog
May 17, 2023
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

Within the last five years, over a billion dollars have been invested in various projects in the Pacific Northwest (PNW). Some of these recent investments include: Roseburg’s plan to upgrade and expand its manufacturing operations in Southern Oregon; Drax’s investment in a 450kt new-build pellet plant in Longview; and North Pacific Paper’s expanded Longview facility. Does this mean the PNW is a profitable area for pulp and paper investments? The reality is actually quite the opposite for many. …Timber supplies in the PNW remain stressed due to lack of harvesting on federal lands. …Log exports in the region have also decreased significantly. …As a result of all these combined factors, we’re seeing a tightening of supply for logs and fibers. Consequently, there have been multiple pulp mill closures in the area. …The PNW isn’t all doom and gloom. There are two major factors that appeal.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Western Washington University breaks ground on carbon neutral academic building

By Elizabeth Troutman
Whatcom News
May 25, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

Western Washington University in Bellingham has broken ground on a nearly $74 million electrical engineering and computer science building, the first carbon neutral academic facility in the region. Kaiser Borsari Hall is a “smart building” meant to exceed LEED standards for energy use, carbon, and other environmental indicators. …“The design of Kaiser Borsari Hall is a watershed moment for Washington state public facilities as the first all mass timber, zero-energy, and carbon neutral building on a university campus,” Anthony Gianopoulos at Perkins&Will, which designed the facility, said. The building will join a handful of other carbon neutral academic buildings in the nation. …Solar panels on the roof will generate all the 54,000-square-foot, four-story building’s electrical power, while local, sustainably harvested wood will be incorporated as part of the design to reduce the facility’s carbon footprint.

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19-storey plywood tower nears completion in Oakland

By David Rogers
Global Construction Review
May 24, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

After just seven months on site, work is nearly finished on a high-rise apartment building in Oakland, California that the developer calls the “tallest beamless mass plywood panel structure in the world”. The 19-storey tower in downtown Oakland will have 222 flats, a fifth of which will be affordable. The 1510 Webster Street project was developed and designed by Oakland-based oWOW, with assistance from Californian design firm DCI Engineers. oWOW is using what it calls “a unique mass-timber construction system” that allows it to “build high-quality housing in less time and at lower costs than our competitors”. It has already built three projects in the San Francisco Bay area, and has 600 more in construction or in the pipeline. The design began about a year-and-a-half ago, ground was broken in October 2022, and construction is expected to top out by the end of June.

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Oregon State, University of Oregon, Portland State, others receive National Science Foundation money

By Meerah Powell
Oregon Public Broadcasting
May 11, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

Oregon’s three largest universities have each received $1 million grants from the National Science Foundation to explore ways to improve a variety of industries, ecosystems and technologies in the Pacific Northwest. The University of Oregon will use its grant to focus on the mass timber industry. The school is partnering with Oregon State University, Washington State University and more than 25 other organizations and agencies to research innovations in mass timber architecture, engineering and construction in the region. …The National Science Foundation awarded the grants as part of its “Regional Innovation Engines program” — a program created out of the CHIPS and Science Act under the Biden Administration… The new partnership hopes to look into how to grow the region’s mass timber ecosystem and explore how it can be used to increase the mass timber workforce, start and expand new businesses and create affordable housing.

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First-of-Its-Kind Test to Prove Resilience of Tall Mass Timber Buildings in Seismic Events

By Think Wood
The Sacramento Bee
May 10, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

OREGON CITY, Oregon — Practical testing is underway at the University of California San Diego on the tallest building ever to be seismically tested. The building, a 10-story mass timber structure, was constructed to undergo testing as part of the Natural Hazards Engineering Research Infrastructure TallWood Project, an industry-wide initiative to prove the seismic resilience of mass timber… supported by Think Wood, its parent organization the Softwood Lumber Board, and its partner organizations WoodWorks and the Binational Softwood Lumber Council. …The project could pave the way for changes in building codes for residential and commercial structures that could lead to more widespread adoption of mass timber. It could also validate mass timber and other innovative technologies as vehicles to help make buildings safer and more resistant to earthquake activity.

