Blog Archives

Special Feature

Tree Frog Forestry News has always been a bit of a different creature

Sandy, Kelly & Heidi
Tree Frog Forestry News
March 30, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, United States, International

It’s not behind a paywall. It doesn’t chase clicks. And it doesn’t try to be everything to everyone. Instead, it’s quietly become a daily habit for thousands across the forest sector—industry, government, First Nations, researchers, students, and retirees alike—all looking for a simple way to stay informed. What started as a small idea has grown into something much bigger than we imagined. Today, Tree Frog directly reaches more than 100,000 readers across BC, Canada, the US and beyond, with thousands more picking it up through company circulations, association newsletters, and even university classrooms. In many ways, it has become shared infrastructure for the sector—a common starting point for understanding what’s happening and why it matters.

But like many things that are widely used, it can be easy to assume it will always just be there. Tree Frog has remained free and open-access by design. We’ve always believed the sector is better off when information flows easily—when a student can access the same news as a CEO, and when smaller operators have the same visibility as larger ones. That only works, however, because a portion of the organizations and individuals who rely on it choose to support it. And in a year when the forest sector is facing real challenges, that support matters more than ever. To those organizations already supporting Tree Frog—thank you.

If Tree Frog is something you or your organization rely on, we’d encourage you to consider being part of that support—whether as a sponsor, a Friend of the Frog, or simply by spreading the word. Even small steps help ensure we can continue delivering this service in its current form. Either way, we’re grateful you’re here and part of the community.

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Business & Politics

U.S.-Canada Trade Relations: Current Tensions And Future Outlook

By Kyla Kitamura
US Congressional Research Service
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The United States and Canada have one of the largest bilateral trade relationships in the world, including highly integrated energy and automotive markets. Since 1989, U.S.-Canada trade has been governed by the U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement, then by the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and now by the 2020 United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA). Since 2025, U.S.-Canada trade tensions have increased following the imposition of U.S. tariffs on key Canadian exports. The two countries, along with Mexico, also are scheduled to engage in a review of USMCA in July 2026. …The United States and Canada have had a decades-long dispute over trade in softwood lumber. The last agreement… expired in October 2015. Since the agreement’s expiration, the United States has imposed antidumping (AD) and countervailing duties (CVD) on imports of Canadian softwood lumber. Canada has challenged the duties through NAFTA, USMCA, the WTO, and the U.S. Court of International Trade..

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Spearhead Pushes Possibilities with $60 Million Glulam Expansion

By Spearhead
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Spearhead, a Nelson, BC-based family-owned timber fabricator, is investing $60 million in a new production facility housing a highly specialized glulam manufacturing line and advanced CNC machining technology — purpose-built to drive innovation and push possibilities in mass timber construction and advanced timber fabrication. With construction already underway, the new facility sits immediately adjacent to Spearhead’s existing operation just outside of Nelson, BC — a site the company has called home for almost 30 years. …The project team includes Leckie Studio as architect of record, Fast + Epp as engineer of record, and HR Pacific as general contractor. …Spearhead is creating over 60 new full time jobs in Nelson, taking the company’s headcount to over 120. The project has already received $7.5 million in provincial funding from the Manufacturing Jobs Fund, reflecting broader recognition of mass timber’s role in Canada’s forestry and construction future, with additional funding partnerships to be announced soon.

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Gorman brothers celebrates 75 years in the Okanagan by expanding into a massive new sawmill

By Nelson Bennett
Resource Works
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

From wooden fruit boxes to telephone poles and finger-joint boards, the Gorman Brothers company has managed to survive and grow for 75 years in the Okanagan by developing niche and specialty wood products. The family-owned wood business, which is celebrating its 75th anniversary in business this year, recently started a new chapter in its long, steady growth story when it acquired a sawmill and forest tenure from Weyerhaeuser for $120 million. The acquisition includes the former Weyerhaeuser sawmill in Princeton, which has been rebranded as Similkameen Forest Products, and forest tenure totaling 682,000 cubic metres. …Until the recent purchase of the Princeton mill, Gorman Brothers was one of the few sawmillers in B.C. that did not produce conventional structural lumber like two-by-fours. It produces mainly “appearance grade” interior and exterior boards for home finishing and renovation – ceiling and soffit boards, wainscotting and trim, decking and siding.

