Blog Archives

Business & Politics

BNN Interview with Derek Nighbor: The importance of Canada’s forestry sector

BNN Bloomberg
May 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Derek Nighbor, president & CEO at the Forest Products Association of Canada, joins BNN Bloomberg to share the outlook for Canada’s forestry sector. [If the embedded 6 min. video below doesn’t play – click the read more below to view it on the BNN site]

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U.S. Lumber Coalition Commends Actions to Combat Evasion of U.S. Trade Remedy Laws Involving Lumber Imports from Canada

By US Lumber Coalition
PR Newswire
May 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The US Lumber Coalition applauds the U.S. Customs and Border Protection announcement of its determination that Coastal Forest Products (based in Bow, NH) has evaded the antidumping and countervailing duty orders on softwood lumber imports from Canada. In reaching its determination, CBP rejected Coastal Forest Products’ argument that the Canadian-origin merchandise “underwent ‘substantial transformation’ in New Zealand.” …As a result of CBP’s determination, Coastal Forest Products will be responsible for unpaid duties and will be required to post cash deposits on future entries of the covered merchandise. …CBP launched its investigation based on an allegation filed by the US Lumber Coalition. ….”The message to Canada is clear: transshipment of lumber into the United States via a third country to evade antidumping and countervailing duties is not tolerated, nor possible,” added van Heyningen.

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Government of Canada announces a $1.5 billion support program for tariff-impacted industries

By Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada
Government of Canada
May 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Mélanie Joly

Evan Solomon

Canadian ministers Mélanie Joly and Evan Solomon announced $1.5 billion to support several of Canada’s tariffed industries. This includes the creation of a new $1 billion Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC) program available to industries that manufacture and export products containing steel, aluminum or copper. …The BDC program will provide financing at favourable terms to enable businesses to address immediate pressures. This new program aligns with the government’s priority to provide rapid liquidity to viable businesses facing significant economic challenges. In addition, the government is providing an additional $500 million through the Regional Tariff Response Initiative (RTRI) to support tariff-impacted businesses in all sectors of our economy. This funding, delivered by Canada’s regional development agencies (RDA), will help ensure that Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) have access to the financing they need to enable strategic pivots through investments in market diversification and enhanced productivity that strengthen their competitiveness.

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Commerce starts Canada softwood lumber duty review, names firms targeted

The Lesprom Network
May 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The US Department of Commerce is initiating administrative reviews of antidumping and countervailing duty orders with March anniversary dates, with the actions applicable May 4, 2026, and final results planned no later than March 31, 2027. …The companies listed for review are 10104704 Manitoba Ltd, Woodstock Forest Products; CWP—Montreal Inc.; and Norsask Forest Products Limited Partnership. For certain uncoated paper from Brazil, the antidumping review covers March 1, 2025, through February 28, 2026. The companies listed are Suzano S.A. and Sylvamo do Brasil Ltda/Sylvamo Exports Ltda. For certain uncoated paper from Portugal, the antidumping review covers March 1, 2025, through February 28, 2026. The company listed is The Navigator Company, S.A.

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Carney stakes out position on Cowichan case after months on the sideline

By Rob Shaw
Business in Vancouver
May 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Mark Carney

After months of silence, Prime Minister Mark Carney has finally waded into the landmark Cowichan Nation title case currently gripping British Columbia politics. Carney surprised many last week when he answered a question from Richmond East—Steveston MP Parm Bains in question period. “Can the prime minister outline the government’s position and explain how the government is working collaboratively to uphold reconciliation while protecting private property rights for residents and businesses?” asked Bains. “Private property rights are fundamental, and this government, indeed, this house, will always protect them,” replied Carney. “This government fundamentally disagrees with the B.C. Supreme Court’s decision on Cowichan. We immediately appealed that decision, alongside the government of B.C., the City of Richmond and other Indigenous First Nations. …Carney has now basically adopted the position of Premier David Eby, who has warned the decision cannot stand because it imperils private property rights.