Additional coverage in ABC News: What scientists discovered after simulating an earthquake on a 10-story wood building

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10 story wood building passes earthquake test

By Thomas Fudge
KPBS Marketplace
May 9, 2023
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

CALIFORNIA — The building swayed as it would have in the 1999 Jiji earthquake in Taiwan. That magnitude 7.7 quake killed more than 2,000 people. Buildings made of steel and concrete were destroyed. But the wood-framed high rise, built recently on University of California, San Diego’s Scripps Ranch shake table, showed no visible damage. “The building is fine. We don’t need repair. Maybe we need to patch some drywall but that’s about it,” said Shiling Pei, a professor of civil engineering at Colorado School of Mines, and lead investigator for the Tallwood Project. The NHERI Tall Wood Project, a 10-story test building made out of mass timber, is under construction in Scripps Ranch, Oct. 26, 2022. The Tallwood Project is a partnership between UCSD and the Colorado School of Mines, among other universities. Its test of the 10 story building is remarkable in many ways.

Additional coverage in Temblor (catastrophe modeling company specializing in seismic hazard), by Montana Denton: TallWood Project tests earthquake-resistant structure

Engineering News-Record, by Nadine Post: 10-story Mass Timber ‘Rocking’ Frame Sails Through Seismic Shake Tests

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Forestry

‘We’re going to need so many seedlings’ for reforestation push

By Alex Brown
Helena Independent Record
May 25, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Tree Cover Loss

Over the next few years, state tree nurseries across the country will build new greenhouses, expand irrigation systems, upgrade seeding equipment and bring on staff. They’re hoping to turn millions of new federal dollars into millions of new seedlings — part of a collaborative effort to reforest landscapes threatened by climate change. “We’re going to need so many seedlings,” Homer Wilkes, undersecretary for natural resources and environment at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, told Stateline. “Helping states get where they need to be is going to be cheaper and more efficient and is going to meet our goals and needs faster, than if the Forest Service tried to build these nurseries ourselves.” Earlier this year, the department announced $10 million to support reforestation work, funded by the infrastructure law that passed in 2021. That law will provide more money for states in the years to come, as well as for federal nursery programs.

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How global warming and a wet winter may impact the U.S. wildfire season

By Evan Bush
NBC News
May 24, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Wildfire season in most parts of the western United States could be delayed this summer with heavy snow still covering many mountain ranges, national fire forecasters say. Still, the risk of damaging wildfires continues to trend upward as the climate warms, one factor making it more difficult to predict how the season will shake out. Forecasters and fire ecology experts said changes to fire behavior make it challenging to predict conditions in the late summer and the early fall. Fire seasons are growing longer. Hotter temperatures zap fuels of their moisture faster. And more people are living near the wilderness — and potentially, in harm’s way. …The National Interagency Fire Center is predicting above-normal fire activity in parts of the Pacific Northwest, including eastern Oregon and central Washington, in July and August. Elsewhere in the West, forecasters are predicting normal or below-normal fire activity for those months.

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Seattle City Council passes new tree ordinance

By Hannah Weinberger
Crosscut
May 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Seattle City Council voted Tuesday afternoon to pass an updated version of a city ordinance regulating trees on private property, which had not been adjusted since 2009. The legislation will fully overhaul the ordinance for the first time since the section of code protecting trees was adopted in 2001, years before the climate and housing crises came to dominate both city discourse and priorities. Seattleites have since become aware of the many benefits trees provide, from cooling to improving people’s health and general well-being. The city is losing trees faster than it is replanting them, and is thousands of housing units short to meet the demand of a growing population. …But the Urban Forestry Commission and tree advocates worry that the legislation so long in the making was rushed through the voting process. 

