Blog Archives

Special Feature

Trump Policy Takes Center Stage And Disruption is the Word of the Day

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
National Association of Home Builders
February 10, 2025
Category: Special Feature
Region: United States

Robert Dietz

The Trump 2.0 administration is underway and disruption is the word of the day in Washington, D.C. The new Trump team hit the ground running, with policy action expected in the areas of regulatory reform, a smaller and more efficient federal workforce, extension of the 2017 tax cuts, tariffs as revenue generators and negotiation tools, and more to come on immigration actions and a more secure border. The sheer breadth of policy actions is a lot for the economy to digest. These policies will offer home builders and remodelers both positive and negative risks in the months ahead. This dual set of risks has been reflected in financial markets, with stocks valuing the focus on growth and efficiency but the bond market reflecting inflation and budget deficit concerns. As a result, investors have pushed long-term interest rates higher since last fall, with the 10-year Treasury rate in the 4.5% to 4.6% range. Mortgage rates remain elevated near 7%.

NAHB projects more economic growth in the quarters ahead, albeit with some disruption in the presidential transition. There is a solid base to build on, with fourth quarter GDP growth coming in at a better-than-expected 2.3% annualized rate. Housing’s share of GDP registered at 16.2% at the end of 2024. The Federal Reserve is undecided on future risks to both inflation and unemployment and will likely hold the federal funds rate at the current top target of 4.5% until at least the third quarter. …However, home sales and building conditions will depend greatly on which policies are for negotiation (such as a proposed 25% tariff on Canadian and Mexican imports) and which policies are intended to be long-term changes to the economy (regulatory reform, for example).Tariffs on Canadian lumber are a near-term concern, with the existing duty rate speculated to increase from a current 14.5% rate to near 30% later this summer. 

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Business & Politics

Canada’s 13 premiers in Washington on mission to push back Trump’s tariff threats

By Kelly Malone
The Canadian Press in CTV News
February 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Doug Ford

WASHINGTON — Canada’s premiers are in Washington today to meet with lawmakers, business groups and lobbyists in a joint effort to push back on U.S. President Donald Trump’s plans for devastating duties. It is the first time all 13 premiers have travelled to the American capital together. Ontario Premier Doug Ford, chair of the Council of the Federation, appealed to members of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Tuesday to send a message to Trump that tariffs would hurt both the American and Canadian economies. Since his return to the White House last month, Trump has taken rapid actions to reshape global trade and American foreign policy through tariffs. The president signed executive orders Monday to impose 25 per cent levies on all steel and aluminum imports into the United States, including Canadian products, starting March 12.

In related coverage:

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‘Entirely unjustified’: Trudeau says Canada will respond to Trump’s steel, aluminum tariffs if necessary

By Rachel Alello
CTV News
February 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Justin Trudeau and JD Vance

PARIS — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says U.S. President Donald Trump’s new 25% tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, including from Canada, are “entirely unjustified,” and “unacceptable.” Trudeau said that the federal government will be working with U.S. administration in the lead-up to the tariffs coming into effect, to highlight their negative impact, but “if it comes to that, our response of course will be firm and clear.” …Disagreeing with the US position, Trudeau pointed to how deeply integrated the Canadian and U.S. markets are, from defence and shipbuilding, to automotive manufacturing. “Together we make North America more competitive,” he said. Trudeau stopped short of committing to a dollar-for-dollar response as he was ready to do on Trump’s now-paused import tariffs, but Canada did retaliate back in 2018 when similar measures were imposed during the NAFTA renegotiations, before receiving an exemption.

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The Truth About Trump’s Steel Tariffs – His first-term levies hurt consumers and US manufacturers

By the Editorial Board
The Wall Street Journal
February 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

President Trump signed executive orders imposing 25% tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports. His advisers say these tariffs are economically “strategic” rather than a bargaining chip for some other goal. Is the strategy to harm U.S. manufacturers and workers? That’s what his first-term tariffs did, and it’s worth revisiting the damage of that blunder as he threatens to repeat it. …Then, as now, most U.S. metal imports came from allies including Canada, Mexico, Europe, South Korea and Japan. …The real goal of U.S. steel and aluminum companies that wanted the tariffs was to boost their bottom lines. Raising prices on foreign imports allowed them to charge more. The price was paid by U.S. secondary metal producers and downstream manufacturers. …Auto makers were another casualty. …Retaliation caused Mr. Trump to exempt Canada and Mexico as part of the renegotiated Nafta deal. …This is political rent-seeking at its most brazen, and it benefits the few at the expense of the many. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

Related coverage in Bloomberg: Canada’s business groups call for government action against steel, aluminum tariffs

