Blog Archives

Business & Politics

Why Canada’s supply management system is going to disappear

By Lawrence Herman, senior fellow at the C.D. Howe Institute
The Globe and Mail
April 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Lawrence Herman

The US has pressured Canada to scrap supply management before USMCA negotiations have even begun. Telling the Americans to go fly a kite… would mean narrow agriculture interests could imperil improvements in the entire Canada-US trading framework. But let’s assume for argument’s sake that intense pressure from the Americans results in agreeing to increased US dairy imports. …To prepare for this, these industries need to pivot. …Ironic as it seems, it’s the US softwood lumber industry that offers a model for Canadian dairy. For more than 40 years, US softwood producers have successfully used countervailing duties to fight Canadian imports. …These efforts have borne fruit, resulting in decades of countervailing duties on Canadian imports. …The trade remedy option makes eminent sense. Why? Because U.S. dairy producers are heavily subsidized and their exports would almost certainly contravene both the WTO’s Subsidies & Countervailing Measures Agreement and the USMCA itself. [to access the full story a Globe subscription is required]

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Carney says lifting U.S. liquor ban depends on Trump ending assault on steel, autos, lumber

By John Paul Tasker
CBC News
April 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Prime Minister Carney said Thursday that the provincial ban on US liquor could end quickly if the Americans bend on the tariffs that have pummeled key sectors in this country like steel, autos and forest products. Carney said the provinces have barred American beer, wine and spirits because US President Trump launched a trade war that has crippled certain industries, and there’s no public appetite for a policy change until the White House delivers some relief. “We can make progress very quickly on that with progress in other areas,” Carney said. …Carney bristled at a question about US Trade Rep Greer’s threat to levy retaliatory measures against Canada if the liquor boycott continues. …”You know what’s an irritant? A 50% tariff on steel and aluminum, 25% on automobiles, all of the tariffs on forest products. Those are more than irritants. Those are violations of our trade deal, OK?” Carney said.

In related coverage by:

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Canada’s national kitchen cabinet association commends Government of Canada for launching inquiry into wood imports

Canadian Kitchen Cabinet Association
April 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, International

OTTAWA — The Canadian Kitchen Cabinet Association (CKCA) supports the Government of Canada’s launch of a safeguard investigation into imported kitchen cabinets and related wood products, an important step toward restoring a fair and level playing field. Canadian manufacturers are facing a flood of imports into Canada. A safeguard is necessary to restore balance and protect domestic manufacturing capacity from imminent collapse. As a member of the Canadian Wood Products Alliance, CKCA supports efforts to maintain a strong and competitive domestic manufacturing base and urges the Government to implement a provisional tariff during the safeguard investigation to prevent further harm. The investigation alone will not be sufficient to provide the stability our industry needs. Without a provisional tariff, Canada’s safeguard investigation risks being undone by massive inventories of product into the Canadian market, and many Canadian producers will close and continue layoffs in the coming months.

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Canada ‘doubling down on globalization’ at odds with U.S. trade goal

By Sean Boynton
Global News
April 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Jamieson Greer

US President Trump’s top trade negotiator hinted that the United States and Canada remain at odds on trade policy as the deadline for renewing the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement draws closer, accusing Canada of “doubling down on globalization.” US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer raised other trade issues with Canada while testifying at the US House Ways and Means Committee, including teasing a future “enforcement action” over provincial bans on US alcohol. …Greer said he was particularly focused on strengthening and broadening rules of origin that prevent third countries like China from importing subsidized goods into the North American market, where they can then cross borders tariff-free. He said Mexico has already agreed to do its part in improving those rules. …“They’re doubling down on globalization when we’re trying to correct for the problems of globalization. So those are two models that don’t fit together very well.”

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Canada’s prime minister says the US does not get to dictate terms for a trade agreement

By Jim Morris
The Associated Press
April 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Canada ‘s Prime Minister Carney said that Washington doesn’t get to dictate the terms of a continental trade deal known as the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA, speaking of obstacles ahead. The deal, dating back to the early 1990s, has intertwined the economies of the three North American countries but has faced bumps amid U.S. President Trump’s constantly changing tariff policy. Carney said finetuning the latest version of the agreement “will take some time.” “We understand what some of the Americans would call trade irritants or trade issues are,” Carney said. “We have some on our side as well,” he added. “We will sit down and work through those issues with the broader approach in the negotiations.” “It’s not a case of the United States dictates the terms. We have the negotiations. We can come to a mutually successful outcome,” Carney also said. “It will take some time.”