 

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Ottawa to supply $15.6M to tariff-impacted Saskatchewan workers and employers

The Canadian Press in Global News
March 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Buckley Belanger

The federal government says it’s funding a $15.6-million program that supports Saskatchewan workers and employers affected by tariffs. Ottawa says the three-year program is available to those in the steel and softwood lumber industries, along with other sectors affected by foreign duties. It says the funding would support up to 1,800 workers in Saskatchewan who may face unemployment and require new skills to keep their jobs. The government says supports will be delivered through SaskJobs. Buckley Belanger, Canada’s secretary of state for rural development, says the funding gives workers a fair shot when tariffs hit their industries hard. Canadian businesses slapped with targeted US levies have said they’re struggling. …Saskatchewan Career Training Minister Eric Schmalz said his province’s diverse economy has allowed it to lessen the brunt of tariffs.

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Meggin Messenger has been appointed chair of BC Forest Practices Board

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
March 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Meggin Messenger

Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests, has appointed Meggin Messenger as chair of the independent forest auditing and investigating body for a three-year term, effective Tuesday, April 7, 2026. Messenger is a registered professional forester with an undergraduate degree in forestry and a master’s degree in public administration. Before being appointed to this new role, Messenger worked as an executive director in the BC Public Service and has led work on forestry, land use, resource stewardship, community development, climate change and sustainability. …The Forest Practices Board is B.C.’s independent watchdog for sound forest and range practices, reporting its findings and recommendations directly to the public and government. The board audits forest and range practices and appropriateness of government enforcement on public lands, investigates public complaints and current forestry issues, participates in administrative appeals and makes recommendations for improvement to practices and legislation.

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Inside New Brunswick’s Forest Economy: A Conversation with JD Irving’s Jason Limongelli

By David Campbell and Don Mills
Yopur Greater Moncton
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jason Limongelli

Our guest on this episode of the Insights Podcast is Jason Limongelli, Vice President, Woodlands Division with JD Irving, Limited. The forest products industry is the most important driver of economic activity in New Brunswick, generating nearly a billion dollars in tax and royalty revenue in 2024 and supporting one out of every 17 jobs in the province. Despite its importance, most people don’t really understand how it works. How many trees get cut down every year? How long does it take for a tree to reach full maturity? How many trees are planted each year? What does it mean to manage a Crown Land license? Jason answers all these questions and more. He also tells us about JDI. [podcast is 1h 7min long

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Ontario’s 2026 budget sees deficit hit $13.8B amid looming global instability

By Adam Carter
CBC News
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Peter Bethlenfalvy

The spectre of worldwide instability looms large in Ontario’s 2026 budget, which includes a small business income tax cut alongside a temporary reprieve on HST for buyers of new homes — but also pushes back a balanced budget for yet another year with a higher-than projected deficit. The $244-billion spending plan is replete with phrases like “uncertainty” and “heightened trade tensions,” and includes an increase in reserve spending from $1.5 billion in 2026-27 to $2.5 billion in 2028-29. …Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy said “Geopolitical forces that may have once felt distant have now reached our shores,” he said. “Global economic and trade tensions, supply chain disruptions, shifting markets — simply put, the world has changed, and we must change with it.” …The province’s recently announced plan to temporarily remove HST for buyers of new homes remains, with plans in place for the full 13% tax to be removed for new homes valued up to $1 million.

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Supreme Court’s tariff decision still leaves a ‘mess’ for companies trying to grab refunds

By Peter Crabb and Alison Larson
The Conversation US
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

US companies stung by President Trump’s emergency tariffs had hoped for relief when the US Supreme Court ruled in their favor. But settling on a remedy – namely, rebate checks from the government – may be an even bigger headache. Fresh wrinkles are prompting businesses to take different routes as they try to recoup money, with many opting to sue to improve their odds. These lawsuits are also underscoring the complex ways that tariffs worked their way through corporate accounting. In some cases, their cost was a clear line item; in others, the impact was muddier – say, through changed supply lines or selective increases in retail pricing. And some have backed off from a legal fight altogether and sold their refund rights to investment firms, often at a deep discount, figuring that getting something is better than risk getting nothing. …Consider the different approaches taken by FedEx and the retail chain Costco.

