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Special Feature

Forest Industry Leader Derek Nighbor Calls on Ottawa to Deepen Support for Japan Market Strategy

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
April 30, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, International

Derek Nighbor, President and CEO of the Forest Products Association of Canada, appeared before the Parliamentary Standing Committee on International Trade to outline the promise and complexity of growing Canadian forest sector exports to Japan — and to make a pointed case for sustained federal investment to make it happen. Canada currently ships roughly $1 billion annually to Japan, a figure Nighbor put in context: it reflects a century of Canadian forestry trade there and 50 years of work by the Canada Wood Group. “It’s a heavy lift,” he said. Against nearly $8 billion in annual softwood lumber exports to the United States — now facing combined duties and Section 232 tariffs in the 45% range — Japan is a real but incremental diversification opportunity. Canada holds 65% of Japan’s 2×4 dimension lumber market, built by actively developing a wood-building culture where one didn’t naturally exist. Holding and growing that share, Nighbor told the committee, requires sustained technical engagement on codes, standards, and the platform frame system — not simply shipping more product. He also flagged headwinds: declining Japanese housing starts, growing domestic Japanese lumber supply, aggressive European entry across lumber, pulp, and pellets, and tightening Japanese sustainability and traceability requirements.

Nighbor’s asks to the committee were specific. He called for dedicated multi-year funding for the Canada Wood Group to build on its export development work, and for doubling the funding of NRCan’s Global Forest Leadership Program. He asked for federal investment in market-entry infrastructure — spec alignment tools, testing labs, and distributor networks — applicable to both Japan and Korea. And he made the case for continued government-led trade missions, pointing to a BC and Alberta forestry-specific mission to Japan in November as the kind of targeted engagement that moves the needle. Beyond lumber, Nighbor identified mass timber and engineered wood — aligned with Japan’s housing renewal, decarbonization, and seismic resilience priorities — and bioeconomy products including biocarbon, biofuels, and biomass as the next frontier for Canadian forest exports to Japan.

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Business & Politics

Canadian red tape is worse than Trump tariffs, say industry groups

By Ilyo Gridneff
The Financial Times in the Financial Post
April 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Derek Nighbor

Canada’s leading industry groups say Prime Minister Mark Carney’s effort to cut red tape is floundering, costing the country billions more in trade losses than Trump’s tariffs. Forestry, oil and gas, and auto industry representatives said they are frustrated at the pace of regulatory reform that is central to Carney’s efforts to insulate Canada from Trump’s devastating trade war. “Ottawa needs to align its regulatory policy objectives with economic reality,” said Derek Nighbor, president of the Forest Products Association of Canada, which represents one of the country’s largest employers. Nighbor said over the past decade overlapping government policies, mostly environmental regulation, have “chilled strategic investments” and become “a productivity and competitiveness killer, driving away investment”. Last week, Carney announced a “first-ever” investment summit in Toronto. …But industry groups warn this plan is impeded by the slow implementation of a red-tape review that found nearly 500 ways to streamline services.

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7 key takeaways from the Liberal government’s spring economic snapshot

By Darren Major
CBC News
April 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

François-Philippe Champagne

Prime Minister Mark Carney and Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne introduced their spring economic update on Tuesday. Here are some key highlights:

  • State of the federal books – a lower-than-forecasted deficit for the fiscal year that ended last month. November’s budget was projecting a deficit of $78.3 billion for the year, but Tuesday’s update says the deficit came in at $66.9 billion. The government saw a $60-billion uplift, in part due to revenue from surging oil prices. Tuesday’s outlook outlines $37.5 billion of spending on newly announced measures.
  • Emphasis on skilled trades recruitment – aiming to recruit 80,000-100,000 new skilled trade workers by the 2030-31 fiscal year. The government is pumping $6 billion over five years behind its promise to recruit, train and hire thousands of new workers. Included is an apprenticeship grant in the shape of a $400 per week income top-up to apprentices completing in-class training. There will also be a one-time bonus of $5,000 for apprentices who complete their Red Seal certification.

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Conifex to curtail Mackenzie sawmill operations for seven-weeks

Conifex Timber Inc.
May 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

MACKENZIE, BC — Conifex will temporarily curtail sawmill operations at its Mackenzie facility for about seven weeks starting May 19, 2026, with a target restart in July 2026. This planned sawmill curtailment is primarily driven by log inventory levels and fibre availability, in conjunction with seasonal logging breakup conditions impacting supply across the BC Interior. Logging operations are expected to resume in early June, subject to, among other things, weather conditions. The curtailment represents an approximately 25 million board feet supply impact. We continue to advance initiatives underway to broaden our available financing options. …Conifex restarted the Mackenzie sawmill in February after a four-week curtailment. The restart followed the completion of a $19 million secured term loan for its subsidiary Conifex Mackenzie Forest Products. 