Related coverage from Canadian Press, by David Baxter: Carney names members of new advisory committee on Canada-U.S. economic relations 

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U.S. trade talks ‘not at a place…with a lot of optimism’: Premier Holt

By Adam Huran
The Telegraph-Journal
April 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Susan Holt

It’s the assessment Holt made after meeting with New Brunswick MP Dominic LeBlanc, minister responsible for Canada-US trade. That’s while Holt holds out hope for a breakthrough, maintaining the “unpredictability” of the US could also change talks for the better “on a dime.” …Alongside Holt in Ottawa, Ontario Premier Doug Ford stated “we’re all worried” about the trade agreement’s future, while also saying he believes it’s going to be extended, although “with a few tweaks.” …Holt said “when you have one customer that’s responsible for the vast majority of your business – and in New Brunswick’s case it’s 92% of our exports that go to the US – that’s a vulnerability. …“We have a sense that at any given moment, a big lumber producer in the US could put in a call to the president, and things could change tomorrow in terms of the 45% tariffs on softwood lumber.

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Washington demanding ‘entry fee’ from Ottawa before trade talks

By Laurence Martin, Fannie Olivier and Daniel Thibeault
CBC News
April 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The Trump administration is demanding what amounts to an “entry fee” from Canada to engage in trade talks toward a revised Canada-United States-Mexico Free Trade Agreement (CUSMA), four sources said. “The Americans are setting conditions before negotiations begin,” said one high-ranking individual. The US demand was also confirmed by former Quebec premier Jean Charest, who was appointed to Prime Minister Mark Carney’s new advisory committee on Canada-US economic relations. …On the US side, there are suggestions that Canada should try to get Trump’s attention by making an immediate concession, especially since the president is juggling several major issues right now. However, Canadian sources said they have twice offered concessions to the US administration without receiving anything in return. …Former Canadian diplomat Louise Blais, in her capacity as a strategic advisor to the Canadian Council on International Affairs, said the Americans “perceive Canada as unwilling to come to the table.”

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‘Two is a start’: British Columbians named to Carney’s U.S. relations committee

By Lauren Collins
Victoria News
April 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Susan Yurkovich

Prime Minister Mark Carney has named two British Columbians to his new Advisory Committee on Canada-US Economic Relations. Carney announced the committee on Tuesday. From BC are Teck Resources president Jonathan Price and Canfor president Susan Yurkovich. Teck is a BC-based mining and resource company… Canfor is a low-carbon forest products manufacturer with operations in Canada, the US, and Europe. …Forests Minister Ravi Parmar added he’s excited to have both Price and Yurkovich on the committee. “I think having Luc Thériault from Domtar and Susan Yurkovich from Canfor, two large companies operating in BC and Canada, is good news,” Parmar said. “But we are going to continue to remind the federal government, especially as they are beginning CUSMA negotiations, that for British Columbia, softwood is our auto sector. Softwood is our steel sector and we need a resolve to this issue.”

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First Nations file new claims against B.C. government, cite court ruling making UNDRIP enforceable in law

By Gordon Hoekstra
The Vancouver Sun
April 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

After a landmark BC Court of Appeal decision that made the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples enforceable in provincial law, First Nations have launched suits using the ruling to argue against government decisions in mining, forestry and energy. In a petition filed last month, the Lower Similkameen Indian Band is seeking to quash an expansion of Hudbay Mineral’s Copper Mountain Mine, arguing a permit was granted without adequate consultation. The First Nation says the decision must be set aside and a declaration issued to ensure its constitutional rights are protected pursuant to UNDRIP and B.C.’s Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act. In outlining the need for deeper consultation, the First Nation cites several legal precedents including a B.C. Appeal Court decision where the Gitxaala First Nation won a ruling that found the province’s open-entry mineral claims system was inconsistent with the B.C. government’s implementation of UNDRIP. 

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U.S. liquor won’t be back in B.C. Liquor stores until softwood tariffs eased: Eby

By Mark Page
Victoria News
April 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

After meeting with Prime Minister Mark Carney on Thursday, Premier David Eby confirmed that US liquor products will remain off BC liquor store shelves, despite pressure from American officials. Eby wants the Americans to ease duties and tariffs on the softwood lumber sector before relenting on U.S. liquor products. …The issue gained renewed international attention after US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick called the measures against American alcohol products “disrespectful”. …One of the major sticking points for Eby is what he sees as preferential treatment by the US for lumber from Russia and Europe, just as punitive measures are ratcheted up on Canadian softwood products. “The reality is that British Columbians are pissed off about our industry being attacked, our families losing jobs for absolutely no reason, to prefer Russian and European lumber to Canadian lumber,” he said.