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European Parliament gives conditional approval to EU-US trade deal

By Jessica Rawnsley
BBC News
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The European Parliament has backed legislation to implement an EU-US trade deal, following months of uncertainty over President Donald Trump’s tariff threats. A majority of lawmakers voted in favour of the measures on Thursday, but added a series of safeguards to ensure the US honours its side of the deal struck last July. The legislation would set tariffs at 15% for most EU goods – down from the 30% initially threatened – in exchange for European investment in the US and the removal of EU import duties on US industrial goods. The vote comes after months of delay following Trump’s threats to annex Greenland and a US Supreme Court ruling that found some of his tariffs unlawful. The EU assembly voted by 417 to 154, and 71 abstentions, in favour of the legislation. The text will need to be signed off by all of the bloc’s 27 member states, with a concluding vote expected in April or May.

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Eagle Forest Products: Precision, People and a Doubled Production at Tangent Facility

By Chaille Brindley
Pallet Enterprise
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — Inside the remanufacturing plant in Tangent, Oregon, owned by Eagle Forest Products, output has quietly doubled in two years. The change didn’t come from chasing volume for volume’s sake. It came from tightening flow, upgrading key machinery, installing the right leadership—and refusing to compete with the very pallet companies the firm supplies. From its headquarters in Eagle, Idaho, the company operates a national network. Eagle manufactures in Tangent and Roseburg, Oregon; Osceola, Iowa; and Piedmont, Alabama. It operates a distribution and trading yard in Montgomery, Texas, along with a small East Coast trading office. …Looking ahead, Eagle is exploring expansion into the South Atlantic region with a model similar to its Texas operation – combining distribution, sales and some manufacturing. The search begins with finding the right personnel. Brad admitted.

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Biofuel plant incentive bill clears Wisconsin Senate

By Celia Horns and Tom Stankard
The Leader Telegram
March 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Romaine Quinn

An incentive package for a proposed aviation biofuel facility in Hayward cleared the Senate 31–2 and now heads to Gov. Tony Evers’ desk for final approval. The bill passed through the Assembly 94–5 last month. …Senator Romaine Quinn praised the bill’s potential to bring economic development to the state’s northern region and its forestry industry… “This will fundamentally change the trajectory of the forestry industry in this state — raising the value of timber, improving forest health, and bolstering 2,000 jobs across Northern Wisconsin.” …The technology used to convert woody biomass into SAF is proven, but has yet to be scaled commercially. …Green said it “not only revives Wisconsin’s timber markets after years of decline, but will also bolster thousands of jobs across Northern Wisconsin.” “By utilizing 80% Wisconsin-sourced wood, the project ensures a strong, homegrown market for loggers and foresters while encouraging better forest management practices,” he said

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Georgia-Pacific Announces President & CEO; Duncan to Lead Nearly 100-year-old Atlanta-Based Manufacturing Company

Georgia Pacific
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

David Duncan

ATLANTA – Georgia-Pacific announced that effective immediately, David Duncan, executive vice president of Georgia-Pacific’s consumer products group, has been named president and CEO. Mark Luetters, who currently serves as executive vice president of Koch had temporarily served as CEO since 2025. David Duncan, executive vice president of Georgia-Pacific’s consumer products group, has been named president and CEO. He’s been with the company since 2018 in leadership roles and has 28 years of experience at Koch companies. Prior to joining Georgia-Pacific, he served as president of performance solutions at INVISTA. …Vivek Joshi, currently president of the consumer tissue, towel and napkins (TTN) business, will become executive vice president of the consumer products business. 

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Hearing set for Georgia Pacific’s polluted water discharge plan

By James Call, USA Today
The Tallahassee Democrat
March 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

The Florida Department of Environmental Protection will hold a public hearing in April on Georgia Pacific’s request to release stormwater runoff from a closed paper mill into the Fenholloway River near Perry.  The Koch Industries subsidiary is embroiled in a dispute with neighboring landowners that has forced it to seek a permit to discharge 5 million gallons of polluted water daily from the site of the closed Foley Cellulose plant into the river. In December, GP submitted the permit application after an arbitrator sided with Four Rivers Land & Timber, who had blocked GP’s use of a 15-mile-long pipeline built to carry the discharge to the river’s mouth at the Gulf. …While there is no new effluent or wastewater, because GP has significantly dismantled the plant, there are pollutants in the ground accumulated during the 70 years the plant was in operation. 