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Trump’s tariffs wars and aid shutdowns are foolish and immoral

By Dan Perry, author and former editor
The Hill
February 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Dan Perry

About 95 years ago, the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act aimed to protect American industries by imposing record tariffs on imported goods. …US exports plummeted, global trade shrank and the Great Depression deepened, worsening global economic instability, contributing to turmoil that would later fuel World War II. It was a disaster. …The whole episode serves as a textbook example of how trade wars backfire, choking commerce and harming economies rather than helping them. But President Trump doesn’t seem to know this, and so he’s threatening a brutal tariff war with America’s democratic neighbors. …For context, in Trump’s first term he placed tariffs on Canadian lumber. This, together with tariffs on aluminum and steel, was estimated to cost the average U.S. family at least $300 per year. The current threatened tariffs could cost 10 times that much. …It is stunningly reckless for the Trump administration to kneecap America’s economy and eviscerate soft power built over decades.

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Why Trump wants higher tariffs on steel and aluminum

By Winnie Zhu and Dylan Griffiths
BNN Bloomberg
February 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

While the move is aimed at strengthening domestic production, it carries implications for the wider economy, given that the U.S. relies on imports to meet a large portion of demand for the metals in sectors such as construction, auto manufacturing, drinks packaging and the production of military equipment. …In 2018, during his first term in the White House, Trump imposed tariffs of 25% on steel imports and 10% on aluminum imports. Today, US industries say they’re still struggling to compete with imports. More broadly, trade frictions in the global steel and aluminum sectors have grown in the past year amid a renewed flood of product from China. …Canada could bear the brunt of tariffs as the top supplier of both metals to its southern neighbor. …In 2024, the output of the U.S. steel industry was 1% lower than it had been in 2017, before the first round of Trump tariffs, and the aluminum industry produced almost 10% less.

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Trump to impose 25% tariffs on steel and aluminium

By Aileen Graef, James Frater and Olesya Dmitracova
CNN Business
February 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

President Donald Trump said he planned on announcing a 25% tariff on all steel and aluminum imports into the US Monday. Trump also said he planned to hold a separate news conference Tuesday or Wednesday to announce massive new reciprocal tariffs, which could match other countries’ tariffs on US goods dollar-for-dollar. …It’s not clear if the new tariffs will be on top of the tariffs already in place on exports from China. Trump in 2018, also announced 25% tariffs on steel and 10% tariffs on aluminum, although the following year he lifted them on Mexico and Canada. While the US is not the manufacturing-focused economy it once was, it still consumes tens of millions of tons of steel and aluminum a year, feeding industries such as automaking, aerospace, oil production, construction and infrastructure, such as roads and bridges. …The steel industry praised the prospect of tariffs to protect America’s interests.

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Canadian supply chains are at the epicentre of Trump’s potential trade war

By Hassan Wafai, Juan Navarro & Kim Tholl, Royal Roads University
The Conversation
February 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Regardless of whether Trump will impose tariffs, Canadian supply chains have become the epicentre of these looming disruptions. The country urgently needs to strengthen its supply chain resilience. If the tariffs were to go into effect, they would reshape the geo-political ecosystem of North America and beyond by disrupting global supply chains. These supply chains are a direct reflection of the geo-political ecosystem in which they operate, and they require stability to establish and thrive. …One of the most effective ways for Canada to strengthen its supply chain resilience is to reduce its heavy trade reliance on the U.S., which can be done through free trade agreements. …Beyond international trade, Canada should also eliminate interprovincial trade barriers to facilitate easier business operations across Canadian provinces and territories. …It is never too late to start, but waiting any longer is no longer an option for Canada.

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Trump Tariffs Could Nearly Triple Lumber Costs Raising Housing Concerns

By Claire Dickey
Newsweek.com
February 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

As President Donald Trump ushers in a slew of new policy changes, the proposed 25 percent tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico—if implemented after the recently introduced 30-day pause—could significantly escalate the cost of lumber, further complicating the already strained U.S. housing market. Some experts predict a near-tripling of costs that could undermine home affordability at a time when the nation grapples with a housing crunch. …According to Carl Harris, chairman of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB), over 70% of softwood lumber and gypsum, which is used in drywall, originate from Canada and Mexico. …Robert Dietz, chief economist at the NAHB, outlined the risks posed by tariffs as it relates to lumber costs. …Per Dietz, not only could they nearly triple the cost of lumber, a critical component of home building, but they would also drive up prices for consumers, putting homeownership out of reach for many Americans.