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Major opposition heard in Nanaimo at second Cable Bay public hearing

By Jordan Davidson
Nanaimo News Now
April 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

NANAIMO — A controversial rezoning application for a forested section of land in the Duke Point area held its second public hearing, with every one of the 60+ speakers strongly voicing their opposition. The Wednesady, April 22 hearing was a continuation from Thursday, April 16 when over 400 people filled the Vancouver Island Conference Centre, passionately voicing their support or opposition to the rezoning proposal of a 212-acre forested property adjacent to the cherished Cable Bay Trail. …Nanaimo Forest Products (NFP), which operates Harmac Pacific pulp mill, is attempting to rezone the majority of 950 Phoenix Way. Approval of this rezoning would allow NFP to plan for heavy industrial use near the Duke Point industrial strip. …Upon conclusion of the public hearing process, Council will consider third reading of the proposed rezoning. Potential fourth reading and adoption would not occur until Nanaimo Forest Products meets the necessary conditions, likely taking a few months.

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John Brink on BC’s forestry crisis, CKPG article on Vanderhoof Specialty Wood Products

On the Brink Podcast
April 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

John Brink & Reinhardt Nolte

In this must-see episode of On the Brink, we dive into the growing crisis facing British Columbia’s forestry industry, where mill closures and economic pressure are reshaping communities across the province. We discuss what’s driving the shutdown of lumber mills, the ripple effects on workers and local economies, and what this moment signals for the future of the industry. John speaks on resilience in uncertain times, highlighting the critical role of having a financial lending partner you can truly trust when markets turn and challenges arise. This podcast episode also addresses a recent news article about our company, offering a clear response while setting the record straight [just after 40 minute mark].

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U.S. Softwood lumber dispute as viewed through a value-added lens from Chilliwack

By Jennifer Feinberg
The Chilliwack Progress
April 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jeff Sheilds

The ups and downs of the U.S. softwood lumber dispute have created a crippling decade of uncertainty for BC companies, particularly the value-added manufacturing sector in the Chilliwack area. The Independent Wood Processors Association (IWPA) has put out a release analyzing the recent preliminary U.S. softwood lumber ruling now under review, calling it more evidence “the dispute has become a broken process” penalizing both businesses and consumers on both sides of the border, without bringing either side closer to resolution. …What’s at stake locally? There may be a couple of logging companies, but there are about a dozen wood manufacturing outfits in and around Chilliwack, such as Visscher Lumber, Yarrow Wood, Woodtone, and more, with hundreds of jobs on the line. Chilliwack Coun. Jeff Shields, who is also the CFO of Visscher Lumber, said whether or not there’s a legitimate basis for these duties, the value-added sector should viewed separately from the timber-harvesting companies. 

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Northern Ontario sawmills idled ‘indefinitely’ because of U.S. tariffs

By Darren MAcDonald
CTV News
April 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Interfor has announced it is indefinitely curtailing operations at its facilities in Nairn Centre and Gogama facilities due to weak market conditions. Sudbury East-Manitoulin-Nickel Belt MP Jim Bélanger said that the decision “is expected to result in the loss of more than 200 good-paying forestry jobs beginning in early June.” Interfor spokesperson Svetlana Kayumova said the lumber market has been hit hard by tariffs imposed the United States as part of its trade war with Canada. “Like many others in our sector, we are navigating a combination of persistent market headwinds and the continued impact of US trade actions, including softwood lumber duties,” Kayumova said. …“These pressures have made it increasingly difficult to operate certain facilities in a sustainable way. We recognize the impact this has on our employees, their families, and the broader community, and we are working with these stakeholders as this decision is implemented.”

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Fire leaves JD Irving Tissue plant with ‘significant’ smoke and water damage

By Derek Haggett
CTV News
April 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

DIEPPE, New Brunswick — Firefighters from Dieppe and Moncton, responded to a fire at the Irving Tissue plant early Tuesday morning. Dieppe Fire Chief Marc Cormier said said when firefighters arrived shortly after 5 a.m. they saw smoke coming from inside the building. …“No injuries reported to us. …“The fire itself was not large, but it was hard to get to because the warehouse is packed with stacked products. The building itself is still in good condition. We had to cut a hole through the outside wall to access the area of origin,” said Cormier. “There is significant smoke damage and water damage.” The Irving Tissue plant is located in the Dieppe Industrial Park. It makes Royale-brand products, including toilet paper, paper towels, and napkins. J.D. Irving, Limited says the fire caused minimal damage and the plant is in the process of restarting production.