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Pulp & Beyond 2026: Featuring pulp and paper industry trends and challenges

By: Simon Matthis
Pulp Paper News
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Highly exposed to energy costs, today’s unpredictable global trade politics and the crisis in the Middle East are impacting the pulp and paper industry in many ways. These developments will certainly be reflected at Pulp & Beyond 2026, the leading forest-based bioeconomy event in Northern Europe, taking place on 15–16 April 2026 at the Helsinki Expo and Convention Centre in Helsinki, Finland. However, the main theme of this year’s event—focusing on the role of artificial intelligence in process industries, innovation within the forest sector, and the future of the bioeconomy—was defined before the Middle East war broke out, along with the subsequent oil and gas crisis, turbulence in global stock markets, and the growing risk of an unprecedented global recession. Pulp & Beyond 2026 will be held April 14-17 in Finland at the Helsinki Expo and Convention Centre.

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Fibre Excellence takes legal action against the French government

Byu Faustine Loison
Print Industry News
March 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

FRANCE — Fibre Excellence has taken the next step in its battle with the French government. The pulp producer, which operates two sites in Saint-Gaudens and Tarascon, has requested a preliminary administrative appeal, a compulsory step before referring the matter to the administrative judge. For the industrialist, “the future of the company and the French forest-wood-paper industry is at stake between now and mid-April”. Committed to a conciliation procedure “unsuccessful to date in avoiding receivership” management is now looking to “to obtain a written response from the State”. …Without a commitment by April 14, the situation could tip over the edge, warns Fibre Excellence, which is talking about suspension of payments. And Fibre Excellence will be “forced” to refer the matter to the administrative judge, who may order modifications to the contract in question, but also “grant compensation commensurate with the damage suffered”.

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World order has irrevocably changed: World Trade Organization chief

Reuters in CTV News
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

GENEVA — The head of the World Trade Organization said on Thursday the multilateral system has fundamentally changed and that countries must look to the future to consider how to reform the global trade system. …“We must look to the future,” WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told delegates at the opening of the 14th WTO ministerial conference in Yaounde, Cameroon. While 72% of global trade still takes place under WTO rules, with growth in AI-related trade providing a bright spot, Okonjo-Iweala said the world trading system faces significant uncertainty due to the Middle East conflict and impact of U.S. tariffs on countries around the world. Okonjo-Iweala set out a list of problems facing the WTO, including the paralysis of the WTO’s dispute settlement body and transparency in notifying the use of subsidies. …“Lack of transparency leads to lack of trust, and that breeds suspicions of unfairness and anti-competitive behaviors,” she said.

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Finance & Economics

Lumber Futures Retreat on Lackluster Demand

Trading Economics
March 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures retreated toward $590 per thousand board feet as the cooling of the North American residential construction sector eroded the demand floor that had supported the market since January. The primary downward pressure stems from a slowdown in housing activity where single-family starts plunged 14.2% in March and building permits fell 5.4% signaling a sharp reduction in seasonal requirements. This demand destruction was catalyzed by a 11 basis point surge in mortgage rates to 6.45% following the Federal Reserve decision to hold interest rates steady alongside global inflationary spikes. While geopolitical tensions in the Strait of Hormuz initially pushed energy costs higher, the resulting increase in financing costs and a 10% drop in US housing starts outweighed the potential for supply chain disruptions. Furthermore a 2.4% increase in unsold builder inventory forced price cuts.

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U.S. kitchen cabinet sales fall 10% as February shipments decline across all categories

The Lesprom Network
March 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Total year-to-date sales for kitchen cabinet manufacturers through February 2026 reached $322.3 million, a 10.4% decrease from $359.6 million in the same period last year, according to the Kitchen Cabinet Manufacturers Association’s Trend of Business summary report. The year-over-year decline was broad-based across all product categories. Stock cabinet sales fell 15.2% to $52.7 million. Custom cabinet sales decreased 11.6% to $84.1 million. Semi-custom cabinet sales declined 9.0% to $185.5 million. On a month-over-month basis, total sales through February decreased 7.3% from January 2026. Semi-custom sales led the monthly decline, falling 14.1%, followed by stock sales down 12.9% and custom sales down 8.6%. The report estimates the overall U.S. market for kitchen cabinets in 2026 at $20.9 billion in sales and 92.0 million units. The average percentage of U.S. business for participating manufacturers was 98% in February 2026, compared to 99% a year earlier.

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US Consumer sentiment fell back 6% this month to its lowest level since December 2025

The University of Michigan
March 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

US Consumer sentiment fell back 6% this month to its lowest level since December 2025. Declines were seen across age and political party. Consumers with middle and higher incomes and stock wealth, buffeted by both escalating gas prices and volatile financial markets in the wake of the Iran conflict, exhibited particularly large drops in sentiment. Overall, the short-run economic outlook plunged 14%, and year-ahead expected personal finances sank 10%, while declines in long-run expectations were more subdued. These patterns suggest that, at this time, consumers may not expect recent negative developments to persist far into the future. These views are subject to change, however, if the Iran conflict becomes protracted or if higher energy prices pass through to overall inflation. …Year-ahead inflation expectations climbed from 3.4% in February to 3.8% this month, the largest one-month increase since April 2025. …Long-run inflation expectations inched down to 3.2%. 

