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Business & Politics

Stop Panicking about CUSMA. Canada’s Trade Future Isn’t as Dire as It Looks

By Carmine Starnino and Pascal Chan
The Walrus Magazine
June 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

A disturbing effect of the Trump era is how the most routine bureaucratic exercises become freighted with existential panic. …Despite having negotiated it himself, Donald Trump has attacked the CUSMA deal relentlessly. …The drumbeat of reporting over the coming sit-down with US officials might have you believing we are headed for gladiatorial combat, and not besuited teams working out the fine print of customs classifications and supply chain logistics. In this world, Pascal Chan, who helps lead the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, has emerged as a kind of trade whisperer. …Pascal Chan: There’s concern that if we don’t get to a renewal right now, everything falls apart. That’s not the case. We just go then into an annual review cycle every year. Sure, if we can hit a renewal now, that’s great. It extends the duration of the agreement. But the practical effect of a failed renewal is more uncertainty, not instant collapse. 

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Trump says US would do better without USMCA trade agreement

By Steve Holland and David Shepardson
Reuters
June 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

PARIS — US President Trump on Wednesday said that the United States would do better without the US-Mexico-Canada ​Agreement on trade and that he would prefer not to have a new ‌one, but added that he was open to doing it. “I would rather not have the agreement, but I may sign it,” Trump said in France. “We do better as a country if we don’t have ​an agreement.” …The US Trade ​Representative’s Office is holding talks with Mexico this week in Washington focused on agriculture and “a ​level playing field,” with a third set of talks in Mexico City scheduled for the week of July 20. Agricultural groups are urging Trump to extend USMCA for another 16 years with duty-free farm products, strengthened ​provisions for genetically modified corn and ethanol access in Mexico and improved access to Canada’s ​largely closed dairy market. Automakers are also pressing for an extension.

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What you need to know as the deadline for formally extending CUSMA approaches

By Kelly Geraldine Malone
The Canadian Press in Calgary City News
June 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON — A major benchmark is coming up for the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade, known in Canada as CUSMA. July 1 is the deadline for the three countries to either formally extend the agreement for 16 years or continue under annual reviews. …What happens if there is no extension on July 1? The trade pact will remain in place even if the United States doesn’t agree to extend CUSMA on July 1. Peisch said CUSMA will continue for another 10 years before “automatically terminating if the parties can’t come to agreement on extension.” In the near term, Peisch said, the countries will continue to negotiate possible changes to the agreement that could lead to an extension. …Can a country leave CUSMA? If the United States does not agree to the extension on July 1, the trade agreement stays in place unless one of the countries gives six months’ notice that it is pulling out of CUSMA. 

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Cascades invests $15M to increase tissue paper production in Quebec

Cascades Inc.
June 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades announced the installation of a state-of-the-art tissue converting line at its Granby, Quebec facility. This equipment will increase the site’s production capacity while enhancing product quality. The installation of the new equipment, a $15 M investment, will take place over a period of 9 months. This builds on a $14 M investment made in recent years, for a total investment of $29 M. …The installation of this equipment will help secure the 239 well-paying jobs at the plant, thereby directly contributing to the economic vitality of the Haute‑Yamaska region. …”The installation of this new modern line is fully in line with our long-term growth strategy,” said Hugues Simon, President and CEO.

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Nova Scotia government, Pictou Landing First Nation consider alternative site for Boat Harbour sludge

By Michael Gorman
CBC News
June 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Fred Tilley

The Nova Scotia government and Pictou Landing First Nation are in talks about an alternative site to store contaminated sludge removed from Boat Harbour as part of the cleanup process of the former tidal estuary that for decades was used as the treatment site for a nearby pulp mill. Fred Tilley, the minister responsible is providing few details about the location in question. …The cleanup of Boat Harbour since the closure of the Northern Pulp mill in 2020 has been delayed for years due to a variety of factors, including what to do with the sludge after it’s removed. Although the province has federal approval to expand an existing on-site hazardous waste containment facility, that approval included a condition that they explore alternative sites with the First Nation. …Chief Tamara Young said it would be preferable for the sludge to be stored at the site of the former mill at Abercrombie Point.