Additional coverage in the Seattle City Council Blog: Seattle City Council Passes Stronger Tree Protection Ordinance That Protects Ten Times as Many Trees While Increasing Housing Stock

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How a drought affects trees depends on what’s been holding them back

By Harrison Tasoff, University of California
Phys.Org
May 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Droughts can be good for trees; certain trees, that is.  Contrary to expectation, sometimes a record-breaking drought can increase tree growth. Why and where this happens is the subject of a new paper in Global Change Biology.  A team of scientists led by Joan Dudney at UC Santa Barbara examined the drought response of endangered whitebark pine over the past century. They found that in cold, harsh environments—often at high altitudes and latitudes—drought can actually benefit the trees by extending the growing season. This research provides insights into where the threats from extreme drought will be greatest, and how different species and ecosystems will respond to climate change. …The authors found a pronounced shift in growth during times of drought when the average maximum temperature was roughly 8.4° Celsius (47.1° Fahrenheit) between October and May. 

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California fire season predicted to be shorter and less intense

By Natalie Hanson
Courthouse News Service
May 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — After years of massive, destructive wildfires, California and much of the American West may see a shorter and more manageable wildfire season thanks to an extraordinarily wet winter. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the state has only just begun to see a historic snowpack melt into streams and rivers, and the flows could be high for many weeks. The agency’s Southern California coordination center reported in a briefing Monday that most of California has seen below normal temperatures since Oct. 1. These conditions have helped about 68% of the state exit drought conditions within three months — a feat that would have required two or three wet years otherwise. …The wet winter and lingering snowpack may also translate to fewer wildfires. 

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Drones give a clear view of frog habitat

By Elizabeth Munding
US Department of Agriculture
May 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Picture an IMAX-style aerial film of a high-elevation wetland complex boasting every shade of green, from lime to emerald to olive, amid its vast landscape. Behind this image is Forest Service hydrologist Kyle Wright, his feet firmly on the ground, operating an unmanned aerial system or “drone” over this portion of Big Marsh in Oregon’s Little Deschutes River Basin. Landscape restoration has a new aerial view thanks to this scientific tool. Drones, which have been used traditionally on fire management projects, are now telling important resource stories to help scientists inform other kinds of projects, from stream restoration to timber management. …Central to the project’s purpose has been focus on one of the smaller marsh creatures—the Oregon spotted frog. The reddish-brown frog with black spots requires wetland habitats with a variety of water depths to support all its life stages. The aquatic frog is rarely found more than 6 feet from water.

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Logging industry on the brink

By Peter Aleshire
The Payson Roundup
May 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The painstakingly developed capacity to thin the forest and save communities from wildfire is dangling by a thread, say the loggers. The leaders of the state’s cobbled together, now-endangered mill and timber industry vented their frustrations at the monthly meeting of the Natural Resources Working Group. The group was organized to facilitate forest restoration and save a dying timber industry. But long delays by the Forest Service, soaring interest rates, rising inflation and a long, wet winter have pushed the whole, fragile forest-industries network to the brink, said loggers and mill owners. …The Forest Service tried for a decade to find a single contractor to thin millions of acres in the 4-Forests Restoration Initiative footprint. The Forest Service squandered years trying to find someone who would make a huge investment and turn a profit on not only small logs, but the 17 tons of biomass that comes off each treated acre.

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Idaho Senator Introduces Wildfire Prevention Bill Ahead of Wildfire Season

Big Country News
May 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

IDAHO – Idaho Senator Jim Risch has introduced a wildfire prevention bill aimed at reducing the risk and severity of catastrophic wildfires in the west by empowering land managers with cutting-edge technology to target large scale treatments in the highest risk areas. The Forest Improvements through Research and Emergency Stewardship for Healthy Ecosystem Development and Sustainability (FIRESHEDS) Act also aims to restore forest health and better equip local land managers and strengthen state authority by allowing governors to enter into joint agreements with land management agencies to specifically designate fireshed management areas and expedite management projects. …Organizations and businesses supporting the FIRESHEDS Act include: the Idaho Forest Group; the Associated Logging Contractors of Idaho; the American Forest Resource Council; the American Forest & Paper Association; the American Property Casualty Insurance Groups; the Hardwood Federation; the American Loggers Association; and the National Association of Counties.