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What is driving the surge in low-grade lumber prices?

By Antonio Gallotta
RISI Fastmarkets
March 27, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Prices for low-grade lumber – the main input cost for pallets – have moved sharply higher since the start of 2026, and the Iran conflict is now adding a second layer of pressure through fuel and freight. …The first sign of this tightening is the shrinking gap between low-grade and framing lumber prices. …This slow shedding of trucking availability suggests the industry is already operating with thinner capacity and weaker margins. Now diesel prices are rising sharply as geopolitical tensions in Iran lift energy costs. …Further upstream in the pallet supply chain lie more challenges. For loggers, diesel is not just another cost, but something that could destroy their already tight margins. With product prices still weak and little room to pass higher costs along, a sustained rise in diesel increases the odds of logging cutbacks, setting the stage for tighter log supply in the second half of 2026 should the increase in diesel prices be prolonged.

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US inflation projected at 4.2% amid Iran war fears

By Tara Suter
The Hill
March 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

US inflation is projected at 4.2% this year amid economic concerns surrounding the US-Israeli conflict against Iran, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). In a new report, the OECD made 2026 inflation projections for multiple countries, with the United Kingdom at 4%, Japan at 2.4%, Canada at 2.4% and the US at 4.2%. “The evolving conflict in the Middle East has human and economic costs for the countries directly involved, and will test the resilience of the global economy,” the OECD report reads. “A halt in shipments through the Strait of Hormuz and the closure or damage of energy infrastructure has generated a surge in energy prices and disrupted the global supply of energy and other important commodities, such as fertilisers,” it continues. …The current average price for a regular gallon of gas in the US is about $3.98, up about a dollar from last month, according to AAA.

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US mortgage rates rise to 6.38%, the highest level in 6 months

Freddie Mac
March 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

MCLEAN, Virgina — Freddie Mac released the results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey® (PMMS®), showing the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 6.38%. “Mortgage rates this week averaged 6.38%,” said Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s Chief Economist. “The housing market continues to show gradual improvements compared to a year ago amid recent rate volatility. Purchase and refinance applications are up year-over-year, and rates remain lower than last year when they averaged 6.65%.” The 30-year FRM averaged 6.38% as of March 26, 2026, up from last week U.S. weekly average mortgage rates as of 03/26/2026 when it averaged 6.22%. A year ago at this time, the 30-year FRM averaged 6.65%. The 15-year FRM averaged 5.75%, up from last week when it averaged 5.54%. A year ago at this time, the 15-year FRM averaged 5.89%.

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U.S. Imports Of Hardwood Plywood Drop By 7%

Decorative Hardwoods Association
March 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

U.S. imports of hardwood plywood began the year with a decline of nearly 7% in volume in January 2026 vs. January 2025. Imports from Vietnam dropped by almost 50%. Imports from Indonesia fell by close to 8%. However, imports from Malaysia shot up by nearly 200%, and imports from Cambodia jumped by more than 440%. [other declines of note include Canada -8%, Russia -7%, and China -52%]

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Japan Housing Starts Drop the Most in 3 Months

Trading Economics
March 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Japan’s housing starts fell 4.9% yoy in February 2026, worsening from a 0.4% decline in the previous month and slightly missing market expectations for a 4.7% drop. This marked the fourth straight month of contraction and the steepest decline since last November, pointing to sustained weakness in the property sector amid higher construction costs and soft demand. Declines were broad-based across all segments, including rental housing (-2.7% vs -1.5% in January), owner-occupied homes (-4.7% vs 6.6%), built-for-sale housing (-8.8% vs -4.8%), prefabricated housing (-2.2% vs 5.1%), and two-by-four homes (-7.7% vs 8.7%).