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US market still key for West Kelowna’s Gorman Group mills

By Ron Seymour
The Kelowna Daily Courier
February 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

KELOWNA, BC — An export-focused West Kelowna firm, the largest private sector employer in the city, is less dependent on the US market than it used to be. But officials at Gorman Group are still nervously waiting to see if US President Donald Trump follows through on a threat to impose a 25% tariff on all Canadian imports. “The tariff threat has caused uncertainty, which makes it very difficult to forecast cash flow and make investments,” said Nick Arkle, CEO of Gorman Group. Years ago, the company shipped 8o% of its product to the US. “But we’ve reduced our dependency to 50% of mill shipments, while 35% stays within Canada, and 15% is destined for other export markets. …Regardless of what happens in the short-term with tariffs, it’s expected that later this year the duty imposed by the U.S. on softwood lumber imports from Canada will increase from 14.4% to approximately 30%, Arkle said.

Related coverage in:

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Tariffs a concern for Ontario First Nations enterprises

By Sandi Krasowski
The Chronicle Journal
February 9, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jason Rasevych

THUNDER BAY, Ontario — The Anishnawbe Business Professional Association (ABPA) is “deeply concerned” about the proposed U.S. tariffs on Canadian exports and their potential to harm to the economic stability of Indigenous businesses in the oil and gas, forestry, mining, and electricity sectors. ABPA president Jason Rasevych, a member of Ginoogaming First Nation, said the business organization is urging the federal and provincial governments to work with treaty partners to ensure that Indigenous leaders are a part of the discussion to mitigate these impacts and support the resilience and prosperity of all Canadians. “Canada needs more than reactive tariffs or bailouts. We need a bold, forward-thinking strategy that makes us the obvious choice for global business,” Rasevych told The Chronicle-Journal. “That means reducing internal trade barriers and championing the strengths that set us apart.”

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Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper names Bill MacPherson CEO

The Net News Ledger
February 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Bill MacPherson

THUNDER BAY, Ontario — Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper , a northern bleached softwood kraft and northern bleached hardwood kraft pulp, paper, newsprint and directory producer, announced the appointment of K. William (Bill) MacPherson as Chief Executive Officer, effective February 10, 2025. …MacPherson brings more than 35 years of pulp and paper industry leadership experience to Thunder Bay, most recently serving as VP of Paperboard Manufacturing for Graphic Packaging International. Prior to Graphic, MacPherson was Managing Director at Mercer International, Canada, and Mill Manager for Domtar in Kingsport, Tennessee. …“As we begin our second century of operations, I look forward to working with Bill as we strengthen our operations and build our reputation in this new era as a steadfast driver of the local economy,” said Kent Ramsay, Thunder Bay President.

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Donald Trump Signals Reciprocal Tariffs to Come Today

CNN in CTV News
February 13, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

U.S. President Donald Trump in an all-caps post on Truth Social Thursday teased a new round of sweeping reciprocal tariffs, matching the higher rates other nations charge to import American goods. …Reciprocal tariffs were one of Trump’s core campaign pledges — his method for evening the score with foreign nations that place taxes on American goods and to solve what he has said are unfair trade practices. …He is set to share more details on the tariffs ahead of his visit with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Wednesday. …The tariffs are likely to hit developing countries hardest, especially India, Brazil, Vietnam and other Southeast Asian and African countries, given that they have some of the widest differences in tariff rates charged on U.S. goods brought into their countries compared to what the U.S. charges them.

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US LBM makes eighth acquisition in six months

By Dakota Smith
The Woodworking Network
February 6, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

PEWAMO, Michigan — US LBM, a national distributor of specialty building materials, has acquired Goodrich Brothers, Inc. located in Pewamo, Michigan. Founded in 1984, Goodrich Bros. provides millwork, stairways, interior and exterior doors, windows, and hardware to residential and commercial builders throughout Michigan. Tony Goodrich, who joined the organization in 1990, will continue running day-to-day operations. “The entire team at Goodrich Bros. is looking forward to joining US LBM,” said Tony Goodrich. “This partnership will allow us to continue serving our communities, while generating new opportunities for our associates and customers.” US LBM now operates 17 locations in Michigan as part of its Zeeland Lumber and Standard Supply & Lumber division.

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Decorative Hardwoods Association supports tariffs on Russian wood products, says Canada should be exempted

By Keith Christman
The Decorative Hardwood’s Association
February 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

We certainly live in interesting and challenging times. President Trump recently announced tariffs on imports from Canada, Mexico, and China. He also mentioned the possibility of sanctions on Russia related to the invasion of Ukraine. DHA strongly supports efforts to strengthen and grow U.S. manufacturing and prevent further damage from the unfair trade practices of China and its allies in Asia. In addition, DHA supports restrictions on wood products manufactured from Russian wood and imported from third countries. Canada is a vital part of the U.S. supply chain for decorative hardwoods. Thus, DHA sent a letter to the Trump administration to request that hardwood plywood, veneer, and engineered wood flooring manufactured in Canada be exempted from any potential tariffs on imports from Canada. Fortunately, tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico have been paused for a month after Canada and Mexico agreed to enhance border enforcement. 