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The Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act—DRIPA and its legal consequences

By Stuart McNish
The Vancouver Sun
May 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Stuart McNish & Robin Junger

Premier David Eby, in response to the December court ruling, raced to amend the DRIPA act. …The case began with a challenge to the Mineral Tenure Act, which allows mineral explorers to make a mineral claim without acquiring agreement and consent by the First Nation to the area. The case upheld the miners’ position that consent was not required during the exploration phase. It was the first challenge to DRIPA. It was immediately appealed and in December of 2025, the B.C. Court of Appeal overturned the lower court ruling, stating, “The Declaration Act gives a statutory mandate and duty to take all measures necessary to bring B.C.’s law into alignment with UNDRIP.” …Junger of McMillan LLP joined a Conversation That Matters to outline exactly what DRIPA is and the legal ramifications of amending the legislation. [24 min video

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Minister says B.C. expects billions from feds for forestry if U.S. talks fail

By Wolfgang Depner
The Canadian Press in Victoria Times Colonist
April 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar

VICTORIA — British Columbia’s forests minister says he expects billions in additional federal support for the timber sector if future trade talks with the United States don’t benefit the softwood lumber industry. Ravi Parmer says BC will use every opportunity to remind Ottawa that the pending renegotiation of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico-Agreement on trade, better known as CUSMA, must include forestry. If it doesn’t, he says the province expects Ottawa to double or even triple the more than $2 billion in supports it has provided the sector nationwide since last August. Parmar says federal negotiators “must recognize that if they are unsuccessful” in addressing US duties and tariffs on timber, BC will need help. …He says Ottawa has been a strong partner so far and he is optimistic that the federal government will address CUSMA in a way that includes forestry.

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B.C. premier dances rather than admitting DRIPA means co-government

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
April 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vaughn Palmer

VICTORIA — Premier David Eby faced tough questions this week for abandoning his changes to the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act in the face of strong opposition from First Nations. Are the New Democrats “now co-governing the province with First Nations leadership?” asked Opposition Leader Trevor Halford. Eby’s initial response was to accuse the Conservatives “of deliberately twisting this to spread fear.” But Halford pointed out that he was simply quoting Terry Teegee, BC regional chief of the Assembly of First Nations. …Teegee had said, “Ultimately First Nations have to get in the room — and to the negotiations table to make decisions on these important matters.” Halford pressed Eby a third time. …No way was Eby going acknowledge the regional chief on co-governance. …Eby’s ducking aside, it remained an open question whether the premier or the regional chief was the more reliable source of information on co-governance.

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Innovation, growth of region’s forestry explored

By Sandi Krasowski
The Chronicle Journal
May 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Northwestern Ontario Municipal Association (NOMA) 2026 conference and annual general meeting, served as a platform for the Thunder Bay Community Economic Development Commission (CEDC) Building Resiliency: The Future of Northwestern Ontario’s Forest panel discussion. Moderated by Jamie Taylor, of the CEDC, and Scott Jackson, for the Centre for Research and Innovation in the Bio-Economy (CRIBE), the panel explored the future of Northwestern Ontario’s forest sector. …Taylor called the forest sector a longtime cornerstone of Northwestern Ontario’s economy, and the panel conversation aimed to look ahead to what comes next in a changing economic landscape, which includes U.S.-imposed tariffs. …Taylor noted that building resilience requires ongoing innovation and a proactive approach to global competitiveness. …Jackson said “A successful transition isn’t just about developing novel and innovative products; it’s also about ensuring we have strong anchor mills and a solid foundation that we can build upon.

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Ford government pitches new strategy to protect, diversify Ontario forest sector

Northern Ontario Business
April 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Doug Ford & Ian Dunn

The Ford government is taking “swift, strategic and decisive action” with a new strategy to protect Ontario’s staggering forest products industry. Associate Minister of Forestry and Forest Products Kevin Holland provided those remarks in introducing the province’s new Roadmap to Protecting the Forest Sector, in Toronto, April 28. …It’s a 10-year plan geared to give the sector a competitive edge and position the Ontario sector as a G7 leader in manufacturing and export wood products. Natural Resources Minister Mike Harris summarized the three-pillared plan as protecting forestry-related jobs and business, identifying new global markets, and growing the demand for wood products at home. …Since 2020, Holland said, the province has spent more than $350 million on forest sector innovation. Expect to see more “exciting” funding opportunities in the months ahead, he said. Holland said the road map is a step-by-step plan to promote forest products at home and aboard while building up the industry’s workforce. 