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EU majority resists French call to overhaul US trade deal

By Carlo Martuscelli and Koen Verhelst
Politico EU
April 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

BRUSSELS — A French push to add safeguards to last year’s EU-US trade deal has hit resistance from a German-led majority of member countries determined to preserve the original agreement. That means the Council of the EU will likely take an unchanged position into talks on May 6 with the European Parliament, which wants to attach a series of conditions. Ambassadors representing the EU’s 27 member countries met to review a first round of inter-institutional negotiations to hash out a compromise that can finally take effect. The call by France to revise enabling legislation — which envisages that the EU would scrap tariffs on US industrial goods — has failed to attract significant support. The European Parliament, like France, wants to add tweaks to the deal to take into account global developments. …The changed situation includes Trump’s threats to annex Greenland, as well as a Supreme Court decision that struck down his original tariffs.

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Request for Comment on Subsidy Programs Provided by Countries Exporting Softwood Lumber to the United States

By International Trade Administration
The US Department of Commerce
April 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The US Department of Commerce seeks public comment on any subsidies, including stumpage subsidies, provided by certain countries exporting softwood lumber or softwood lumber products to the United States during the period July 1, 2025, through December 31, 2025. Pursuant to section 805 of title VIII of the Tariff Act of 1930 (the Softwood Lumber Act of 2008), the Secretary of Commerce is mandated to submit to the appropriate Congressional committees a report every 180 days on any subsidy provided by countries exporting softwood lumber or softwood lumber products to the United States, including stumpage subsidies.

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National Wood Flooring Association named its 2026 award winners

The Floor Daily
April 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

ORLANDO, Florida — The National Wood Flooring Association (NWFA) named its 2026 award winners at its annual Expo, which kicked off Tuesday. Emerging Leader of the Year: Oliver Barajas, CEO and founder of Bridgebay Flooring in Hayward, California. Vanguard Awards: Drew Kern, Infinity Claims Management Solution of Milton, Ontario, Tommy Sancic, Olde Wood Ltd. of Magnolia, Ohio, and Bryan Park, Footprints Floors of Greenwood Village, Colorado. …Wood Floor of the Year Awards. …NWFA Hall of Fame: Bob Goldstein, Vermont Natural Coatings, Tom McNeil, Bona (retired), and Danny Hickman and Larry Hickman, Hickman Lumber & Allegheny Mountain Hardwood Flooring.

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Researchers Model Impact Of European Union Deforestation Regulations On Pellet Production, Trade

By Erin Krueger
Biomass Magazine
April 21, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

Researchers at the U.S. Forest Service’s Southern Research Station and Louisiana State University have published a paper that investigates how the European Union Deforestation Regulations could alter global wood pellet trade patterns. The paper is titled “Wood pellet market restructuring under the European Union deforestation regulation: A dynamic spatial equilibrium analysis.” …“Our results suggest the EUDR reallocates global trade rather than reducing global production,” the researchers wrote. While the regulation succeeds in reducing the European Union’s reliance on imports and increases its share of consumption of deforestation-free products, it does not materially lower the total amount of wood pellets produced and burned worldwide. …The main economic result is a shift in trade flows, where pellets that are blocked from the European market are redirected to Asian buyers. …The large production losses projected for the US Southeast, compared to the much smaller losses for Canada.

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Mondi opens new paper bags plant in Pittsburgh

Mondi plc
April 22, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

PITTSBURGH — Mondi has officially opened its new packaging production facility in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, further expanding its manufacturing capabilities in the United States to better support customers with reliable, high-quality paper based packaging solutions across key end markets. The new state‑of‑the‑art plant produces a wide range of paper bags for customers in the eCommerce, food, feed, building materials and chemicals sectors. The facility brings together production previously located at Mondi’s Wellsburg, West Virginia and Oakdale, Pennsylvania sites, while adding advanced, highly automated technology to enhance efficiency, quality and customer service. The Pittsburgh plant significantly expands Mondi’s production capacity in the US. …After completing the ramp up phase, the plant is expected to reach an annual capacity of 300 million paper bags. By the end of this year, approximately 170 people are expected to work at the site.