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Boise Cascade Named One of America’s Best Large Employers

By Boise Cascade Company
Business Wire
June 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Boise Cascade was named one of America’s Best Large Employers in 2026 by Forbes. This recognition highlights the company’s strong workplace culture built by their dedicated team of 7,500 associates across North America. Forbes, in partnership with Statista, selects their annual list of America’s Best Employers based on an independent survey of more than 217,000 US employees at companies with at least 1,000 team members. Over 3.5 million employer evaluations are considered. The final score is based on two types of evaluations: personal (those given by employees themselves) and public (those given by friends and family members of employees, or members of the public who work in the same industry), with a much higher weighting for personal evaluations. [Other forest products companies named include Georgia Pacific. View the complete list of 2026 award recipients here

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EU Parliament passes transatlantic trade deal

By Camille Gijs
Politico EU
June 16, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The European Parliament approved legislation on Tuesday to implement the EU’s trade deal with the United States, marking one of the final hurdles in a process that has repeatedly frustrated the Trump administration. Lawmakers voted by 440 in favor, with 151 against and 50 abstaining, to approve changes to legislation to remove tariffs on U.S. industrial goods and some agricultural products — fulfilling the EU’s side of the agreement struck last July at President Donald Trump’s golf resort in Turnberry, Scotland.  Washington had agreed to cap tariffs on most EU exports at 15 percent and to lower levies on European cars. Those changes took effect last fall. …The Council of the EU — representing EU governments — is now expected to rubber-stamp the texts on June 26, before they are officially published in the EU’s Official Journal and enter into force. 

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Timber Investment Group acquires Jamestown’s timberland platform

Timberland Investment Group
June 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

NEW YORK — BTG Pactual Timberland Investment Group, timberland investment managers, announced the acquisition of approximately 90,000 acres of US timberland formerly managed by Jamestown, a global design-focused real estate investment and management firm. …The portfolio of high-quality timberland spans five U.S. states, including approximately 50,000 acres of pine timberland in Georgia and Alabama and approximately 40,000 acres of diversified hardwood timberland across Indiana, Pennsylvania, and New York. All properties are certified under the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI). The acquisition increases BTG Pactual TIG’s core U.S. timberland strategy’s portfolio to more than 1.7 million acres. The firm manages 3.3 million acres globally. The transaction creates further opportunities for BTG Pactual TIG to scale positive conservation outcomes through its long-term collaboration with The Nature Conservancy (TNC), Conservation Advisor to the firm’s core U.S. timberland strategy.

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Forestry and Related Products: Why Location Mistakes Are So Hard to Undo

By Lindsey Cannon
Area Development Magazine
June 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

The forestry and related products sector does not behave like most industrial sectors – especially in the current economic climate. Typically, an industry is either growing or contracting. Both expansion and contraction are happening at the same time. For example, paper mills producing newsprint are closing, while paperboard plants are announcing new locations. Therefore, understanding the nuances within the sector helps enforce the important factors that must be taken under consideration during the site selection process. Within this sector, facilities are capital-intensive, supply chains are geographically constrained, and relocation is rarely a realistic option once operations begin. As a result, location decisions in this industry carry a level of permanence due to their longevity in a location. Therefore, it is important to ensure that the site selection process is comprehensive, so location mistakes are avoided. …For corporate site selection teams, this means fiber analysis must go far beyond aggregate volume.

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Fibre Excellence: Toulouse Commercial Court postpones hearing to July 6 to solidify takeover plan with a new investor

PaperFIRST
June 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

FRANCE — The Toulouse Commercial Court has decided to postpone the hearing scheduled today June 17 to July 6. …The discussions during the hearing highlighted the strong interest of a new, renowned French investor. The commitment of this investor, ready to support industrial sovereignty, makes it possible to consider consolidating the current takeover plan led by Fibre Excellence’s management, or the potential submission of a new offer. This extension until July 6 will notably allow for continued discussions on fulfilling the conditions precedent to the management’s offer. Supported from the outset by the Occitanie and Sud Regions, as well as by committed investors, the objective remains to pave the way for the expected guarantees in order to consolidate the fundamentals of combined pulp and power production and ensure the long-term sustainability of the business. …Fibre Excellence welcomes the mobilization of French investors ready to commit to France’s industrial sovereignty.