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Do it Best CEO: Tariffs on Canadian, Mexican imports would have ‘immediate impact’

By Alex Brown
Inside Indiana Business
February 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Dan Starr

FORT WAYNE, Indiana – The CEO of Fort Wayne-based Do it Best Corp. says if the 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico go into effect, it would create an immediate impact on costs for the lumber and hardware cooperative’s members. …Dan Starr said that the co-op’s imports from Canada would be particularly hit hard. “Do it Best purchases from Canadian mills… and then ships into independent lumber yards and home centers across the U.S.,” Starr said. “That’s that’s millions and millions of dollars of product–actually, it’s upwards of more than a billion. So we would see an immediate increase in that the cost of product that would be routed from Canada, and that that would drive up costs across the board.” Starr said even though the tariffs are on hold, the threat of such tariffs dating back to before the 2024 election has caused some price inflation.

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Acadian Timber Announces Acquisition of Harvesting Operations in Maine

By Acadian Timber Corp.
Globe Newswire
February 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, US East

EDMUNDSTON, New Brunswick — Acadian Timber has signed an agreement to purchase assets of A & A Brochu and its affiliates for a total price of US $4.8 million. The assets include harvesting, trucking, and road building equipment, as well as related real estate, in the Millinocket, Maine region. …Adam Sheparski, CEO said, “A & A Brochu has provided contractor services to Acadian for many years. The transaction will address the historical harvesting capacity challenges in Maine and enable greater control over costs as well as sustainable forestry practices.” The asset purchase agreement was signed on February 10, 2025 and the transaction is expected to close during the first quarter of 2025. Acadian Timber is one of the largest timberland owners in Eastern Canada and the Northeastern US and has a total of approximately 2.4 million acres of land under management.

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Vermont construction company already seeing prices rise among tariff talk

By Lauren Granada
NBC News 5
February 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Phil Scott

SOUTH BURLINGTON, Vermont — Tariffs may be on pause for our neighbors to the north, but right now, Vermont-based Polli Construction is talking to its clients about potentially speeding up their contracts.mHome renovations may cost you thousands of dollars more than usual if President Donald Trump goes through with the 25% tariff on imports from Canada and Mexico. “The threat of tariffs are clearly going to encourage some unscrupulous individuals to charge more,” said Steven Polli, who’s owned Polli Construction in South Burlington for 40 years. …Polli Construction has seen some pricing on products go up by 17%. Gov. Phil Scott said the state is contemplating what this threat could mean to brand new affordable housing projects that are currently underway.

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Finance & Economics

Total value of Canada’s building permits rose 11% in December

Statistics Canada
February 11, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The total value of building permits rose 11.0% to $13.1 billion in December. The increase was led by a 21.2% increase in the residential sector, largely due to gains in Ontario and British Columbia. On a constant dollar basis (2017=100), the total value of building permits issued in December grew 8.8% from the previous month and was up 30.5% on a year-over-year basis. The total value of residential permits increased by $1.6 billion to $9.0 billion in December. Multi-unit construction intentions (+$1.5 billion) contributed the most to the gain, posting a 33.3% increase from the previous month. …The total value of building permits in the fourth quarter edged up $430.8 million (+1.2%) to $37.5 billion, marking the fourth consecutive, albeit slowest, quarterly increase in 2024. In the fourth quarter, the residential sector led the growth, while the non-residential sector retreated after reaching a record high level in the third quarter.

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Lumber prices: Five predictions for the housing and wood products markets in 2025

By Dustin Jalbert
RISI Fastmarkets
February 12, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

After several years of unprecedented volatility in wood products markets, 2024 experienced a more stable, albeit depressed, environment for wood products demand and prices. …As President Trump enters his second term have the potential to break the wood products market out of this sleepy period weighed down by soft demand conditions. So, what does our crystal ball suggest in 2025? 