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U.S. considers new land swap deal in Alaska wildlife refuge

Reuters
May 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Deb Haaland

The U.S. Interior Department will review the environmental impacts of a possible land swap deal that would allow a new road to cut through an Alaska wildlife refuge, it said on Wednesday. The move comes two months after Interior Secretary Deb Haaland withdrew a Trump-era land exchange deal between her agency and the Alaska Native American-led King Cove Corporation, but said she would be open to considering other proposals to replace it. …Interior said it would consider an exchange that would allow for a road corridor for noncommercial use through the Izembek National Wildlife Refuge and the Izembek Wilderness Area. Supporters say the road would give residents of King Cove village access to nearby airstrip in case of medical or other emergencies. Environmentalists have said a road would destroy valuable habitat for birds along Kinzarof Lagoon, and would set a dangerous precedent for other wildlife refuges.

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Ninth Circuit rules against environmental group in dispute over logging project in Idaho forest

By Alanna Madden
Courthouse News Service
May 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A Ninth Circuit panel on Tuesday reversed a lower court’s ruling that had blocked the Hanna Flats logging project in the Idaho Panhandle National Forest, which includes several thousand acres of grizzly bear territory. The ruling will allow the U.S. Forest Service to resume its designation of parts of the national forest for commercial logging — a treatment aimed at reducing the risk of wildfires and disease. Environmental group Alliance for the Wild Rockies sued the Forest Service in 2019 after the authorization of the Hanna Flats logging project, which permitted extensive commercial logging and prescribed burning, temporary road construction and maintenance and excavated skid trail construction next to a recovery zone for the protected Selkirk grizzly bear.

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Red-legged frogs find a new pad

By Odin Rasco
Georgetown Gazette
May 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The California red-legged frog, Rana draytonii has found a favorable foothold in foothill freshwater thanks to efforts by the U.S. Forest Service in the Georgetown Ranger District of the Eldorado National Forest. Development, over-harvesting, climate change, invasive species and pesticides contributed to the species being added to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife threatened species list in 1996. Between 2014 and 2016, crews in the northern zone of the Eldorado National Forest began construction of nine areas that would provide potential breeding grounds for the frogs and western pond turtles in the area around Georgetown. Of those initial nine areas, six are still around (three, built in-stream, were blown out in 2017 during the heavy winter), with three serving as a consistent breeding habitat for the red-legged frogs, according to Forest Service aquatic biologist Maura Santora. The ponds have also seen frequent visits from bats, deer and other local wildlife.

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University of Montana to lead precision forestry and rangeland innovation engine

University of Montana
May 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MISSOULA – The University of Montana recently was selected to lead one of the first-ever Regional Innovation Engine awards from the National Science Foundation. UM’s project is designed to advance precision forestry and rangeland technologies. As with the 43 other awardees selected across the country, UM will receive an initial $1 million over two years. This will support and develop a team that will create an implantation proposal, which could lead to as much as $160 million in additional regional economic investment over 10 years. UM has 18 partners on the project all working in forest and rangeland management. They include regional research universities and tribal colleges, national nonprofits, federal and state agencies, industry associations and venture capital firms. …Julia Altemus, director the Montana Wood Products Association, said a plan developed by the Montana Forest Action Advisory Council has identified 3.4 million acres in the wildland urban interface as high priority acres in need of restoration.