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Production curtailments at UPM’s pulp mills in Finland

EUWID Pulp and Paper
June 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

HELSINKI — Finnish forest products group UPM has announced temporary production curtailments at its pulp mills in Kaukas and, potentially, Pietarsaari. Production at the Kaukas mill is scheduled to be suspended for approximately six weeks from 3 August. UPM is also preparing for a possible temporary production stoppage at its Pietarsaari mill in October. The company said the measures are aimed at optimising production volumes and wood procurement. The curtailments are also intended to safeguard profitability under current market and cost conditions.

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New Zealand’s PF Olsen and Forest360 unite as Stand Forestry

NewsTalkZB.co.nz
June 17, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

NEW ZEALAND — PF Olsen and Forest360 have merged to become New Zealand’s biggest independent forestry manager, trading as Stand Forestry. The companies announced their merger late last year, backed by new investment from Adamantem Capital’s Environmental Opportunities Fund and supported by PF Olsen’s Quayside Holdings. …The new brand will combine 75 years’ experience, a workforce of more than 200 skilled professionals and 480,000ha of forestry under management on both sides of the Tasman, the companies said. …The company recently launched a new carbon joint venture model in New Zealand to make it easier for farmers and landowners to participate in the Emissions Trading Scheme. …The merged group has more than 1000 clients, from major institutional investors to family-run businesses and private landowners. PF Olsen also has a large operation in Australia, managing 212,000ha.

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Stora Enso plans two-month shutdown at Veitsiluoto sawmill in Finland

Lapin Kansa newspaper in FEA News
June 15, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

FINLAND — Stora Enso will suspend operations at its Veitsiluoto sawmill in Kemi, Finland, in August and lay off staff until the beginning of October, Metsälehti reported, citing Lapin Kansa. The company cited a challenging lumber market, low consumer confidence, geopolitical uncertainty, and log prices as factors behind the suspension. The layoffs do not apply to Stora Enso’s other sawmills operating in northern Finland.

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Finance & Economics

Lumber Futures Rise to 8-Month High

Trading Economics
June 19, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber climbed past $630 per thousand board feet, the highest level since October, amid higher effective US import costs on Canadian softwood and tighter expected supply. Prices rose despite a small reduction in preliminary antidumping and countervailing duties, because the combined tariff burden remains high at about 35.9% including the existing Section 232 levy, set to take effect in August. The market is also being driven by uncertainty ahead of final duty decisions, prompting buyers to accelerate purchases and lift near-term demand. At the same time, US domestic production is still constrained, while housing-related consumption remains structurally large, with softwood lumber and engineered wood products heavily used in new construction. Each new home requires roughly 15,000 board feet of lumber plus extensive engineered wood products, keeping baseline consumption elevated even in a softer housing cycle. [END]

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Second official linerboard increase in four months started in North America

By Gregory Rudder
RISI Fastmarkets
June 15, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

North American producers are pursuing a second formal linerboard increase in four months, faster than the typical five-month cadence. Roughly 10% and 3.9 million tons of US containerboard capacity were permanently retired from February 2025 through March 2026. Cost pressures mount as inflation hits a three-year high, OCC rose $5–10 per short ton and diesel jumped 50% to $5.259 per gallon. PCA reported legacy box demand up 4.5% in April and 3.5% in May, selling 90,000 tons of inventory across March and April. Packaging paper increases of $50–$60 per ton take effect July 1 and August 1 across multiple producers, including Smurfit Westrock and ND Paper.

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Harvard Housing Study Shows Affordability Hitting Demand for Home Purchases

The National Association of Home Builders
June 18, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

While supply concerns are still weighing on housing affordability, a combination of soaring prices and economic uncertainty is dragging on housing demand, according to the annual State of Nation’s Housing report from the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies (JCHS). The study noted that the economy added just 116,000 jobs in 2025, the lowest number of new jobs added in a non-recession year since 2002. …But housing supply issues are still a major concern in the market. …The report also details how federal, state and local officials are quickly moving to address housing supply. …Growing numbers of state and local governments are loosening local zoning and land-use regulations to increase the availability of buildable land. …In a positive development for the industry, the report notes that remodeling activity is surging. Over the last 10 years, owner home improvement spending grew by 153%, far outpacing growth in spending on new multifamily (84%) and single-family development (90%).