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

The Government Building That Refuses to Be Disposable

By Paul Makovsky
ARCHITECT Magazine
March 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

WASHINGTON — On most state capitol campuses, buildings are treated as monuments—fixed, permanent, and resistant to change. In Olympia, Washington, the opposite has just occurred. The Newhouse Replacement Building, designed by The Miller Hull Partnership is a deliberate rethinking of what civic architecture can be when permanence is no longer assumed, when materials are treated as part of a lifecycle, and when sustainability is measured not just in performance metrics, but in cultural continuity. …Rather than erase the original structure, the design team approached the project as an act of deconstruction—carefully dismantling the old building and salvaging its materials for reuse. …In a region defined by its forests, the use of mass timber is both practical and symbolic. …Its structural system incorporates Acoustic Dowel Laminated Timber (ADLT) floor decks—an innovative assembly that replaces adhesives with precision-milled wood joinery and integrates acoustic insulation directly into the material system.

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Commission publishes guidance to support implementation of new packaging rules, for a more sustainable and competitive EU packaging sector

The European Commission
March 29, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The European Commission published guidelines on the implementation of the Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR) to facilitate the uniform application of the new packaging rules across the EU and simplify compliance for economic actors and Member States. The full application of this law will contribute to a more sustainable and competitive packaging sector across the EU and to strengthening the Single Market for packaging through common rules. On average, in 2023, each European generated 178kg of packaging waste. Without intervention, total packaging waste could further rise by 19% by 2030 compared to 2018 levels, while plastic waste could rise by as much as 46%. At the same time, the packaging industry faces significant administrative burdens as a result of divergent national packaging rules across Member States. …This document also spells out the restrictions on single-use packaging, enforcement of the PFAS restriction in food contact packaging, and the application of re-use targets. 

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Building with nature: lessons from wood for a wider diffusion of bio-based materials in construction

By Roberta Salierno, Margherita Pero & Nizar Abdelkafi
International Journal of Construction Management
March 22, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The construction industry is a major contributor to greenhouse gas emissions, mostly due to conventional materials production. Because of this, there is an urgent need for sustainable alternatives. Bio-based materials offer a promising alternative but remain underutilized. This study examines wood to derive insights that could support the broader adoption of bio-based alternatives. This research explores the systemic drivers and barriers to the diffusion of wood through interviews with key actors. A system dynamics model is developed to capture the main factors affecting wood diffusion and their interdependencies. …It shows that successful diffusion requires systemic innovation, necessitating collaboration across the ecosystem. This systemic analysis offers important insights for other bio-based materials, which differ in resource availability, applications, and production cycles, but face similar barriers such as workforce shortages, scalability, and societal acceptance. Overcoming these barriers requires targeted trainings and supportive policies. 

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Forest Certification Gains Relevance Despite Shifting Consumer Focus, Study Shows

By Lara Emundts
European Supermarket Magazine
March 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Awareness of the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) label for responsible forest management continues to rise in Germany, reaching 77% in 2025, a recent survey has indicated. According to the 2025 Global Consumer Awareness Survey, conducted by Ipsos on behalf of the FSC, recognition of the label has reached 77% among German consumers – up six percentage points since 2022. The study, based on more than 32,000 consumers globally, shows that 59% of German respondents trust brands more if they offer FSC-certified products. Across the DACH region, awareness remains high, particularly in Switzerland (81%) and Austria (68%). …The data reflects a broader behavioural shift: while environmental issues receive less public attention, consumers increasingly act on sustainability through everyday purchases. …For retailers and brands, the growing demand for credible sustainability claims is becoming increasingly significant.

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Forestry

Why forest loss is making our watersheds leak rain

By Adam Wei, University of BC professor
The Conversation
March 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

It’s a well-established fact that forests and water are deeply connected. For decades, paired-watershed experiments have shown that when we lose forests, the total amount of water flowing through our rivers tends to rise. But a critical question has remained unanswered: does this extra water come from previous reserves, or is it simply “new” rain that the land is failing to hold? Is forest loss causing our watersheds to lose their internal integrity and leak like a sifter? Our recent study at the University of BC analyzed 657 watersheds across the globe. By using a tool called the Young Water Fraction, we found that forest loss significantly accelerates how fast precipitation travels through a landscape. We estimate that for every 1% of forest lost, the “young water” in our streams increases by about 0.17%. Crucially, our research reveals that… the way we arrange forest patches can either aggravate or mitigate this leakage.