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Toilet paper isn’t going digital: Thunder Bay pulp mill CEO ‘very optimistic’

By Matt Prokopchuk
Timmins Today
April 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The head of Thunder Bay’s pulp mill says he feels the local operation is well-positioned, given current market demands. Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper now only produces softwood kraft pulp on a single line at its Neebing Avenue facility and generates renewable energy for sale to the Ontario power grid after axing its newsprint division earlier this year. Despite that, CEO Norm Bush said there’s a significant demand for what they’re still producing. “Fortunately, the pulp sector that we are participating in now, and particularly the grades that we’re supporting, is actually growing,” he said at the Northwestern Ontario Municipal Association conference on the future of the region’s forestry sector. …“We’re not subject to electronic substitution in toilet paper and paper towel, so that market is pretty protected and, because of our proximity to those markets, it’s a barrier for other pulp producers to come and make a profit in our market segment.”

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U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities Releases 2025 Annual Report

By Pete Madden
EIN Presswire in the Indy Star
April 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

GREENVILLE, South Carolina — The US Endowment for Forestry and Communities released its 2025 Annual Report. …In 2025, the Endowment awarded $33.9 million through 112 awards across 31 states. The report showcases the Endowment’s work to strengthen forest product markets, support working forests and help forest-reliant communities navigate economic change and opportunity. “Our most important responsibility—and the key to revitalizing our industry—is to drive greater demand for wood products,” said Pete Madden, CEO. “Our 2025 Annual Report reflects the breadth and depth of opportunities within the forest products space and how we’re working to create awareness of and demand for a broad array of wood products and wood fiber.” …Highlights include: Expanding investment in forest product markets… Supporting wood manufacturers and market development… Building a national forest carbon data platform… Advancing locally led rural development… Convening leaders for forest sector investment… [and] Creating new uses for low-value wood.

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U.S. Lumber Coalition Calls on Canada to Address its Market-Disrupting and Unsustainable Excess Lumber Capacity Problem

The US Lumber Coalition
April 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — As Canada doubles down on its well-documented unfair trade practices in the softwood lumber sector by pushing out billions of dollars in new subsidy schemes aimed at undermining President Trump’s policy initiatives to further grow the American forestry sector, the US Lumber Coalition is calling on Canada to instead focus on addressing the problem of its massive, unsustainable, and market-disrupting excess lumber capacity. …”The US Lumber Coalition is pleased to see that Canada, much like the United States, uses its antidumping and countervailing duty laws to address the exact same trade problem that the United States faces as a result of Canada’s well-documented unfair trade practices in softwood lumber. This is a step in the right direction to Canada admitting the legality and purpose of trade law enforcement against unfair trade practices, rather than complaining about being subject to US. trade laws.

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The Plywood Smuggling Ring That Ensnared a Building-Products Giant

By Ryan Dezember
Wall Street Journal
April 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Days after federal agents raided a South Florida wood importer’s warehouse and seized stacks of Chinese-made birch plywood, an order for another load of the illegal panels arrived. The 2021 raid touched off a scramble from Miami to Qingdao, China. The couple who owned the importer, Horizon Plywood, fled the US. But word was slow to reach Boise Cascade’s branch in Pompano Beach, Florida. …The smuggling and ensuing investigation trapped Boise in a global web that spanned China, Florida, Panama and Montenegro. And while Boise didn’t make or import the plywood, prosecutors maintain the company must have known it had been smuggled into the US given how cheap Horizon was selling it compared with competitors. …Boise pleaded guilty Monday to a federal felony charge related to its role in the case and agreed to pay a fine of $6.4 million, or twice the profit it reaped. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

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Rep. Pavlov, local leaders welcome governor Whitmer to Legacy Paper re-opening in Port Huron

By Joseph Pavlov
Michigan House Republicans
April 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

State Rep. Joseph Pavlov recently joined local leaders and community members in welcoming Governor Gretchen Whitmer to the grand re-opening of Legacy Paper in Port Huron, a major step forward for job creation and economic growth in St. Clair County. The event marked the restart of the former Domtar paper mill, now operating under Legacy Paper. The reopening is part of a broader effort to strengthen economic development in the region and bring new opportunities to local families. “This is a big win for Port Huron and all of St. Clair County,” said Pavlov (R-Smiths Creek). “We’re seeing a long-standing facility come back to life, creating good-paying jobs and giving our local economy a real boost.” The project represents an investment of approximately $24.5 million and is expected to create more than 80 good-paying jobs for Port Huron, further reinforcing the area’s manufacturing base. [END]