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U.S. Imports Of Hardwood & Decorative Plywood Fall

By Keith Christman, President
Decorative Hardwoods Association
June 18, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

We appear to be seeing the impacts of the preliminary antidumping and countervailing duties on imports of hardwood plywood from China, Indonesia, and Vietnam. After spikes in recent years, there are significant declines in imports from these countries. However, we may also be starting to see the signs of transshipment through other Asian countries, including Malaysia, Cambodia, and Thailand. …The most recent data shows that U.S. imports of hardwood and decorative plywood are down by more than 36% in volume and 23% in value for the first four months of this year. Imports from Indonesia, Vietnam, and China declined by nearly 70%, 61%, and 66%, respectively. During the same period, imports from Malaysia and Cambodia surged by 175% and 650%.

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The Federal Reserve maintained its target interest rate

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
June 17, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

With a new Fed Chair and plans for evolving operating strategies, the Federal Reserve maintained its target policy rate at the conclusion of the June Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. For the fourth consecutive meeting, the FOMC maintained the short-term federal funds rate at a top rate of 3.75%. …Overall, the FOMC statement was short, indicating a new communication strategy. There were no dissenting votes. The two-year Treasury rate increased by more than 10 basis points after the FOMC announcement. It is worth noting that while the statement was short, the press conference revealed a number of new plans under Fed Chair Warsh. While holding rates constant, the Fed pivoted to a more hawkish tone in its policy statement. Among the items dropped from the current FOMC statement was its prior easing bias for monetary policy. …Looking forward, the Fed’s outlook for the economy and monetary policy reflects recent supply shocks.

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Oil prices won’t drop to pre-Iran war levels anytime soon

By Jodan Flegeul
BNN Markets
June 15, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

Global oil prices fell on Monday following news of a tentative deal between Iran and the U.S. to extend their ceasefire agreement and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, but a veteran oil watcher doesn’t see crude prices returning to pre-war levels anytime soon. Eric Nuttall, partner at Ninepoint Partners, said that traders are trying to determine where the price of oil will settle out in the coming days and weeks, as many key details about the deal still need to be ironed out. …Nuttall noted that even if the strategically important Strait of Hormuz is fully reopened as a result of the Iran-U.S. deal, it will take time for oil markets to recover from the volatility of the last three and a half months. …In addition to the logistical backlog and supply chain disruption, the war in Iran has caused extensive damage to petroleum facilities across the Middle East, Nuttall explained.

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May Housing Starts Fall as Multifamily Construction Slows Sharply

The National Association of Home Builders
June 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Housing starts fell sharply in May, driven by a steep drop in multifamily construction, while single-family building also slipped amid high interest rates, rising construction costs and persistent labor shortages. Overall housing starts decreased 15.4% in May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.18 million units. …“The decline in housing starts aligns with NAHB’s latest builder survey, which showed builder sentiment weakening further in June,” said Bill Owens, chairman of the NAHB. “Elevated mortgage rates, affordability challenges and cautious buyers continue to weigh on demand for new homes.” …Overall permits decreased 0.7% to a 1.41-million-unit annualized rate in May. Single-family permits increased 0.6% to an 886,000-unit rate and are down 1.8% compared to May 2025. Multifamily permits decreased 2.8% to an annualized 527,000 pace and are up 2.5% compared to May 2025. The number of single-family homes under construction is at 587,000 units—5.9% lower than a year ago.

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U.S. Housing Starts Plunge Much More Than Expected In May

United States Census Bureau
June 16, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Construction activity on new single-family homes retreated in May alongside permits and completions in the face of economic uncertainty, high borrowing costs, and material rates, the U.S. Census Bureau reported Tuesday. Single-family housing starts last month were a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 882,000, down 1.9% from April. Total housing starts in May also experienced a significant pullback, plunging 15.4% month over month and 8.7% year over year to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.17 million units. Municipalities across the U.S. issued 1.413 million permits for the construction of private housing in May, 0.7% below April’s rate of 1.42 million and 0.2% below May 2025’s 1.416 million. Single-family completions last month dipped 1.6% below April’s revised rate of 886,000 units, while total housing completions dropped 8.1% from April.