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Governor Spanberger Establishes Virginia Wood Council to Grow Forestry Industry, Help Businesses Contend With Tariffs

Governor of Virginia
April 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Abigail Spanberger

RICHMOND, Virgina — Governor Abigail Spanberger on Friday during an industry roundtable at the East Coast Sawmill, Logging & Pallet Equipment Exposition in Doswell signed an executive directive creating the Virginia Wood Council — a new advisory body focused on growing Virginia’s forestry industry, supporting loggers, and making sure Virginia’s forests remain strong into the future. The Council will also help the industry contend with the challenges created by federal tariffs and support business expansion into new markets. Governor Abigail Spanberger said “I am creating the Virginia Wood Council to drive economic growth, help businesses access new markets for Virginia-made wood products, and keep our forests and wood-based businesses strong for generations to come. I look forward to appointing highly qualified experts from across Virginia to serve on this Council.” Virginia has approximately 16 million acres of forestland.

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French paper sector under pressure after wave of closures

By Markku Björkman
PulpPaperNews.com
April 23, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Seven paper mills have closed in France since the beginning of 2024, raising concerns about a broader decline in the country’s paper and pulp industry. The warning comes from COPACEL, which highlighted the trend during its annual press conference. The industry group also pointed to a fragile outlook for several production sites entering 2026. Out of a total of 81 paper mills in France, seven have permanently ceased operations. According to COPACEL, the closures have significant consequences for employment, regional development and industrial sovereignty. France is already a net importer of pulp, paper and cardboard, increasing its reliance on foreign supply. At the same time, two packaging paper companies are undergoing court-led restructuring, while a group operating two large pulp mills is in conciliation proceedings. Several other companies are considered financially vulnerable. Meanwhile, French manufacturers face persistently high production costs linked to energy prices, taxation and administrative complexity.

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Finance & Economics

NAHB Applauds Lawmakers’ Push to Remove Harmful Mandate from Major Housing Package

The National Association of Home Builders
April 23, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

In a letter signed by 76 representatives, the Real Estate Caucus and the Build America Caucus called on House Speaker Mike Johnson and Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries to remove harmful provisions in the Senate-passed 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act that mandate the forced sale of single-family build-to-rent (BTR) housing.  The letter stated that Section 901 of the Senate bill, as drafted, “would have far reaching and unintended consequences that run counter to the bill’s stated goal of expanding housing opportunity.” The 76 lawmakers further warned that the Section 901 language would exacerbate the housing affordability crisis by severely curtailing the production of BTR housing nationwide. …NAHB estimates that single-family housing starts may drop by 40,000 units per year as a result of this mandate. Moreover, the Urban Institute says this provision targeting BTR owners could  “decrease the number of rental units built each year by at least 72,000.”

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Containerboard prices rise in April for second consecutive month

By Katie Pyzyk
Packaging Dive
April 21, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

For the second consecutive month, a leading index reported an increase in North American containerboard pricing. Month-over-month containerboard prices rose $30 per ton in April, following March’s $40 per ton increase, according to monthly data released Friday in Fastmarkets RISI’s Pulp & Paper Week publication. When also taking into consideration the $20 per ton decrease the index reported in February, containerboard pricing has a year-to-date net increase of $50 per ton. …On the boxboard front, most prices remained relatively flat in April. Solid bleached sulfate remains in oversupply, although demand was flat to slightly improved. 

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Indonesia turns to paper, glass packaging as plastic prices climb

By Maudey Khalisha
The Jakarta Post in Asia News Network
April 22, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

JAKARTA — The Industry Ministry is pushing for packaging diversification and the development of alternative materials to strengthen the competitiveness of domestic manufacturers, particularly in the food and beverage sector, as global dynamics continue to drive up plastic prices …“We see the geopolitical situation in the Middle East as a catalyst to improve efficiency and accelerate innovation in more sustainable packaging alternatives,” said Putu Juli Ardika. In response, industry players have begun diversifying packaging materials, turning to paper, glass, metal and recycled plastics such as recycled polyethylene terephthalate (rPET), according to the ministry. Putu noted that the shift reflects both cost considerations and a broader push toward sustainability. Furthermore, the ministry sees strong potential in paper-based packaging, supported by Indonesia’s well-established pulp and paper industry. Paper packaging is increasingly being adopted across the retail, food and beverage, e-commerce and logistics sectors.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