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Davis Timber Company Expands in Beauregard Parish, Louisiana

Trade & Industry Development
April 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

LOUISIANA — Davis Timber Company, Inc. announced it will invest $1.9 million to expand its Beauregard Parish operations with new production capabilities that will enhance efficiency and strengthen Louisiana’s timber industry. The company is expected to create 12 direct new jobs while retaining 11 current positions. Louisiana Economic Development estimates the project will result in an additional nine indirect new jobs, for a total of 21 potential new job opportunities in the Southwest Region. …Davis Timber Company’s expansion will take place at its production facility within the Beauregard Regional Airport Industrial Complex in DeRidder, where the company produces poles and pilings used in utility and infrastructure applications. The project will add new processing capabilities to the existing operation, improving efficiency and enhancing product readiness for market.

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No two risks alike as forestry insurance grows more complex

By Bryony Garlick
Insurance Business UK
April 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

UK — Forestry has long sat at the margins of the insurance market, often folded into broader property portfolios and lightly scrutinised. That position is becoming harder to sustain. The class now requires a level of focus and expertise the market has not always applied, said Daniel Longden, head of forestry at Orvia Underwriting. The sector differs from traditional property risks in one fundamental way: it is constantly changing. Trees grow, are harvested and replanted, altering the risk profile year by year. That dynamic sits alongside an exposure to catastrophe events that can erase entire areas in a single incident. …This variability complicates underwriting and limits the development of standardised data sets, helping explain why the class has remained relatively niche despite growing investor interest. …Where underwriters once relied heavily on historical loss data and third-party reporting, satellite technology now offers a more direct view of exposure.

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Finance & Economics

Atlas Engineered Wood Products reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $0.69M

Atlas Engineered Products
April 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Nanaimo, BC — Atlas Engineered Products announced its financial and operating results for the fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2025. …Revenue was $17,645,972 compared to revenue of $15,069,615 for the three months ended December 31, 2024, representing a 17% increase. Revenue has increased due to acquisitive growth for the quarter. …Net loss after taxes was $686,098 for the three months ended December 31, 2025 compared to net loss after taxes of $838,728 for the three months ended December 31, 2024. This improvement in net loss after taxes was mainly due to increased revenues, but offset by a reduction in gross margins. …AEP is nearing completion of the first truss robotic facility in Clinton, ON. The building is in the final stages of interior painting and office setup while the equipment has been shipped and is anticipated to be operational at the beginning of July 2026.

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Bank of Canada holds interest rate for fourth time but warns on oil shock, trade risks

By Paula Tran
The Financial Post
April 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The Bank of Canada held its policy interest rate at 2.25 per cent for the fourth consecutive time on Wednesday, but warned that it would be closely watching the impact of rising oil prices on inflation in the coming months amid ongoing uncertainty caused by the war in Iran. …Inflation has been close to two per cent for over a year but rose to 2.4 per cent in March after slowing to 1.8 per cent in February. The central bank base case forecast is that inflation will peak in April at about three per cent before returning to the two per cent target in early 2027, but that is assuming global oil prices decline. U.S. tariff measures along with the uncertainty surrounding the Canada-United-States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) have also added to the uncertainty ahead of the July 1 CUSMA review deadline, especially since the Canadian government has not yet launched formal discussions with U.S. officials.

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West Fraser reports Q1, 2026 net loss of $188 million

West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd.
April 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

VANCOUVER, BC — West Fraser Timber reported the first quarter results of 2026. First quarter sales were $1.334 billion, compared to $1.165 billion in the fourth quarter of 2025. First quarter earnings were $(188) million, compared to earnings of $(751) million in the fourth quarter of 2025. First quarter Adjusted EBITDA was $(66) million compared to $(79) million in the fourth quarter of 2025. Included in first quarter Adjusted EBITDA in the Lumber segment is ($114) million of duty adjustments related to prior periods compared to nil in the fourth quarter of 2025. …North America Engineered Wood Products segment Adjusted EBITDA of $11 million, and Europe Engineered Wood Products segment Adjusted EBITDA of $10 million. …Sean McLaren, West Fraser’s President and CEO said “Excluding the impact of prior year duty adjustments, we were pleased to see all of our core segments – lumber, NA EWP, and Europe EWP – report positive Adjusted EBITDA.” 