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US Administration developing process to refund certain liquidated International Emergency Economic Powers Act tariffs

By Aaron Lorenzo
Deloitte
June 13, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

A top US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) official told Court of International Trade (CIT) Judge Richard Eaton on 9 June that the agency is still creating a process for refunding tariffs that involve more complex entry types and that have been finally liquidated (i.e., are more than 90 days post-liquidation) in the Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries portal. “We can’t do it all at once,” CBP Executive Assistant Commissioner Susan Thomas testified. ….The US Trade Representative (USTR) is proposing additional tariffs, at rates of 10% and 12.5%, on 60 economies after determining they failed to impose and/or enforce a prohibition on goods produced with forced labor, giving them advantages over US competition. USTR is seeking feedback on the proposals and called for written comments by 6 July, with hearings on the proposed actions scheduled for a day later. 

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The Conference Board Leading Economic Index for the US Rose in May

The Conference Board
June 18, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics

The Conference Board Leading Economic Index® (LEI) for the US increased slightly by 0.1% in May 2026 to 99.3 (2016=100), following a 0.2% increase in April. After these two consecutive increases, the LEI is down just 0.3% over the six months between November 2025 and May 2026, a much smaller rate of decline than its 1.3% contraction over the previous six months (May to November 2025). “The Leading Index for the US increased slightly in May, fueled entirely by positive contributions from financial components, especially stock prices and the interest rate spread,” said Justyna Zabinska-La Monica, Senior Manager, Business Cycle Indicators, at The Conference Board. “On the non-financial side of the LEI, only ISM® New Orders Index showed some strength, with consumer expectations remaining a major drag. Despite two consecutive monthly increases, the LEI’s six- and twelve-month growth rates were still negative, suggesting slower economic expansion ahead.”

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

The instant high-rise. Novel modular construction using AI and robots

By UBC Applied Science
The University of British Columbia
May 5, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

For decades, populations in North American cities have been growing faster than housing can accommodate. …Dr. Yang is the director of UBC’s Smart Structures Lab, where researchers combine advanced structural simulation and large-scale experimental testing to design building systems that are safer, more environmentally friendly, and quick to assemble. Integrating artificial intelligence, robotics, and modular assembly to automate key stages of construction—and even monitor structural health in real time—the lab has evolved into a hub for next-generation infrastructure research. It also plays a central role in an $8.27-million national initiative led by UBC Civil Engineering to address housing supply through sustainable modular construction. …Dr. Yang’s team is already applying their research in the field, testing out large-scale construction machines to automate the construction sequence. …Instead of performing repetitive or hazardous physical tasks, workers become machine operators and systems managers, while supervisors monitor multiple projects remotely. 

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Design for Mass Timber Hospital in Canada Wins Fast Company 2026 World Changing Ideas Award

HDR Inc.
June 16, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — The Quinte Health Prince Edward County Memorial Hospital (PECMH) in Picton, Ontario, Canada, is a winner of Fast Company’s 2026 World Changing Ideas Awards in the “general excellence” category. Upon completion in 2028, it will be the first acute care hospital in North America constructed with an unencapsulated all mass timber structure. …The new 23-inpatient-bed, 97,000-square-foot hospital represents a deeply collaborative effort between Quinte Health, Infrastructure Ontario, HDR, M. Sullivan & Son Limited, and the Prince Edward County Memorial Hospital Foundation. Currently under construction, the hospital establishes a new benchmark for sustainable healthcare infrastructure. …PECMH’s timber structure, geothermal energy systems, building-integrated photovoltaics, high-performance envelopes, public gardens and green roofs position the hospital as a pioneering example of how one of the most energy-intensive building typologies can be reimagined for a lower-carbon future.

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Trex Announces its 2025 Sustainability Report, ‘For Today and Tomorrow’

Trex Company
June 17, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

WINCHESTER, Virginia — As Trex celebrates 30 years of innovation and impact, the company announced the release of its 2025 Sustainability Report. Trex was the first company to bring wood composite decking to the market, creating an entirely new category of circular decking. …Amy Fernandez, Chief Sustainability Officer said “Our 2025 report demonstrates how principled, ethical leadership is the foundation for our business, fostering long-term relationships based on trust.” …Highlights include: Circular Materials Leadership – Since its founding, the company has upcycled more than 6.4 billion pounds of waste plastic film. NexTrex® Recycling Network – Expanded to more than 15,300 retail locations, collecting over 353 million pounds of waste polyethylene film in 2025 through partnerships with retailers and consumers. NexTrex® Grassroots Movement – Trex makes recycling accessible to more and more communities. The program added 38 new centralized drop-off sites in 2025, recycling a record amount of waste plastic film.