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New California Wildfire Alert System is a Network of 1,000 Cameras

By Jaron Schneider
PetaPixel
May 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The University of California San Diego has launched a new cutting-edge system made up of more than 1,000 cameras positioned across the state designed to prepare for, respond to, and recover from wildfires and other natural hazards. The system integrates and expands on what was formerly the ALERTWildfire camera network that is now known as ALERTCalifornia. The expanded state-focused program manages more than 1,000 pan-tilt-zoom capable cameras and sensor arrays across the entire state and collects data regularly that can provide real-time, actionable information that serves to inform public safety during natural disasters. …Some of the new installations have more than traditional cameras. Some incorporate infrared systems that allow emergency responders to identify hotspots and flare-ups through thick smoke and provide firefighters with real-time updates on evolving situations on the ground during a wildfire.

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Tanker 12 moves to National Museum of Forest Service History

By Kelly Andersson
Fire Aviation
May 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MISSOULA, Montana — Neptune Aviation and the National Museum of Forest Service History in Missoula have announced a partnership to provide Tanker 12 a new permanent home. Neptune Aviation retired its Lockheed P2V airtankers in September of 2017, closing the final chapter on the world’s last active fleet of former maritime patrol aircraft, dating back to the Cold War era, which served for years as national aerial firefighting assets. …Before Tanker 12 began its history as an aerial firefighting aircraft, the P2V served the U.S. Navy in anti-submarine warfare missions. From 1993 Neptune operated a fleet of Lockheed Martin P2V aircraft, and its ships put in about 47,000 firefighting missions, dropping a total of 97 million gallons of retardant. …The National Museum of Forest Service History is a nonprofit organization with a mission of sharing the history of America’s conservation legacy. 

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Gila County approves easement for Forest Service helicopter base

By Peter Aleshire
Payson Roundup
May 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Forest Service is putting the final touches on a helicopter base near Star Valley just in time for the lead-in to the 2023 fire season. The Gila County Board of Supervisors approved granting the Forest Service an easement through its road maintenance yard near Star Valley off Highway 260. The easement will give the Forest Service access to a helicopter base it is building. “It’s not a helicopter pad – it’s a base, with a hanger, administrative area and crew quarters. If you’ve never been there – it’s quite a construction site,” said Public Works Director Homero Vela. …Communities like Payson, Star Valley and Pine rank as among the most fire-prone in the nation, surrounded by thick, overgrown forests. …Air resources remain one of the best ways to stop a fire when it’s small.

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Lawsuit alleges 43,000-acre forest treatment project will impact lynx

By Mateusz Perkowski
The Blue Mountain Eagle
May 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

An environmental group seeks to overturn the federal government’s approval of 43,000 acres of forest treatments that will allegedly harm threatened lynx in Washington. Last year, the U.S. Forest Service decided to proceed with the Bulldog project to reduce wildfire fuels and improve aquatic habitat, among other objectives, within the Colville National Forest in Northeast Washington. Much of the project area will be treated with prescribed burning and vegetation removal but about 7,000 acres will be commercially logged and thinned in the Kettle Range portion of the Monashee Mountains. Though the federal government determined the treatments likely will not adversely affect the Canada lynx, which is protected under the Endangered Species Act, the Kettle Range Conservation Group nonprofit has filed a lawsuit alleging that analysis was faulty.

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Restoring the health of the Kootenai National Forest is the superior climate solution

By Nick Smith, executive director of Healthy Forests, Healthy Communities
The Missoulian
May 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Nick Smith

Anti-forestry groups are once again making misleading statements about the Black Ram project on the Kootenai National Forest, falsely claiming our public lands managers are seeking to “clear cut” miles of old growth forests. Despite the false rhetoric, the Black Ram project represents an important effort to reduce future wildfire and disturbance risks to nearby communities, Indigenous resources, wildlife habitat, water resources and other values. From a climate perspective, the project will improve the forest’s ability to sequester and store carbon, and ultimately reduce carbon emissions that would result from a massive wildfire. …In addition to misleading the public about Black Ram’s impact on wildlife, opponents of the project have mischaracterized the size and scope of the project, claiming the Forest Service is seeking to clear-cut wide swaths of “old-growth” forests. …This work is necessary to protect communities near the Kootenai National Forest because much of the project area is located where homes and forest intermix. 