The digital issue of Hardware & Building Supply Dealer is out — Navigating the business of lumber

The HBS Dealer
April 21, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, United States

In the April issue of Hardware & Building Supply Dealer, our editors look at traders and treaties. Our cover story features industry leaders sharing insights on the behind-the-scenes business of lumber trading. “Lumber trading isn’t really about buying at the cheapest price all the time,” Kyle Little, COO of Sherwood Lumber told HBSDealer. “It’s about positioning.” Statistics and analysis of Canadian softwood imports round out our April cover story. The digital issue also includes the House-Hasson Hardware Report, which lays out the vision from new CEO Jeff Land. …In regulatory news, the April issue shares highlights from the National Lumber and Building Material Dealers Association’s Spring Meeting and Legislative Conference in Washington, D.C. Access the latest digital issue here.

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United States’ efforts to combat illegal cross-border trade of timber and wood products

By Adam Gustafson, Principle Deputy Attorney General
US Dept of Justice’s Environment and Natural Resources Division
April 24, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Adam Gustafson

Presentation to the Timber Interdiction Membership Board and Encorement Recourses Working Group. …The US Dept of Justice’s Environment and Natural Resources Division continues to uphold its long-standing commitment to enforcing the nation’s environmental laws and defending the responsible use of her natural resources. Today’s event is designed to provide an overview of what the federal government is doing to combat one of the most pervasive and lucrative forms of transnational crime. …The US was the first country to criminalize the transnational trafficking of plants and plant products, including timber, when the Lacey Act was amended in 2008. …Since 2008, we have seen other countries follow our lead. This includes Australia, the European Union, Japan, and the United Kingdom among others. …The only way we can end the illegal timber trade is to cut off the demand for illegal wood products. This is done through effective and collaborative enforcement efforts.

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NAHB and the International Code Council (ICC) Release 2025 Edition of the National Green Building Standard

The National Association of Home Builders
April 22, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and the International Code Council (ICC) proudly announce the release of the ICC 700-2025 National Green Building Standard® (NGBS)—the fifth edition of the nation’s premier residential green building standard. Approved by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), the 2025 NGBS continues to define the benchmark for sustainable residential construction, renovation and land development across the United States. Developed through an independent consensus committee… it applies to single-family homes, multifamily buildings, mixed-use developments and land development projects, as well as other similarly constructed residential facilities. …What’s New in the 2025 Edition:

  • New property certification path for existing multifamily and mixed-use communities
  • Expanded resilience practices to help homes better withstand natural disasters
  • New practices to encourage low-carbon design to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
  • Alternative energy efficiency compliance options
  • Substantially revised existing building chapter with more flexible compliance options

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Michigan Tech Researchers Develop Sustainable Building Material from Wood Waste

Michigan Technological University
April 22, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

More efficient use of lumber byproducts leads to more sustainable forest management. That’s why Michigan Technological University researchers are developing a biomaterial lighter than steel and just as strong, made from leftover wood waste, that could revolutionize the lumber industry. …Xinfeng Xie, associate professor of forest biomaterials, and his team have partnered with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s Waste Upcycling for Defense (WUD) program to turn scrap wood into a strong, sustainable building material. …Led by Xie, students began by using a group of wood-decay fungi, also known as xylophagous fungi, to break down lignin, the tough, rigid structural polymer in plant cell walls. This biological approach leaves behind cellulose nanofibers that are stronger than steel, and its only byproducts are carbon dioxide and water. …The project also provides a physical product that has a positive impact on the future of their industry.

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United voice formed to revive and represent wood industry occupations in UK

By Stephen Powney
The Timber Trades Journal
April 23, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

A new unified voice to represent the UK’s carpenters, joiners, and shopfitters – the Wood Occupations and Materials Alliance (WOMA) – has been launched in London. A signing ceremony of a declaration of intent to form WOMA took place at the joint Members’ Day of the Institute of Carpenters (IOC) and National Association of Shopfitters (NAS) on April 22. …Both organisations will continue to retain their independence, but WOMA is intended to be a publicly facing voice for the benefit of individuals and businesses across the wood sector. …Outgoing IOC president Geoff Rhodes Rhodes said WOMA would be an umbrella organisation sitting above IOC and NAS. “In the future it may expand to include other like-minded organisations.” He said the existing Confederation of Timber Industries (CTI) was already an umbrella group for parts of the timber industries, with WOMA complementing this in the related carpentry, joinery sectors and shopfitting sectors.