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Mass timber industry would see a boost under this bipartisan US House bill

Michigan Farm News
June 18, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

A bipartisan bill in the US House is calling for additional incentives to use of mass timber building materials in federal contracting. Introduced by House Ag Committee Chair Glenn Thompson (R-PA) and Andrea Salinas (D-OR), the Mass Timber Federal Buildings Act, the bill would give timber and other forest products companies the ability to compete for construction, renovation, or acquisition of public buildings, and for military construction. The bill creates a two-tier contracting preference for mass timber and other innovative wood projects. The first-tier preference applies to mass timber that is made within the US. …The optional second tier applies to mass timber products that are sourced from restoration practices, fire mitigation projects and forest owners. Additionally, the bill contains a reporting requirement for a whole building lifecycle assessment, which will help provide additional evidence of the environmental benefits of the use of timber and forest products in buildings.

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How can we make buildings more resilient before—and after—earthquakes?

By Askkan Hashemi
Tech Xplore
June 13, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

UNIVERSITY OF AUCKLAND — This week’s magnitude 7.8 earthquake in the Philippines came with scenes familiar to New Zealanders: collapsed buildings, shattered facades and streets strewn with rubble. Earthquakes of such force test buildings to their limits. …Last month, in one of the country’s most demanding full-scale earthquake tests, we assessed an emerging timber-based technology and found that it can meet all these requirements. Over the past decade, many people will have heard growing talk about timber as a low-carbon alternative to concrete and steel. While we might picture traditional timber-framed houses, modern mass timber construction is very different. …During earthquake shaking, engineered timber structures have been found to perform extremely well. …To understand how our system performs under realistic earthquake conditions, we built a full-scale, modular CLT building and tested it on the University of Auckland’s “shake table” simulator. …The building performed as hoped.

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Forestry

FSC Canada releases 2025 Annual Report – A year of growth

By Étienne Vézina, Board Chair
FSC Canada
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

2025 was a landmark year for FSC Canada, one defined by transition, renewed clarity, and a deepening of the values that anchor our mission. I am proud to reflect on a year in which FSC Canada strengthened its role as a trusted leader in responsible forest stewardship. This year marked an important moment in our organization’s history with the retirement of François Dufresne, who served as President and CEO for more than a decade. François guided FSC Canada through periods of significant change in the forest sector, always with integrity, steadiness, and a commitment to collaboration. …We also welcomed Monika Patel as FSC Canada’s new President and CEO. Monika brings a clear strategic vision, a deep understanding of the FSC system, and a values driven approach that aligns strongly with our mission. Her leadership has already brought renewed focus to our priorities and strengthened our engagement with partners across the country.  

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The latest ‘sustained yield’ scam will devastate Montana’s national forests

By George Ochenski
The Daily Montanan
June 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Way back in 1995 Bob Brown, the Republican president of the Montana Senate, called me into his office. He had co-sponsored a bill with a pro-logging Missoula Democrat to establish a “sustained yield” level of logging on Montana’s state trust lands – and he was worried it wasn’t working out the way he hoped. Bob was right to be worried then and Montanans are right to be worried now because Trump’s Forest Service Chief and former timber industry lobbyist Tom Schultz, has just unleashed the “sustained yield” scam on Montana’s National Forests. …My advice to Bob was to let the bill die because he didn’t have the votes to remove the amendments the timber industry lobbyists stuck on the bill. But he didn’t take that advice. …Two years later, Tom Schultz went to work for Montana’s Department of Natural Resources and Conservation, earning the sobriquet “Chainsaw Tom” for his pro-logging zeal.