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Foresters focus on recovering from Archie Creek Fire

By Craig Reed
The News-Review
May 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — Some of the topics of discussion during a tour of the Archie Creek Fire area included salvage logging, reseeding and replanting seedlings, future fire prevention, road construction and maintenance, stream restoration to benefit fish and recreation accessibility and opportunities. About 40 professional foresters from federal and state agencies, consultants, private companies, academics, retirees and several college forestry students spent a day discussing the issues, the impact and the future of the 131,542-acre burn. The tour was part of the annual Oregon Society of American Foresters Conference that this year was held at Seven Feathers Casino Resort in Canyonville. The Archie Creek Fire was first reported on Sept. 8, 2020. The heat and humidity, wind and dry fuels resulted in the fire exploding to 72,000 acres in the first 12 hours and to 100,000 acres in the first 24 hours. The fire wasn’t 100% contained until almost two months later on Oct. 31.

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Conservation groups’ lawsuit halts clearcutting project in critical Cabinet-Yaak grizzly habitat

By Mike Garrity, Alliance for the Wild Rockies
The Missoulian
May 14, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MONTANA — One would have to be mighty gullible to believe the Forest Service’s claim that the Knotty Pine Project would benefit the declining population of Cabinet-Yaak grizzly bears because the 5,000 acres of logging with massive new clearcuts would allow more huckleberries to grow. If that sounds too outrageous, that’s because it is. The evidence was so clear and convincing, the Court halted the project. The Cabinet-Yaak grizzly bears are the most imperiled population in the Northern Rockies and are considered crucial to the on-going efforts to recover the species. Yet the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service has documented a consistent decline in population numbers. In 2018 the Agency counted 54 grizzlies in its monitoring report. In 2019 only 50, down to 45 in 2020 and the 2021 estimate was only 42 bears. …According to peer-reviewed scientific literature, losing three Cabinet-Yaak female grizzlies in a single year will likely result in a population decline. 

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Many southwestern forests destroyed by megafires may never return

By Jim O’Donnell
The Genetic Literacy Project
May 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

While fire is an integral part of Southwest forest ecosystems, a century of policies geared toward fire suppression in the American West that has led to a lack of diversity is colliding with climate change, upending the rules. Historically, a mature forest would burn, then, over time, return to a healthy, recognizable state. Today, however, an unprecedented decades-long drought, rising temperatures and massive insect outbreaks are hammering forests across the region, creating ideal conditions for megafires like the Calf Canyon/Hermits Peak inferno. Thanks to climate change, experts say many southwestern forests destroyed by megafires may never return. …“All bets are off,” says Thomas Swetnam, Regents’ Professor Emeritus of Dendrochronology at the University of Arizona. “I hate to sound apocalyptic, but these are shocking, extraordinary events. The forests we had are not going to come back.”

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Prevent wildfires: Consider alternatives to debris burning

Herald and News
May 11, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SALEM — The Oregon Department of Forestry (ODF) urges the public to exercise caution when disposing of yard debris this spring. With fires already occurring in the state, Oregonians need to keep fire prevention at the top of their mind. Now is a great time to trim trees and bushes, and tidy up plants around your home to create a “defensible space” around your property. Defensible space creates a buffer around your home that can help protect your home from catching fire and provides firefighters with a safe space to work from. After your clean up, you will want to dispose of the debris. Debris burning is the leading human-related fire cause on ODF-protected lands, so as you begin this spring clean-up they urge you to put some extra thought into how you want to dispose of your yard debris.