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Takeaways from the 107th annual Canadian Woodlands Forum Spring Meeting in Moncton

By Maria Chruch
Canadian Biomass
March 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Industry leaders at the Canadian Woodlands Forum Spring Meeting in Moncton, New Brunswick, on March 25 and 26 called for greater unity among Atlantic Canada’s fragmented forestry sector to address policy challenges and market pressures. Jason Limongelli, vice-president of woodlands at J.D. Irving, said insecure fibre supply and negative public perceptions are limiting investment, urging companies and woodlot owners to share positive stories about sustainable practices. Susannah Banks, executive director of Canadian Forest Owners, highlighted the sector’s significant economic contribution and ongoing efforts to better represent private landowners in policy discussions. Trade uncertainty with the United States remains a concern, with no progress on softwood lumber negotiations and new tariff risks emerging. Christine Leduc of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative noted Canada’s global leadership in forest certification, while new digital tools from Loupra aim to improve coordination across the industry.

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‘Aggressive’ invasive mushroom is spreading across America, leaving path of destruction in its wake

By Jamie Hale
Oregon Live
March 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

A new invasive species is rapidly spreading across North America, leaving a path of destruction in its wake. The golden oyster mushroom, a bright yellow fungus that grows rapidly and in large clusters, has been aggressively reproducing across the Northeastern U.S., destroying fungal communities. While it isn’t yet common in the Pacific Northwest, researchers worry that the golden oyster mushroom could soon wreak havoc here. The Oregon Mycological Society sounded the alarm about the invasive mushroom last year, warning foragers and cultivators about the dangers it poses. “The spread poses a risk to microbial biodiversity,” Joe Cohen, a former president and current member of the organization, wrote in a March 2025 blog post. “It’s beyond time for us to steward fungal biodiversity and cultivate fungi intentionally.” …Golden oyster mushrooms typically feed on dead hardwood trees, particularly elm trees found throughout the eastern half of the country. 

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Congresswoman Hageman seeks to repeal Roadless Rule

By Aubrey Hale
SVI News
March 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

US Representative Harriet Hageman (R-WY) has introduced legislation that would nullify the 2001 Clinton administration Roadless Rule and permanently restore active forest management on National Forest System lands, saying the restriction has blocked access and increased the risk of catastrophic wildfires across the West. Hageman introduced the bill in Washington with original cosponsors including Representatives Troy Downing (R-MT), Celeste Maloy (R-UT), Pete Stauber (R-MN), and Tom Tiffany (R-WI). Her measure would codify the Department of Agriculture’s recent rescission of the Roadless Rule and direct future road construction to support missions such as timber harvesting, watershed management, and wildfire prevention. …Congresswoman Hageman framed the legislation as an effort to return National Forests to their original multiple‑use mandate. “Our Forest Service lands were always to be managed and providing commodities, a continuous supply of timber, a continuous supply of water to be used for grazing, multiple use, etc.,” she said.

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US Department of Agriculture Announces Availability of New Log Truck Route Planner Tool

The USDA Agriculture Marketing Service
March 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) announced the launch of an innovative new tool, the Log Truck Route Planner, to help forest owners, mill operators, and log truckers in the Pacific Northwest allocate timber and schedule log trucks. The system can assist users in coordinating routing between logging sites and sawmills which can significantly increase the returns to log truck owners/operators, create efficiencies in the operation of sawmills, and ultimately increase the market for US timber products. The new tool offers a way for the timber industry to reduce empty backhaul miles and increase the volume of timber moved daily, with a goal of increasing efficiency and revenue earned. The tool was developed in partnership with Washington State University and the Forest Service. The tool provides both a log allocator and truck scheduler, which can be run sequentially or independently.

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Lawsuit challenges Bureau of Land Management logging project near Grants Pass over owl surveys

By Roman Battaglia
Oregon Public Broadcasting
March 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The timber sale is part of the BLM’s Last Chance timber project, which proposes commercial logging and wildfire reduction efforts across about 11,000 acres northeast of Grants Pass. The project is the subject of a lawsuit filed by the environmental group KS Wild. A hearing was held last week on a proposed preliminary injunction that would halt current and future logging while the case proceeds. Attorney Sydney Wilkins said the group is concerned the BLM incorrectly determined the project area was unoccupied by northern spotted owls. “There were calls heard and recorded,” she said. ”And so there was a question about whether their unoccupied determination was arbitrary and capricious or inappropriate.” …Wilkins said a decision on the preliminary injunction is expected in the coming weeks.