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US Forest Service Chief Warns Markets, Not Trees, Drive Wood Imports

By Jason Ross
Wood Central
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Tom Schultz

WASHINGTON, D.C. — A new plan to rebuild markets for American wood is due within months, after the country’s top forester blamed weak demand, and not a shortage of trees, as the real brake on a federal estate. That is according to US Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz, whose evidence to a House Natural Resources subcommittee set the case out in full, even as his agency pursues a 25% increase in federal logging. …Bruce Westerman, who chairs the full House Natural Resources Committee, questioned how a country managing 193 million acres and spending billions of dollars a year fighting wildfires had become the world’s largest importer of wood and paper. Citing a steep fall in federal timber sales since the late 1980s, Schultz countered that the resource on the ground is more than ample. …On the import mix, Schultz noted Canadian lumber now supplies around 25% of US consumption, down from roughly 33 per cent.

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Federal judge sends Bayer’s $7.25 billion Roundup settlement back to Missouri state court

By Dietrich Knauth
Reuters
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

A federal judge sent Bayer’s proposed $7.25 billion Roundup settlement back to ‌state court, overruling objections from plaintiffs who had argued the state court had no power to implement a nationwide resolution of lawsuits that claim the company’s Roundup weedkiller causes cancer. US District Judge Henry Edward Autrey sided with Bayer, concluding that the objecting plaintiffs did not have the power to transfer the ​case to federal court because only the defendant has that right. The ruling is likely to bolster Bayer’s efforts ​to win approval of the sweeping settlement by restoring the case to the state court where the deal is ⁠being fast‑tracked and avoiding the risk that the settlement would be reviewed by a different federal judge who has already criticized the deal. …In a separate case, the US Supreme ⁠Court is weighing ​Bayer’s argument that federal law governing pesticides should prevent plaintiffs from suing under state laws.

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Brewing battle over Forest Service glyphosate spraying near Lake Tahoe’s pristine waters

By Cary Gillam
The New Lede
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The US government plans to spray multiple types of herbicides – including the cancer-linked glyphosate weed killer – within national forest property that abuts the community’s cherished lake. …Katherine Levy is among a number of Lake Tahoe-area residents and officials who are fighting to block or alter the US Forest Service project, which is aimed at restoration of areas damaged by the 2021 Caldor Fire. The wildfire burned through more than 200,000 acres in and around the Lake Tahoe Basin. The Forest Service manages more than 156,000 acres of National Forest land within that basin. …The brewing battle is only one of similar fights over forestry pesticide use playing out across the US, but the Lake Tahoe issue has drawn the attention of leaders with the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement, who have been lobbying the US Environmental Protection Agency to ban or severely restrict glyphosate use.

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Connecticut Opens $1.23 Million in Urban and Community Forestry Grants

Environment Energy Leader
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Connecticut’s Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) announced two federally funded grant programs totaling $1.23 million for urban and community forestry projects, with application deadlines in August 2026. The programs are available through DEEP’s Urban and Community Forestry Grant Opportunities webpage and target different eligible applicant pools with different project scopes. The Urban Forest Resilience Grant Program makes $230,000 available to municipalities and 501(c)(3) organizations for tree removal and replanting in response to forest pest and disease losses, particularly from the Emerald Ash Borer. …The Resilient Forestry Practices Grant Program provides $1 million to rural municipalities and federally recognized tribes with populations under 50,000. It focuses on proactive forest management practices targeting pests, invasive species, and climate-related stressors in municipally and tribally owned woodlands. 

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Forest Stewardship Council wants to reduce worker risks in erodible, ‘non-certified’ forests

By Monique Steele
Radio New Zealand (RNZ)
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

NEW ZEALAND — One of the world’s largest certifiers of responsible forests is cracking down on risky work in erosion-prone forests, which could affect smaller plantation growers. The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) was working to reduce health and safety risks in forests that were not certified under its programme, but supplied what was known as “controlled” wood into mixed class products. The Germany-based organisation’s strict certification aimed to prevent illegal harvesting, human rights violations, to reject the use of genetically-modified organisms and protect conservation values. …FSC Australia and New Zealand senior policy manager Stefan Jensen said it was proposing significant due diligence changes in New Zealand, especially in steep and erosion-prone areas. He said the current risk assessment included one specified risk that was relatively easy for companies to meet, but more were being proposed.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Drax cleared after investigation into sourcing of wood pellets

By Lauren Almeida and Jillian Ambrose
BBC News
June 18, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