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How Northern California’s fire season will be affected by an incoming weather transition

By Damon Arthur
Redding Record Searchlight
May 11, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

As Northern California see temperatures reach into the 90s this week, in the equatorial Pacific Ocean, a transformation is unfolding that is expected to affect the region’s fire season for the next several months. A change in ocean temperatures in the equatorial Pacific is transforming the weather pattern from El Niño to La Niña…With the change, the weather outlook for May and June is for near normal to above normal rainfall over Northern California and from normal to below normal temperatures, a forecast that is not conducive to large-scale wildfires, according to a report by the Northern California Geographic Coordinating Center’s Predictive Services. The outlook for July and August is for “near to above normal temperatures and near normal precipitation.” …While the wetter winter and spring may delay the outbreak of larger fires, the North State’s hot summers eventually take their toll, leaving the forests dried out by August and September…

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South Plateau logging plan will keep forest healthy

By Tom Partin
The Bozeman Daily Chronicle
May 11, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MONATANA — Visitors to the Custer Gallatin National Forest west of West Yellowstone have likely seen the dense stands of lodgepole pine that are ripe for insect infestation, disease and wildfire. It is only a matter of time before a wildfire is ignited in this area, potentially endangering the community, other adjacent properties, and possibly the tens of thousands of people that visit the area each year. …To reduce this risk and improve local water quality, public lands managers have developed the South Plateau Project on the Hebgen Lake Ranger District to thin these unnaturally dense stands and restore them back to health. The project will implement a variety of proactive and science-based resiliency treatments, including commercial timber harvest, non-commercial fuels treatments, and associated activities such as pile burning, temporary road construction and rehabilitation of disturbed sites.

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Oregon Gov. Kotek, fire officials say wet winter could delay wildfires, but drought persists

By Julia Shumway
The Herald and News
May 10, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A wet winter is likely to delay wildfires, but ongoing drought in eastern Oregon could make for a worse fire season east of the Cascades, Gov. Tina Kotek said. Kotek’s press briefing came just ahead of a forecasted heat wave bringing temperatures in the 90s to the Willamette Valley later this week. Klamath County is expected to see sunny weather in the mid-80s Saturday. …The Oregon Department of Forestry already has 22 firefighters helping combat ongoing wildfires in Alberta, Canada, where nearly 1 million acres have been destroyed and 30,000 people have evacuated, said Mike Shaw, the department’s fire chief. As fires continue throughout the summer, firefighters from western states and several Canadian provinces will help each other. Shaw said rainy conditions this spring and a strong winter snowpack are good signs. The snowpack — snow accumulated on mountains — is at about 140% of its normal level for this time of year.

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Mast Reforestation announces securing $15M in project financing from Carbon Streaming to accelerate reforestation efforts post wildfire

By Mast Reforestation and Carbon Streaming
PR Newswire in Yahoo! Finance
May 10, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SEATTLE — Mast Reforestation, the leading vertically integrated reforestation company, announced a $15 million financing agreement with Carbon Streaming Corporation to advance its post-wildfire reforestation projects throughout the American West. This first-of-its-kind project financing will cover the high upfront costs of reforestation projects, accelerating Mast’s forest restoration work and enabling the company to serve more landowners affected by wildfires. Under the stream financing agreement, Carbon Streaming will provide Mast with up to $15 million to advance its pipeline of post-wildfire reforestation projects. In addition to the $15 million project financing agreement, Carbon Streaming has invested $2 million in Mast.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Climate Change Gets Blame For Forest Fires, Evidence Suggests Management, Weather Patterns Have More Impact

By Kevin Killough
Cowboy State Daily
May 25, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

The forest fires in Alberta, Canada, have blanketed Wyoming under a layer of haze. And the adage is proving true — where there’s smoke, there’s the media talking about climate change. Throughout this extensive coverage of the Canadian wildfires there has been no mention that, according to the Canadian National Fire Database, the number of wildfires in Canada are down.  …Jim Steele, an ecologist who served as director of San Francisco State University’s Sierra Nevada field campus, is skeptical of connecting climate change to any trend in forest fires. “I do not feel the media is educating us about the science that affects fires. They’re just trying to push a catastrophe narrative that’s been going on way too long,” Steele told Cowboy State Daily. Steele’s book, “Landscapes & Cycles: An Environmentalist’s Journey to Climate Skepticism,” discusses his work at the Sierra Nevada Field Campus, where he monitored wildlife populations.