Related coverage in The Bulletin, by Michael Kohn: Central Oregon LandWatch Forum to focus on public forest protections

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Trump administration seeks Endangered Species Act exemption for oil, gas projects in Gulf

By Alexa St.John
The Associated Press
March 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

As the Trump administration wages war on Iran, it’s citing national security to seek an exemption from the Endangered Species Act for expanded oil and gas drilling in the Gulf of Mexico — a move alarming environmental groups who say it could set a dangerous precedent for future fossil fuel projects. Environmentalists argue the government hasn’t followed proper procedure and they’re seeking to block the move before Interior Secretary Doug Burgum convenes the Endangered Species Committee on Tuesday. The committee, nicknamed the “God Squad” by groups who say it can determine the fate of a species, is comprised of six high-ranking federal officials plus a representative for states involved. …The Center for Biological Diversity sued last week to block the committee meeting. …The committee was established in 1978 as a way to exempt projects from the Endangered Species Act. …The committee has only convened three times in its 53-year history and issued only two exemptions.

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Decade in the Making — Australia and NZ Launch Forest Valuation Standard

By Jason Ross
Wood Central
March 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Michelle Freeman

The first joint Australia and New Zealand Forest Valuation Standard was formally launched at the 2026 Forest Valuation Summit in Melbourne today, with Forestry Australia President Dr Michelle Freeman and New Zealand Institute of Forestry President James Treadwell cutting the cake in Melbourne. …The framework consolidates national standards last revised in Australia in 2010 and in New Zealand in 1999 into a single trans-Tasman benchmark covering plantation and native forests alike, developed with support from Forest and Wood Products Australia. The launch was accompanied by the release of the Australian Carbon Standard Exposure Draft — the first formal step toward standardising carbon accounting within the sector’s valuation framework. Dr Freeman said the milestone reached beyond valuation practice to forestry’s standing as a global asset class. “The merging of the separate country-level standards held by Forestry Australia and NZIF reflects the strength and value of ongoing collaboration and partnership between our countries, our industries and professional organisations.”

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

New Brunswick funds project to reduce carbon footprint of Atholville pulp mill

By Isabelle Leger
CBC News
March 30, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Government of New Brunswick is spending $254,600 to help an Atholville pulp mill lower its carbon footprint. The AV Group NB pulp mill near Campbellton will get a new energy-efficient dump condenser, thermal insulation upgrade, flow and temperature probes to track energy consumption and a modern control system — all with the goal of reducing energy. …It’s estimated the upgrades will reduce the facility’s carbon footprint by 3.4%. Ashley Irvine, president, said said the investment will allow the mill to recycle heat from its boilers that can then be used to cook woodchips and for bleaching and drying pulp rather than it being wasted. Irvine said this project is one of many the mill is taking on to reduce emissions, which will cost upwards of $3.5 million in total. …The project received funding through the province’s Output-Based Pricing System Industry Fund, designed to help facilities reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

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Health & Safety

Lack of air quality monitoring in rural B.C. raises concerns as wildfire smoke risks grow

By Camille Vernet and Shaurya Kshatri
CBC News
March 28, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Health officials and advocates are raising concerns about gaps in air quality monitoring across rural BC, saying some communities may be exposed to dangerous wildfire smoke levels if they don’t have access to accurate local data. It comes as the health impacts of wildfire smoke are becoming clearer, and as new monitoring stations are being installed in parts of the province to address the gaps. Air quality is typically monitored by federal and provincial governments and according to Environment Canada, 286 sites across every province and territory make up the National Air Pollution Surveillance program. “Even with nearly 300 sites, there are enormous gaps in geography — often at the expense of rural and remote communities,” said Christopher Lam, of the BC Lung Foundation. …Smoke from the record-breaking Canadian wildfires in 2023 caused an estimated 5,400 acute deaths and about 82,100 premature deaths worldwide.

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More than 100 daily high temperature records are expected through Sunday, forecasts show

By Emily Mae Czachor
CBS News
March 26, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States

High temperatures are expected to continue baking large sections of the U.S. through the end of the week, potentially setting more than 100 new daily temperature records between Thursday and Sunday, forecasts show. Temperatures were forecast to linger around 30 or 40 degrees above average in a number of southwestern and Central states, continuing a trend that began earlier in the week as a massive heat wave expands further into the western two-thirds of the country, said CBS News meteorologist Nikki Nolan. Indianapolis reached 81 degrees Fahrenheit on Thursday, breaking a 1907 record of 80 degrees, the National Weather Service said. …The heat wave that initially brought unusual warmth to the West last week has been slowly moving eastward, with forecasts indicating it would arrive on the southeastern coast by Friday. Along the way, it may fuel a series of potentially severe storms across parts of the Midwest. 

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