UK — The City watchdog has closed an investigation into the owner of the Drax power plant after an almost 10-month review into whether the company’s sustainability claims mislead shareholders. The Financial Conduct Authority said it had “reviewed thousands of pages” of “complex material” relating to the company’s sourcing of wood pellets for the Drax power plant in Selby, North Yorkshire, but “did not find evidence that justified any further action”. The regulator began the investigation last year into whether Drax’s annual reports and accounts between 2021 and 2023 misled shareholders or left out important information investors needed to know about the origins of its biomass fuel. …Ofgem found at the time that there was no evidence to suggest the breach was deliberate, and said instead that it was “technical in nature”. It also found no evidence that the biomass sourced was unsustainable or that Drax had wrongly laid claim to renewable energy subsidies.

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Federal government sued over climate policies: ‘It must keep its word’

The National Post
June 16, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — Three young women and two environmental groups on Tuesday filed a lawsuit against the Canadian government seeking to force it to develop an action plan to meet its key climate goals. The lawsuit comes as Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government shifts Canada’s climate and energy priorities, rolling back key environmental policies while advancing major energy and infrastructure projects to reduce dependence on the United States. Announcing the lawsuit, plaintiff Shirley Barnea, a university student from Quebec, said authorities had an obligation to build a sustainable future for younger generations. …The legal action aims to compel the government “to chart a credible, up-to-date course of action” and “to protect Canadians from the worsening impacts of climate change,” according to a statement from the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment (CAPE), which is also a party to the lawsuit.

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Crude Tall Oil—A Byproduct of the Kraft Pulping Process—Is Gaining Value in Low-Carbon Fuel Markets

ResourceWise Forest Products Blog
June 16, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

For decades, crude tall oil (CTO) was viewed primarily as a byproduct of the kraft pulping process. While valuable, it still served a secondary purpose to a mill’s core business. Today, that perspective is changing. As renewable diesel, sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), and other low-carbon fuel markets expand, crude tall oil is increasingly being recognized as a strategic feedstock. …The shift illustrates a broader trend across the bioeconomy: low-carbon markets are creating new value streams for materials that have traditionally been viewed as industrial byproducts. …Tall oil fatty acids (TOFA) are particularly used as feedstocks for renewable diesel production. Because CTO is considered a waste- or residue-based feedstock in many markets, it can help fuel producers meet increasingly stringent carbon-reduction requirements while supporting compliance with renewable fuel policies. As governments raise decarbonization targets and fuel producers seek lower-carbon inputs, interest in forest-derived feedstocks continues to grow.

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European Commission Faces Scrutiny Over Carbon Removal Certification Rules

Fundsfor NGOs
June 15, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

A coalition of environmental organizations has formally requested the European Commission to review recently adopted methodologies governing biogenic emissions capture with carbon storage (Bio-CCS) and biochar carbon removal under the European Union’s Carbon Removals and Carbon Farming (CRCF) Regulation. The request for internal review argues that the methodologies fail to meet the regulation’s requirement of delivering permanent carbon dioxide removal from the atmosphere and therefore do not fulfill their intended climate objectives. …The coalition contends that the methodologies overlook important scientific evidence and international standards related to the quantification, monitoring, and sustainability of carbon removal activities. …The environmental groups argue that the methodologies could weaken the credibility of the European Union’s carbon removal framework. Concerns have also been raised regarding the potential future use of carbon removals within the European Union Emissions Trading System. 

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Health & Safety

Poor air quality incident in Saint John in May came with no public warning

By Mark Leger
CBC News
June 15, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — On the morning of May 26, a provincial air quality monitoring station on the west side of Saint John began registering unusual readings. …There was no special public notification about the west side spike, even though the environment department watched it develop and was concerned enough to launch an immediate investigation to determine the cause. …The department, in emails, said it believes operations and maintenance work at the Irving Pulp & Paper mill could have been a contributing factor. …“The cause appears to be a combination of unusual weather, which trapped pollutants at ground level rather than dispersing them upward, combined with higher than ordinary emissions during a cleaning/maintenance cycle at the mill.” J.D. Irving said there is “no concrete way to confirm” it caused the poor air quality readings but said adjustments in mill operations were made at the time to be on the safe side.

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