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Alaska lawmakers consider using forested lands for money-making carbon credits

By Yereth Rosen
The Alaska Beacon
May 13, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

Legislators are considering whether Alaska, one of places in the world most transformed by climate change, can be a solution by keeping habitat intact. That is the idea behind an initiative by Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy, who has introduced and is championing two bills that would put Alaska on the path to what he describes as a money-making opportunity through carbon conservation and sequestration. One bill would set up a system for investors to lease forested land in Alaska with the purpose of keeping it intact so that it continues to absorb carbon from the atmosphere. …“Experts in this emerging industry have informed us that we can realize revenue to the tune of billions of dollars per year by creating a carbon management system. We’ve been told by some that we can generate as much as $30 billion or more over 20 years, just from our forest lands,” Dunleavy said in January.

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Black Is The New Green: Exploring Biochar’s Potential to Moderate Wildfire, Store Carbon

By Lael Gilbert
Utah State University
May 10, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

From almost any scenic viewpoint in Utah, the problem becomes readily apparent; among evergreen and aspen is a peppering of gray: standing dead trees. Utah forests have had an especially tough couple of decades, and foresters are grappling to manage the remnants. An emerging tool — biochar — shows potential to benefit both forest and the greater ecosystem, according to USU forestry resources specialist Darren McAvoy. …Biochar has potential to both reduce the risk of wildfire on public lands and limit the amount of greenhouse gasses released when burning hazardous fuels, said McAvoy, from the Quinney College of Natural Resources.

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Health & Safety

Arizona Department of Forestry testing new locating device to improve safety

KNAU Arizona Public Radio
May 16, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

The Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management is testing new satellite-based crew locating and communication devices to improve safety. Officials say that six of the department’s 13 wildland fire hand crews will carry and test new field support and safety devices known as DropBlocks. They’re essentially GPS tracking and locating systems that will provide another layer of communication and accountability for crews at work in remote areas with limited or no cell phone service. The department says they have been exploring ways to increase crew safety and enhance communication between firefighters and overhead for years. They plan to distribute the DropBlocks to all of the agency’s wildland fire hand crews and engine crews if testing is successful. [END]

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Unusually early heat wave in Pacific Northwest tests records

National Public Radio
May 14, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

PORTLAND — An early heat wave took hold Saturday in parts of the Pacific Northwest, with temperatures nearing or breaking records in some areas and heat advisories in place through Monday. The historically temperate region has grappled with scorching summer temperatures and unprecedented wildfires fueled by climate change in recent years. The National Weather Service issued a heat advisory extending from Saturday through Monday for much of the western parts of both Oregon and Washington state. It said the temperatures could raise the risk of heat-related illness. …Residents and officials in the Northwest have been trying to adjust to the likely reality of longer, hotter heat waves following the deadly ” heat dome ” weather phenomenon in 2021 that prompted record temperatures and deaths across the region. …”This is the first significant event … and it is early for us,” said Chris Voss, the county’s director of emergency management. 

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Forest Fires

Escaped burn piles, lightning strikes ignite wildfires as Oregon firefighters ramp up

By Zach Urness
The Salem Statesman Journal
May 16, 2023
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — Small wildfires have popped up across western Oregon over the past few days as hot temperatures and windy conditions put firefighters on high alert. At least three significant fires ignited when slash or burn piles escaped in the Willamette Valley area and required a response from the Oregon Department of Forestry. Far more smaller-scale fires from burn piles were handled by local firefighters, officials said. At least one lightning-ignited fire from Monday night’s thunderstorm was doused south of Eugene. The trend is expected to continue with at least four more days above 80 degrees forecast. “Our firefighters are on high alert,” ODF fire spokeswoman Jessica Prakke said. “It’s our first warm and dry stretch and people are wanting to burn debris or get out and camp. Even though it’s still May, when it turns dry like this fires can start and people need to be cautious and prepared.”

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