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Lumber Futures Hit 7-week Low

Trading Economics
April 28, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Lumber futures fell to $566 per thousand board feet, the lowest in seven weeks, as broader uncertainty and ongoing trade tensions weigh on sentiment. The US has recently outlined preliminary antidumping and countervailing duties on Canadian softwood lumber, with the antidumping rate reduced from 20.6% to 10.7% and the countervailing duty trimmed from 14.6% to 14.2%, lowering the combined rate to about 25.9%. Including an existing 10% Section 232 tariff, total effective duties on Canadian imports are expected to remain near 35.9% once they take effect in August. Despite these measures aimed at supporting domestic producers, US sawmill utilization remains relatively weak at around 64%, with capacity use trending lower since 2017, pointing to limited supply response. At the same time, elevated construction costs and high interest rates are continuing to pressure housing activity, with US builder confidence slipping to its lowest level since September 2025. [END]

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Montreal Wood Convention Highlights: Oil Shock, Housing, and Trade Uncertainty

By Jennifer Ellson
Madison’s Lumber Reporter
May 1, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

A panel of industry leaders at the recent Montréal Wood Convention examined key market drivers, including U.S. housing starts, mass timber growth, the repair and remodelling (R&R) segment, and ongoing trade uncertainty. Moderated by Mark Allison of Boscus Canada, the discussion featured Thomas Mende of Binderholz, Doug Robinson of Weston Forest, and Frédéric Verreault of Nordic Structures and Chantier Chibougamau. On the outlook for U.S. housing, panellists pointed to relatively flat activity in the near term. Robinson said current projections appear reasonable in the absence of further geopolitical disruption, while Mende said recent global tensions have already slowed momentum. Affordability remains a central issue, influencing both demand and how homes are built. Robinson said cost pressures, along with demographic shifts such as an aging population, are contributing to smaller homes and changing design preferences. …The panel also discussed recent policy measures in Ontario aimed at improving housing affordability. 

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Powell’s Chair Ends but He Keeps His Board Seat

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
April 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The April meeting of the Fed’s monetary policy committee featured a lot of institutional news for a month in which the Fed kept monetary policy unchanged. The outlook for the economy and monetary policy remains unclear due to geopolitical turbulence and domestic policy uncertainty. This headline risk is delaying additional Fed monetary policy easing, likely until the end of 2026 or possibly into 2027. The Fed continued its current pause for rate reductions at the conclusion of the April meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the central bank’s monetary policy decision making body. The FOMC held the short-term federal funds rate at a top rate of 3.75%, the level set in December of last year. This marked the third policy pause since the Fed resumed easing in September of 2025. The Fed’s statement of current economic conditions and policy stance was relatively unchanged from March to April.

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Fed Changes Leadership, but Powell Stays On Board

The National Association of Home Builders
April 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Following the April meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the Federal Reserve opted to maintain its current stance, leaving interest rates unchanged. The target for the federal funds rate remains at a top level of 3.75%, where it has stood since December. This meeting may represent the final policy decision led by Jerome Powell in his role as Chair of the Fed’s Board of Governors, bringing his eight-year tenure in that position to a close. President Trump’s nominee, former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh, is widely expected to secure Senate confirmation and take over in time for the next FOMC gathering. However, Powell plans to continue serving as a member of the Board of Governors after relinquishing the Chair position. …Powell has said he will remain as a Governor as long as the Justice Department’s probe into the cost of the renovations to the Fed’s headquarters remains active.

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US single-family housing starts jump to 13-month high in March

Reuters
April 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — US single-family homebuilding increased to a 13-month high in March, but the improvement was likely a blip as permits for future construction fell sharply and confidence among builders remained subdued. Single-family housing starts, ​which account for the bulk of homebuilding, surged 9.7% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate ‌of 1.032 million units, the highest level since February 2025, the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau said on Wednesday. Single-family housing starts increased to a pace of 941,000 units in February from 898,000 units in January. They rose 8.9% year-on-year in March. Permits ​for future construction of single-family homes decreased 3.8% last month to a rate of 895,000 units. ​They had increased to a pace of 930,000 units in February from 876,000 units ⁠in January. Single-family building permits dropped 7.9% year-on-year in March. …Overall housing ​starts vaulted 10.8% to ⁠a pace of 1.502 million units. They increased 10.8% year-on-year in March.

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US consumer confidence unexpectedly improves, but higher gasoline prices still a worry

By Lucia Mutikani
Reuters
April 28, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — U.S. consumer confidence unexpectedly edged higher in April amid a rally in share prices following a ceasefire in the war with Iran and improved perceptions of the labor market, helping ​to ease households’ financial worries for now. Despite the rise in confidence to a four-month high, the survey from the Conference Board on Tuesday showed higher gasoline prices ‌stemming from the conflict with Iran remained a source of concern for consumers. Fewer planned vacations over the next six months and the share of those intending to drive to their holiday destinations was the lowest since April 2020. …The Conference Board said its consumer confidence index climbed 0.6 point to 92.8 this month. Economists had forecast the index easing to ​89.0. It was in stark contrast with the University of Michigan’s Surveys of Consumers, which last week showed its Consumer Sentiment Index slumping to a record low in April.