  1. Interest rates will fall as the economy cools and policy uncertainty eases
  2. Wood products demand will rebound as single-family housing starts growth remains positive and R&R reaccelerates. …US consumption of lumber, structural panels and nonstructural panels are all forecast to advance by 2-3%.
  3. Duties on Canadian softwood lumber will double again, placing immense financial pressure on Canadian sawmills
  4. Panel supply discipline and tight inventory levels will persist in 2025
  5. Lumber price volatility will increase across wood products due to tightening conditions, duties and policy uncertainty

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Canada and Mexico tariffs risk inflating US housing crisis, Trump is warned

By Callum Jones
The Guardian
February 12, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Pressing ahead with steep tariffs on Canada and Mexico risks exacerbating the US housing crisis and threatening the broader economy, dozens of congressional Democrats have warned Donald Trump. …In a letter to Trump seen by the Guardian, Democrats noted that the US imports key construction materials worth billions of dollars – from lumber to cement products – from Canada and Mexico each year. “Given the severe housing shortage, compounded by rising construction costs, persistent supply chain disruptions, and an estimated shortfall of 6m homes, these looming tariffs, while intended to protect domestic industries, risk further exacerbating the housing supply and affordability crisis while stifling the development of new housing,” they wrote. More than 40 Democrats urged the White House to consider housebuilding industry estimates that the proposed tariffs will raise the cost of imported construction materials by up to $4bn.

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Tariff risk casts a dark shadow over the Canadian housing market

By Robert Hogue
RBC Thought Leadership
February 11, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The significant risk that tariffs pose to Canada’s economy casts a potentially dark shadow over the housing market. Any economic turbulence arising from tariffs would be felt by participants, whose confidence is critical to the stability of the housing market. …Therefore, assessing the outlook for Canada’s housing market at this juncture is like putting a price on a home before an earthquake—it’s hard to know what shape the structure will be in at the end of the day. Still, we highlight some of the key themes in 2025. …Lower interest rates heat up demand. …Inventory of homes for sale is rebuilding in Canada. …Strained affordability, immigration and uncertainty to keep buyers cautious. …Affordability relief from rate drop will only be partial. …Absent any major economic shock, we’d expect housing market demand and supply to stay balanced in the year ahead, yielding minimal price increases Canada-wide.

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Amid Trump tariff threat, Canadian economy adds 76,000 jobs

By Uday Rana
Global News
February 7, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Canada’s economy added 76,000 jobs in January as the country braced for the impact of tariffs from U.S. President Donald Trump, marking the third consecutive month of jobs growth. The unemployment rate fell by 0.1 percentage points last month, bringing Canada’s unemployment rate to 6.6 per cent, with the largest gains (33,000 jobs) coming from the manufacturing sector, Statistics Canada said in its monthly labour force survey. The latest jobs report comes as Canada faces the threat of Trump’s sweeping tariffs, which economists have warned could lead to mass layoffs, particularly in Canada’s manufacturing sector. The drop in Canada’s unemployment rate was driven largely by youth aged 15 to 24, whose unemployment rate fell to 13.6 per cent. Average hourly wages across Canada were up 3.5 per cent, or by $1.23 to $35.99.

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Factcheck Posts: Trump on US Imports of Oil and Lumber

By D’Angelo Gore
FactCheck.org
February 11, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Experts told us that, in theory, if the US stopped importing crude oil and lumber from Canada and Mexico, it still would be able to meet domestic demand using natural resources available in the U.S. But, in reality, they said, the transition would be costly and take some time to implement, among other complications. “Sure: we could probably meet most of our lumber needs domestically,” said Marc McDill at Penn State University. “The reasons why we don’t boil down to two things: 1) sometimes imports are cheaper than our own suppliers, and 2) we value our forests for a lot of other things.” He added that without lumber from Canada, “1) prices would go up, 2) we would harvest more of our own trees, and 3) we would import more from countries.” …Rhett Jackson at the University of Georgia, said that differences in the lumber produced in the US and Canada may be problematic. …“All lumber is not created equally.”

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Sweden’s wood industry gains competitive edge as US raises tariffs

The Lesprom Network
February 7, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

The U.S. market accounts for 5-10% of Sweden’s forest industry exports, depending on the segment, meaning the direct impact of potential new tariffs remains limited, said Christian Nielsen, market analyst for wood products at Swedish Forest Industries Federation. The U.S. relies on imports for 25% of its lumber consumption, primarily from Canada. Higher tariffs on Canadian wood could raise costs for American consumers while improving the competitive position of European suppliers. However, Nielsen noted that future tariffs directly targeting EU exports remain uncertain. In the pulp and paper sector, the U.S. could rely entirely on domestic production, reducing the need for imports. Sweden currently exports 7% of its pulp and 5% of its paper and board products to the US. In total, Sweden exports 92% of its paper and board production, and global trade flows could be affected by tariff changes. [END]

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Slight uptick in lumber prices after tariffs delayed 30 days

By Joe Pruski
RISI Fastmarkets
February 7, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