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Forestry

Canfor releases 2025 Sustainability Report

Canfor Corporation
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Canfor released its 2025 Sustainability Report… providing an overview of the company’s sustainability strategy and its environmental, social and governance progress in 2025. Canfor CEO Susan Yurkovich said, “Our sustainability strategy is centered on sound resource stewardship, product and operational excellence, and commitment to our people and communities. Together, we are delivering the high-quality, renewable forest products our customers rely on, while advancing a more resilient, low-carbon future.” Highlights include:

  • Maintaining leading sustainability certifications: 100% of managed forests were certified to SFI® or FSC® Forest Management Standards in Canada, 29% of purchased fibre in the US was certified to SFI Forest Management or American Tree Farm System® standards and 100% of Swedish forestry operations were certified to the PEFC Forest Management Standard. In addition, 56 million seedlings were planted in 2025.
  • Pursuing climate & energy targets: Across global operations, nearly 80% of energy used came from renewable sources. In addition, Canfor Pulp was awarded an EcoVadis silver medal for sustainability.

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BC ‘Going Backwards’ on Ecosystem Protections

By Sarah Cox
The Tyee
April 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Last Wednesday, BC Premier David Eby released a statement celebrating B.C.’s wild places and passion for protecting the environment… commemorating Earth Day. …The problem? Conservation advocates, the BC Greens and a former BC Liberal cabinet minister who led a government biodiversity review said Eby’s claim about strengthening ecosystem protections largely isn’t true. Ken Wu, of the Endangered Ecosystems Alliance, said that after a promising start under Eby, BC has “stalled and started going backwards” when it comes to protecting ecosystems such as old-growth forests. …Former BC Liberal MLA Mike Morris, said he gives the Eby government “a failing grade” on strengthening ecosystem protections. …BC Green Party MLA Jeremy Valeriote said he hasn’t seen any evidence the government is strengthening ecosystem protections. …“With a huge deficit, and a premier taking it on the nose from the Conservatives on economic development, there’s a lot of focus on Look West,” he said.

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Sustainable forestry would support industry, jobs and ecosystems

Mary P Brooke
Island Social Trends
April 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA, BC –A panel called The Future of Forestry on Vancouver Island and Coastal BC at the annual convention of the Association of Vancouver Island and Coastal Communities (AVICC) , was chaired by North Cowichan Mayor Rob Douglas… with an audience of about 60 municipal leaders …A panel of forestry sector representatives tackled what is likely only the surface of a multi-faceted problem. They looked at how to protect forests for all the right ecological reasons while still maintaining or even strengthening the wood-production sector for the benefit of jobs and the economy. …The four panelists were Klay Tindall, general manager, Lilwat Forestry Ventures, Geoff Dawe, former president of the Public and Private Workers of Canada, Chris McGourlick, manager with the FESBC and Younes Alila, Professor of Forest Hydrology at UBC Forestry. The panel did not have a representative of the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) or any provincial government forestry representatives.

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Early-season wildfires in B.C. prompt warnings

By Akshay Kulkarni
CBC News
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Officials are asking British Columbians to be watchful if they’re outdoors this weekend as they respond to a number of early-season wildfires. As of 5 p.m. PT Thursday, there were 19 fires burning throughout the province, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS). Most were human-caused, which is how any wildfire not sparked by lightning is categorized, and five were classified as out of control. BCWS officials had said that the warm and dry winter experienced by most of the province could lead to heightened risk in some areas this summer. …Fire information officer Julia Caranci said it comes amid what are called outflow conditions — when warm, drier air flows from the Interior to the ocean through the coastal valleys. …As of Thursday at noon, most of the province sat at a moderate fire danger rating — with some small pockets reporting high and extreme fire danger.

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Court says Nova Scotia woods ban was unreasonable, but premier says he would do it again

By Taryn Grant
CBC News
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Premier Tim Houston says he would institute a ban on entering the woods again, if the circumstances called for it, in spite of a judge saying last year’s province-wide decree was unreasonable. Houston was reacting to a Nova Scotia Supreme Court ruling that says the province failed to consider individual mobility rights — enshrined under Section 6 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms — when it told people to stay out of the woods on Aug. 5, 2025. The ban was imposed during an extended period of drought when wildfire risks were high to extreme. It remained in place across the province for several weeks. The court decision, released last week, suggested that Charter rights should be considered in a more meaningful way before the next emergency. Houston said he respects the decision but he stood by last year’s ban. He disputed the judge’s conclusion that the province did not consider Charter rights. 