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Kimberly-Clark Announces reports Q1, 2026 net profit of $753M

Kimberly-Clark Corporation
April 28, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

DALLAS — Kimberly-Clark reported first quarter 2026 results. Highlights include: Net sales of $4.2 billion increased 2.7 percent, as organic sales growth of 2.5 percent and favorable currency impacts of 2.0 percent were partially offset by a 1.8 percent decline from the exit of the company’s private label diaper business in the US. …First quarter operating profit was $753 million compared to $631 million in the prior year. Current quarter results included a $120 million benefit related to the settlement of insurance claims from a previous acquisition, and $99 million of charges related to the 2024 Transformation Initiative and Kenvue acquisition. 

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Weyerhaeuser reports Q1, 2026 net earnings of $156 million

Weyerhaeuser Company
April 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

SEATTLE — Weyerhaeuser Company reported first quarter net earnings of $156 million on net sales of $1.7 billion. This compares with net earnings of $83 million on net sales of $1.8 billion for the same period last year and net earnings of $74 million for fourth quarter 2025. Excluding an after-tax benefit of $79 million for special items, the company reported first quarter net earnings of $77 million. This compares with a net loss before special items of $67 million for fourth quarter 2025. Adjusted EBITDA for first quarter 2026 was $308 million, compared with $328 million for the same period last year and $140 million for fourth quarter 2025. …Weyerhaeuser anticipates second quarter earnings before special items and Adjusted EBITDA will be comparable to the first quarter.

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International Paper reports Q1, 2026 net earnings of $60 million

By International Paper
PRNewswire
April 30, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US East

MEMPHIS, Tennessee — International Paper announced results for the quarter ended March 31, 2026. Highlights include: Net sales of $5.97 billion Earnings from continuing operations of $76 million Adjusted EBITDA (non-GAAP) from continuing operations of $677 million Received $1.1 billion of net proceeds from the sale of the Global Cellulose Fibers business and paid down $660 million of debt. …International Paper Chairman and CEO Andy Silvernail said “We still have work to do to improve consistency and reliability, but the primary pressures this quarter came from a tougher macro environment, including ongoing inflation and the severe winter storm.” “Looking ahead,” Silvernail added, “We’re updating our outlook to reflect the volatile environment, with a strong focus on managing cost and cash flow.”

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Suzano reports Q1, 2026 net income Brazil Real (BRL) 4.3B

By Suzano
Business Wire
April 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

SÃO PAULO, Brazil — Suzano announced its results for the first quarter of 2026. In the first quarter, Suzano sold a total of 3.2 million tonnes, comprising 2.8 million tonnes of pulp and 378 thousand tonnes of paper. Net revenue amounted to BRL 11.0 billion, while adjusted EBITDA reached BRL 4.6 billion. Net income totaled BRL 4.3 billion in 1Q26. …Over the 12‑month period from April 2025 to March 2026, the company sold 12.7 million tonnes of pulp, the highest volume ever recorded in its history. During the same period, Suzano also sold 1.7 million tonnes of paper across the packaging, printing and writing, specialty, and tissue segments. This unprecedented sales level mainly reflects the increase in production capacity following the start‑up of the Ribas do Rio Pardo pulp mill.

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Metsä Group’s Q1 loss deepens to Euro 4 million as muted pulp demand and US tariffs bite

Lesprom Network
April 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

Metsä Group reported a comparable operating result of Euro 4 million for the Q1 2026, compared to Euro 81 million in the same period last year, due to muted demand for market pulp in Europe and China, lower delivery volumes, and the negative impact of US import tariffs. Sales decreased to Euro 1,358 million from Euro 1,642 million a year earlier. The comparable EBITDA was Euro 128 million, down from Euro 197 million. The operating result (IFRS) was Euro 18 million, compared to Euro 51 million in the Q1 2025. The Pulp and Sawn Timber Industry segment reported a comparable operating result of Euro 12 million, compared to Euro 38 million a year earlier.  The Paperboard Industry segment reported a comparable operating result of Euro 11 million… and The Wood Products Industry segment reported a comparable operating result of Euro 7 million.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Postmedia to print most New Brunswick newspapers out of province