A 30-day delay in implementation of tariffs on Canadian shipments to the US reset recent trends in framing lumber markets. Sales picked up in most regions and species, but higher quotes early in the week retreated nearer to last week’s levels. Western S-P-F sales were mixed, but several secondaries reported their strongest days of the year as buyers padded relatively thin inventories with insurance loads. Prices remained close to last week’s levels, but supplies of some items tightened in late trading. Lumber futures swung from extreme volatility Monday and Tuesday to an upward trend towards the end of the week. The threat of tariffs drove prices up, but selling commenced after the delay. The biggest gains were posted in green Fir, where a supply-side rally pushed Std/#2&Btr dimension prices $15-35 higher. The Random Lengths Framing Lumber Composite Price posted another modest adjustment, finishing $5 higher. Most Southern Pine producers throttled back quotes.

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2024 Southern Pine Lumber Exports Surge 11% Despite Year-End Decline

Southern Forest Products Association
February 10, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US East

Year-end 2024 Southern Pine lumber (treated and untreated) exports hit 565.7 Mbf, which was up 11% over the previous year, according to December 2024 data from the USDA. On a monthly basis, Southern Pine lumber exports were up 21.9% in December 2024 over the same month in 2023 but down 2.2% from November 2024. …Softwood imports, meanwhile, were down 11.5% in December 2024 compared with the same month a year ago and down 11% from November 2024. …Mexico remains the largest export market (by volume) of Southern Pine and treated lumber, up 23% over 2023 with 150.2 Mbf of imports. The Dominican Republic, the No. 2 importer of Southern Pine, ended the year 19.1% ahead of 2023 with 92.3 Mbf. India’s total of SYP imports ended 3.1% ahead of last year with 36.6 Mbf. Canada: up 30% with 27.4 Mbf in 2024. Canada ended the year as the No. 5 importer of Southern Pine lumber (treated and untreated).

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Oregon Tech Integrates Student Experience into New Mass Timber Residence Hall

Oregon Institute of Technology
February 6, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

Oregon Institute of Technology (Oregon Tech) is focusing on the student experience and incorporating hands-on learning into the construction of its new $35 million mass timber residence hall at the Klamath Falls campus. The 86,170-square-foot, four-story building will house 517 students, addressing the university’s growing need for additional on-campus housing. Construction is expected to be completed in December 2025. …“Utilizing mass timber aligns with Oregon Tech’s history of sustainable design and environmental stewardship,” said Kurt Haapala, a Partner at Mahlum Architects, the firm that designed the structure. “Mass timber provides aesthetic and functional benefits, such as exposed wood ceilings and efficient manufacturing techniques that reduce waste and improve construction timelines.” Associate Principal Joseph Mayo at Mahlum Architects describes the building as a biophilic design, which aims to connect people with nature by incorporating natural elements into buildings.

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Forestry

A fire deficit persists across diverse North American forests despite recent increases in area burned

By Sean Parks et al
Nature
February 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Rapid increases in wildfire area burned across North American forests pose novel challenges for managers and society. Increasing area burned raises questions about whether, and to what degree, contemporary fire regimes (1984–2022) are still departed from historical fire regimes (pre-1880). We use the North American tree-ring fire-scar network (NAFSN), a multi-century record comprising >1800 fire-scar sites spanning diverse forest types, and contemporary fire perimeters to ask whether there is a contemporary fire surplus or fire deficit, and whether recent fire years are unprecedented relative to historical fire regimes. Our results indicate, despite increasing area burned in recent decades, that a widespread fire deficit persists across a range of forest types and recent years with exceptionally high area burned are not unprecedented when considering the multi-century perspective offered by fire-scarred trees. …There is abundant evidence that unprecedented contemporary fire severity is driving forest loss in many ecosystems and adversely impacting human lives, infrastructure, and water supplies.

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Alberta government pushing Hinton, other communities for more wildfire mitigation work

By Peter Skokeir
The Canadian Press in CTV News
February 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The provincial government is requesting Hinton and other communities in Alberta undertake more wildfire mitigation work in the wake of the Jasper wildfire last summer. Forestry and Parks Minister Todd Loewen sent Hinton Mayor Nicholas Nissen a letter outlining the actions the province would like to see taken, including establishing larger fireguards around the community. “While I am pleased that many communities have applied for fireguard funding, I have concerns that the proposals are not broad enough to reduce the negative impacts of a Jasper-like wildfire event,” Loewen wrote. Surrounded by coniferous trees, Hinton is situated in a wildfire-prone region that has seen multiple blazes over the past few years, including the Jasper wildfire and the 2023 fire that forced Edson to evacuate. “The Forest Resource Improvement Association of Alberta (FRIAA) Fireguard Program is intended for large-scale mitigation work,” Loewen wrote. 