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America’s Largest Landowner Is Using AI to Digitize the Forest

By Ryan Dezember
The Wall Street Journal
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Autonomous skidders that drag felled trees around logging sites. A database detailing each tree in the forest. A screen that shows loggers which trees to cut and which to leave standing to maximize financial returns decades down the line. Weyerhaeuser, the country’s top logger and one of its oldest companies, is betting artificial intelligence can deliver these and other big changes to American forestry, which has come a long way from oxen and axes. Many applications envisioned by Weyerhaeuser executives are unique to a company that manages timberlands in the US and Canada that together cover an area roughly the size of Indiana. …Among the initiatives is the creation of a digital twin of Weyerhaeuser’s timberlands using satellite imagery, drone photography and lidar. …Weyerhaeuser is also studying semiautonomous logging equipment. At a meeting with investors, executives showed video of a driverless skidder, dragging freshly downed timber around a Southern logging site. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

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Idaho Forest Service employees told their positions may be affected by federal agency restructure

By Laura Guido
The Idaho Capital Sun
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The recently announced major restructure of the US Forest Service may disrupt a number of forestry positions in Idaho. But the details as to how those positions will be affected and what work will continue or be eliminated under the plan remain unclear. Anna Webb, an entomologist and federal employee union representative based in Boise, received a notice about two weeks ago that her position in the agency would be affected. …Leaders of the federal employee union that represents Forest Service employees for the Boise, Payette, Salmon-Challis and Sawtooth national forests are concerned about the disruption to local employees as well as the potential long-term consequences to forest health. …Although Idaho’s forests are overseen by two out-of-state regional offices, many regional and some national positions are based in Idaho — all of these may be affected by the proposed restructure.

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Wildlife experts call for ‘misleading’ timber industry book to be removed from schools

By Caroline O’Doherty
The Irish Times
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

IRELAND — The Department of Education has distanced itself from a book distributed to primary schools that champions commercial Sitka spruce plantations despite their well-documented environmental downsides. The children’s book, Sitka Spruce – the Amazing Timber Tree, has a foreword written by Michael Healy-Rae, the recently resigned minister of state with responsibility for forestry, and depicts Sitka forests as being full of wildlife with trees removed individually while the rest of the woodland “flourishes”. In reality, such plantations, while critical for the timber industry, are regarded as ecological dead zones. The book was originally produced by the Morgan Sindall Construction company in Britain and distributed to schools there. The Irish version is almost identical and is funded by the Society of Irish Foresters, the Irish Timber Council and the Social, Economic, Environmental Forestry Association (SEEFA). The book is written from the perspective of a Sitka spruce tree that describes seeing abundant wildlife all around it.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Drax extends Ultrabulk wood pellet shipping contract through 2031

The Lesprom Network
April 21, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

Drax has extended its wood pellet shipping contract with Ultrabulk through March 2031, with a mechanism to reduce carbon emissions year on year from sea freight journeys, according to Drax. The agreement follows the first UK arrival of the M.V. Ultra Yorkshire, a Handymax carrier operated by Ultrabulk, which completed its first transatlantic voyage carrying over 29 thousand tonnes of biomass pellets from the Port of Greater Baton Rouge to the Port of Liverpool. The cargo is set for rail transport to Drax Power Station in Selby. …The company estimated the voyage produced around 90% less CO2 than standard maritime fuels such as VLSFO or ULSGO.

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Forest Fires

Smoke from South Georgia wildfires spreads across 30,000 acres

By Christopher Harris
CBS News
April 23, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US East

GEORGIA — Smoke has filled the air across parts of the Peach State this week as wildfires continue to burn out of control in southern Georgia, forcing evacuations and destroying homes. According to the Georgia Forestry Commission, crews responded to 34 new wildfires Wednesday that burned about 75 acres statewide. But officials say the biggest concern remains two large, active fires that have already scorched tens of thousands of acres. The Pineland Road Fire in Clinch County has grown to nearly 29,606 acres and is about 10% contained. In Brantley County, the Highway 82 Fire has burned more than 4,400 acres and is roughly 15% contained. Officials say dry conditions, high winds, and a lack of rain are making the fires harder to control. …The growing wildfire threat prompted Brian Kemp to declare a state of emergency, allowing more state and federal resources to assist, including expected support from FEMA.

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