By Shane Magee
CBC News
April 29, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — Postmedia plans to stop printing most New Brunswick newspapers in Moncton. Postmedia publishes the Times & Transcript, Telegraph-Journal, Daily Gleaner and other local newspapers. They are printed and distributed from a building along Main Street in downtown Moncton. Dave Arsenault, president of the New Brunswick Media Guild, confirmed that print and distribution will cease in Moncton and be moved elsewhere. …”Following an assessment of printing and insert packaging operations, it was determined that outsourcing these operations from Postmedia’s Moncton facility would allow us to continue serving print subscribers and advertisers while supporting long-term financial sustainability,” the company said Wednesday. The printing will be outsourced out of province starting Aug. 2. Postmedia bought most of New Brunswick’s English-language newspapers from Irving-owned Brunswick News in 2022.

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Japanese Firms to Frame 6% of US Homes After Sumitomo Forestry’s $4.5B Deal

By Jason Ross
Wood Central
April 30, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, International

Sumitomo Forestry’s $4.5 billion Tri Pointe buyout was approved with more than 99% support, taking the combined Japanese-owned share of US single-family home construction from just 0.2 per cent in 2015 to close to 6 per cent in 2026. Sumitomo Forestry’s buyout of Tri Pointe Homes, one of California’s largest builders, was approved at a special meeting in Irvine, California, earlier this month, with the deal set to be completed by mid-year. The Tri Pointe transaction, first announced in February, is the largest US homebuilder acquisition by a Japanese forest-based conglomerate in history, and follows the same playbook Sumitomo has already run across Australia, where Japanese conglomerates wholly or partly own just under 30 per cent of the country’s top 20 housebuilders. …Tri Pointe gives the Tokyo-listed parent access to California and Nevada, the two major US growth states where Sumitomo… had no meaningful presence. 

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Forestry

Industry partners boost University of Alberta forestry programs through new $6.5M research chair

By Bev Betkowski
University of Alberta News
April 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Forestry programs at the University of Alberta will be strengthened through the integration of Indigenous perspectives with the establishment of a new $6.5-million research chair. The Endowed Chair in Indigenous Forestry in the Faculty of Agricultural, Life & Environmental Sciences will support experiential learning, Indigenous-led courses and collaborations with communities, academics and industry. $526,065 will be used to establish an accelerator fund through which a community engagement and research co-ordinator will be hired to support the chair’s community and student engagement activities. The endowment supporting the chair is funded through the Forest Resource Improvement Program with sponsorship from Canfor, West Fraser and Weyerhaeuser. …The chair will lead a research program exploring relationships between Indigenous knowledge systems and western forestry practices, and will serve as a mentor to the next generation of Indigenous and non-Indigenous foresters.

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Trump Conditions on DEI, Immigration Threaten State Wildfire Funding

By Alex Brown
The Missoula Current
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

A new effort to force states to affirm the Trump administration’s views on DEI, transgender athletes and immigration when signing contracts with the U.S. Forest Service is threatening millions of dollars in wildfire grant funding and fire reduction projects on federal lands. Some liberal states can’t sign the documents because the policies clash with state law, forestry experts say. Already, at least one state is reporting that the new rules have stalled work to reduce wildfire risk and assist with projects on national forest lands. Other states say the requirements are so vague that they don’t know how to follow them. And some timber industry leaders believe the standoff could cut into their revenues. …The update to the requirements governing federal partnerships comes even as many Western states brace for a brutal wildfire season, following a winter that brought record high temperatures and a paltry snowpack.

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More than 60 percent of U.S. is covered by drought as impacts worsen

National Weather Service – US Seasonal Drought Outlook
April 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Extensive drought conditions continue across much of the nation, with over 60-percent of the contiguous United States currently experiencing drought conditions as of the April 7 US Drought Monitor. During the last month, widespread drought expansion and intensification occurred across the West, the central US, and the Southeast south of the Ohio River, as dry conditions and above-normal temperatures combined with increasing Spring evapotranspiration rates to rapidly dry soils and reduce streamflow levels. In contrast, several rounds of heavy precipitation eased drought across much of the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes region. A potent Kona Low brought flooding rainfall and eased drought conditions across Hawaii, while Alaska, Puerto Rico, and the US Virgin Islands remain drought free. During the upcoming 3-month period, below-average precipitation favored for the Northwest combined with much below-normal mountain snow cover will likely lead to drought persistence and expansion.