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‘They just don’t make sense for the Americans or us’, says North Island forester on tariff threats

By Nora O’Malley
Ha-Shilth-Sa
February 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Len Apedaile, RPF, is the general manager of Tiičma Forestry, a small market logger based up in Ka:’yu:’k’t’h’/Che:k’tles7et’h’ First Nations (KCFN) territory on Vancouver Island’s north coast. He thinks, if anything, the American tariffs scenario of 25% on all Canadian imports will give businesses the opportunity to re-evaluate how they fundamentally do things. …“This doesn’t happen overnight, but I think that you’ll see that this will spur on those efforts over time,” said Apedaile. …“We really don’t understand where these tariffs are coming from because they just don’t make sense for the Americans or us. …Tiičma Forestry operates in a high-cost area of Vancouver Island. The relatively new First Nations forestry company sells west coast old and second growth logs to a Terminal Forest Products sawmill on the mainland who exports primarily to the U.S.

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WildFireSat: $72 million for critical Canadian space infrastructure for wildfires

By Canadian Space Agency
Cision Newswire
February 7, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

LONGUEUIL, Quebec — Canada’s boreal forest is vast and experiences some of the world’s largest and most intense wildfires. About $1 billion is spent each year in Canada to combat wildfires. …Satellite Earth observation is the only way to provide daily data on all active wildfires spanning the entire Canadian territory. …Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change announced that exactEarth Ltd., a subsidiary of Spire Global Canada, was awarded a contract of $72 million for the design of Canada’s WildFireSat constellation. …WildFireSat will consist of seven microsatellites tailored to monitor active wildfires across Canada on a daily basis. This mission will provide essential data to fire managers and other responsible authorities. This data will enable them to track fire behaviour, identify high-risk wildfires, and make informed decisions. WildFireSat data will also be used in air quality forecasts.

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Sens. Ossoff, Cassidy Introduce Bipartisan Bill to Strengthen Forest Management

US Senator Jon Ossoff
February 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff is introducing a bipartisan bill to help grow Georgia’s forestry industry. Sen. Ossoff and Sen. Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA) introduced the bipartisan Forest Data Modernization Act, which would modernize and improve the U.S. Forest Service’s Forest Inventory and Analysis program to ensure reliable data is available to inform forest management decision making. The bipartisan bill would require the Forest Service to prepare an updated strategic plan to expand data collection and further integrate advanced remote sensing technology. According to the forestry industry, the improvements would unlock new economic opportunities for foresters and better protect the environment. The companion bipartisan bill is being introduced by Representatives Kim Schrier (D-WA-08) and Barry Moore (R-AL-01) in the U.S. House of Representatives …“The Georgia Forestry Association (GFA) commends Senators Ossoff and Cassidy for their bipartisan leadership in re-introducing the Forest Data Modernization Act.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

UK Subsidies halved for controversial Drax power station

By John Fisher
BBC News
February 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

The UK government has agreed a new funding arrangement with the controversial wood-burning Drax power station that it says will cut subsidies in half. …The new agreement will run from 2027 to 2031 and will see the power station only used as a back-up to cheaper renewable sources of power. …The government says the company currently receives nearly a billion pounds a year in subsidies and and predicts that figure will more than halve to £470m under the new deal. …The new agreement also states that 100% of the wood pellets Drax burns must be “sustainably sourced” and that “material sourced from primary and old growth forests” will not be able to receive support payments. All the pellets Drax burns are imported, with most of them coming from the USA and Canada. BBC has previously reported that Drax held logging licences in British Columbia, and used wood, including whole trees, from primary forests for its pellets.

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UK Government support for low-carbon dispatchable generation from 2027

Drax
February 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

The Government has announced a new support mechanism for sustainable biomass generation post-2027. From 2027, Drax and other eligible large-scale biomass generators will be supported via a lowcarbon dispatchable CfD (Contract for Difference). If approved, the plan will keep the power station running until 2031. Under this proposed agreement, Drax Power Station can step in to increase generation when there isn’t enough electricity, helping to avoid the need to use more gas or import power from Europe. When there’s too much electricity on the UK grid, Drax can reduce generation, helping to balance the system. Importantly, the mechanism will result in a net saving for consumers. …The agreement also prioritises biomass sustainability. Drax supports these developments and will continue to engage with the UK Government on the implementation of any future reporting requirements.

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Beyond fairy tales – the realities of sustainable forestry investment

By Charlie Sichel
IPE Real Assets
February 6, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

As institutional interest in real asset investing grows, forestry is gaining recognition beyond its core enthusiasts for its ability to produce income and capital growth, alongside added benefits like carbon sequestration and biodiversity protection. However, trust in sustainability-focused investments remains a challenge. In EY’s 2024 Institutional Investor Survey, 85% of respondents said misleading claims about sustainability are more of a problem today than five years ago, despite regulators’ efforts to quash exaggerated ESG statements. …A persistent narrative is that established timberlands are better, safer investments than new greenfield developments. The truth is more nuanced. Greenfield projects, which involve reforesting degraded or underused land, offer an opportunity to achieve ‘additionality’ – a crucial component of effective carbon sequestration. …For forestry investors, the upshot is clear: regulatory uncertainty is currently a barrier to restoring widespread trust in carbon markets, and resolving this will take time.

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Drax is the subsidy show that goes on and on

By Nils Pratley
The Guardian UK
February 10, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Surprise, surprise, a mighty £7bn of subsidies since 2012 have not been enough to get Drax to stand on its own feet. More bungs are required to keep the wood fires burning at the enormous power plant in North Yorkshire. The energy minister Michael Shanks at least sounded embarrassed. He railed against the “unacceptably large profits” Drax has made, said past subsidy arrangements “did not deliver a good enough deal for bill payers” and vowed that that the definition of a “sustainable” wood pellet would be tightened. But the bottom line is that the government has agreed to crank the subsidy handle once again, just at a slower rate. Why? As he didn’t quite put it, Drax has us over a barrel if we’re not prepared to use more gas to generate electricity. A renewables-heavy system needs firm, reliable power as backup. Transporting wood pellets from North America to burn in Yorkshire is deemed the solution.

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Stora Enso achieves milestone in carbon reduction

Stora Enso OYJ
February 11, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

HELSINKI — By the end of 2024, Stora Enso achieved a 53% reduction in Scope 1 and 2 emissions, surpassing the target of a 50% reduction by 2030 from the 2019 base year. This milestone reflects the Group’s long-term commitment to proactive decarbonisation efforts. In 2021, Stora Enso set its ambition to align with the 1.5-degree scenario of the Paris Agreement with a target of absolute Scope 1 and 2 emission reduction by 50% by 2030 from the 2019 base year. The 53% reduction by the end of 2024 is mainly attributed to mitigation measures, such as fuel switches and improvements in energy efficiency, and the impact from site closures. While Stora Enso acknowledges this progress, the Group’s target is to maintain this level until 2030 and explore opportunities to further improve. “I am pleased to share this progress on our path towards net zero,” says Hans Sohlström, President and CEO, Stora Enso.

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Climate Rules Threaten the Money Growing in Nordic Trees

By Jonas Ekblom and Leo Laikola
Bloomberg
February 7, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Swedes and Finns have long monetized their forests. EU climate goals — seen as a threat to both family wealth and the two national economies — are fast becoming a lightning rod for anger. …In Sweden and neighboring Finland, forestry is, to all intents and purposes, a retail asset class. In Sweden, some 300,000 people own, in total, half of the country’s forests. In Finland, 60% of forests belong to 600,000 individuals. Owners like Velander have been able to work their land with relatively light regulations, generally free to harvest trees when and as they chose. The way these small forest owners traditionally manage their land is, they contend, also good for the climate. But this approach, along with their investments, is under threat from a growing number of European Union regulations aimed at protecting biodiversity and reducing the bloc’s carbon emissions. In Sweden and Finland these measures have been interpreted as a potential ban on logging. [to access the full story a Bloomberg subscription is required]

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Health & Safety

Tariff talk a ‘distraction’ in high-hazard industries

By Shane Mercer
Canadian Occupational Safety Magazine
February 10, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

The looming threat of U.S. president Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canadian goods is more than just an economic challenge—it’s a direct threat to workplace safety. Across forestry, mining, manufacturing, and oil and gas, industry leaders warn that uncertainty surrounding these tariffs is creating dangerous distractions for workers in high-hazard environments. The result? Increased mental stress, loss of focus, and a heightened risk of workplace incidents. …Mike Parent, president and CEO of Workplace Safety North, says this distraction isn’t just theoretical—it’s already affecting worker morale. In forestry alone, existing tariffs on softwood lumber are squeezing the industry, and an additional 25% tariff could push operating costs to unsustainable levels. “This could just completely decimate the logging sector,” Parent adds​. …The stress of economic uncertainty doesn’t just cause momentary lapses in concentration—it contributes to long-term mental health challenges. Anxiety, fatigue, and reduced resilience can lead to burnout, increasing the likelihood of accidents.

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