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States across the wildfire-prone Western US are using AI for early detection

By Dorany Pineda and Brittany Peterson
The Associated Press in Vancouver is Awesome
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

On a March afternoon, artificial intelligence detected something resembling smoke on a camera feed from Arizona’s Coconino National Forest. …One of dozens of AI cameras installed for the utility Arizona Public Service had spotted early signs of what came to be known as the Diamond Fire. Firefighters raced to the scene and contained the blaze before it grew past 7 acres. …Arizona Public Service has nearly 40 active AI smoke-detection cameras and plans to have 71 by summer’s end, and the state’s fire agency has deployed seven of its own. Another utility, Xcel Energy in Colorado, has installed 126 and aims to have cameras in seven of the eight states it serves by year’s end. “Earlier detection means we can launch aircraft and personnel to it and keep those fires as small as we can,” said Arizona’s John Truett. …“The AI that’s being run on the cameras is actually beating 911 calls,” he said.

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A roadmap to recovery – the U.S. timber industry

By Tom Laventure
Price County Review
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Scott Dane

HARRIS, Michigan — In his keynote address at the Great Lakes Timber Professionals Association’ Spring Celebration in Harris, Michigan on April 1, Scott Dane said the past 18 months has shown significant progress with the challenges of the logging and partnering wood products industries. Dane, the executive director at American Loggers Council, based in Washington, D.C., said this is the result of partnerships who have formed a bipartisan blueprint for the recovery of the U.S. timber industry. “The challenges within the industry really boils down to one simple common denominator, and that’s markets,” Dane said. …Dane said first the bad news… “Loggers are being crushed by a perfect storm of low demand, unpredictable quotas, volatile prices, rising costs, and shrinking markets,” Dane said, referencing an editorial he read. …Now the good news, he said. Encouraging opportunities include increased domestic lumber production, cross-laminated timber, and biofuels – both sustainable aviation fuel and biojet.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

‘One of the most rapid transitions that I’ve seen’: NOAA forecaster on how this year’s El Niño could shatter records

By Sophie Berdugo
Live Science
May 1, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, United States, International

Our warming world is set to enter an El Niño period as early as May, with a high likelihood of southern North America experiencing supercharged temperatures. One of the three phases of the natural El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle in the Pacific Ocean, El Niño events occur every two to seven years, driving up sea surface temperatures across the Pacific Ocean and increasing global temperature. The last El Niño partially explains why 2024 was the hottest year on record. The knock-on effects of past El Niño events have been profound, with studies linking them to famine in Europe; civil wars in tropical regions; and droughts, floods and forest fires around the world. …To get a better idea of what the upcoming El Niño will look like and what it could mean for Earth’s climate and weather, Live Science spoke with Nathaniel Johnson, a research meteorologist at NOAA Climate Prediction Center. 

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Octopus Energy Generation to invest $500 million to remove polluting CO₂ from the atmosphere

Octopus Energy
April 30, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

LONDON and SAN FRANCISCO – Octopus Energy Generation, one of Europe’s leading renewables investors, is ramping up efforts to slash CO₂ pollution at scale – inking a major US deal that will help remove up to 50 million tonnes of carbon dioxide from the air. Octopus’s fund management team is set to invest $500 million in afforestation and reforestation projects in the US developed by public benefit and climate technology company Living Carbon. On top of that, Octopus has put nearly $13 million into Living Carbon’s fast-growing, cutting-edge carbon removal development business. …Across the US, roughly 130 million acres of land lie degraded and could be reforested. …The locations include old mining sites and worn-out farmland, transforming these spaces into CO₂-absorbing sinks that slash emissions and combat climate change. These projects will also have a host of additional benefits: restoring wildlife habitats, improving water quality, strengthening soils, and supporting local economies in rural communities.

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Finland’s Forestry Industry in 2026: Powering a Bioeconomy Under Pressure

By Kai Merivuori
ResourceWise Forest Products Blog
May 28, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Finland’s economy has long been rooted in its forests—but in 2026, the sector sits at the intersection of energy transition, environmental regulation, and global market uncertainty. A glance at Finland’s real-time energy production reveals a system increasingly diversified across nuclear, hydro, and renewables. Yet beneath this transition lies a quieter but equally critical story: the evolving role of forestry in powering both industry and energy systems. Finland’s energy picture depends heavily on whether we look at electricity output or total primary energy consumption. …The broader energy balance tells a different story. When heat, fuels, and industrial energy are included, bioenergy remains Finland’s largest energy source, at roughly 135 TWh, ahead of nuclear energy at about 105 TWh. Oil remains significant at around 70 TWh, while hydro and wind contribute roughly 25 TWh and 20 TWh, respectively. This matters for forestry because forest-based energy remains central to Finland’s energy system, even as its role is slowly declining.

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