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Plenty of interest in buying Crofton mill

By Robert Barron
The Cowichan Valley Citizen
May 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

CROFTON, BC — Numerous companies and investors have expressed an interest in purchasing the Domtar pulp mill site in Crofton since the facility shut down operations earlier this year. Domtar said in a statement that it is exploring a variety of possibilities for the future of the waterfront site, and North Cowichan Mayor Rob Douglas said a number of interested parties have contacted the municipality directly looking to buy the site for a range of potential uses, including manufacturing, energy production, and other industrial purposes. …“Domtar has retained BMO Capital Markets to evaluate potential purchase proposals and expects to make a decision regarding the site’s future in the coming months.” Douglas said that as decisions about the site’s future use will ultimately rest with Domtar or a prospective new owner, and not the municipality, he is encouraging interested parties to contact Domtar directly.

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B.C. premier pushes back after softwood lumber left off list for tariff relief

By Emily Fagan
CBC News
May 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ottawa’s decision not to include softwood lumber among the industries that will benefit from $1 billion in tariff relief funding sparked frustration from BC Premier David Eby, who said softwood lumber in the province has been “decimated” by U.S. tariffs. “I don’t know what it’s going to take, really, to get the bureaucrats and the ministers in Ottawa to recognize that softwood lumber employs more people in Canada than steel and auto parts combined,” Eby said. …”I really feel like BC’s projects are not getting the attention they deserve.” …Eby said he does not know why the industry would have been overlooked, though he hopes a separate funding announcement just for softwood lumber is in the works. …Jeff Bromley, wood council chair with the United Steelworkers, said 150,000 workers across Canada make their living off forestry. “I wish they would have included a broader program that would have helped our forestry industry,” he said.

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Conifex to curtail Mackenzie sawmill operations for seven-weeks

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

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

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

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

Stuart McNish & Robin Junger

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

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Union warns of need to ‘stabilize’ forestry sector as trade war drags on

By Palak Mangat
Barrie Today
May 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

A union representing lumber workers in Canada warned that the federal government needs to help “stabilize” the forestry sector as the trade war with the United States drags on and impacts productivity, leading to sawmill closures. The sentiment emerged at a Tuesday meeting of the House natural resources committee as it continued its study into Canadian energy exports, where Unifor national president Lana Payne told MPs that the industry continues to struggle. Industry Minister Mélanie Joly had unveiled a $1.5-billion aid package for the steel, aluminum and copper sectors on Monday, with the bulk of this amount offered through three-year loans under a program that will be created by the Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC). At the time, Joly stressed that Ottawa is still working to offer “similar terms” through BDC to the softwood lumber and forestry industries.

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Supreme Court set to weigh in on huge New Brunswick title claim

By John Chilibeck
The Telegraph-Journal
May 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The clock began ticking April 7 on one of the most important Supreme Court of Canada cases in New Brunswick’s history. That’s the date the country’s top court told law firms involved in the Wolastoqey Nation’s landmark title claim it would determine if it would allow “leave for appeal.” …On one side are logging firms and other private property owners who say they’re caught in the middle of a three centuries-old fight that had nothing to do with them. The Indigenous nation wants the Supreme Court to overturn a Court of Appeal decision last December. That ruling found the nation would have no chance of success in its lawsuit proving that it has Aboriginal title over privately held lands. …By that measure, the Wolastoqey Nation could sue governments but would have no means to take back control of most of their old territory. …If the appeal goes ahead, the Supreme Court could hear the case as early as this fall.

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Innovation, growth of region’s forestry explored

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

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

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Gov. Kemp signs forestry, land management legislation

Fox5 Atlanta
May 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

GEORGIA — Governor Brian Kemp osigned a package of forestry and natural resources legislation that state leaders and industry officials say will strengthen Georgia’s forestry economy and support rural communities. The bills were signed during an event at the headquarters of the Georgia Forestry Association and were headlined by House Bill 134, known as the Keep Georgia Forested Act. The measure allows Georgia’s existing Jobs and Investment Tax Credits to become transferable for forestry manufacturers during a five-year period, a move supporters say will help companies access capital earlier in operations and encourage hiring and investment in rural Georgia. The governor also signed House Bill 983, Senate Bill 306 and House Resolution 1008, all backed by the Georgia Forestry Association. …Georgia has about 22 million acres of commercially available forestland, according to the association. The industry supports more than 141,000 jobs statewide and generates an estimated $59 billion in annual economic impact.

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Finance & Economics

Mercer International reports Q1, 2026 net loss of $52 million

Mercer International Inc.
May 7, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

NEW YORK — Mercer reported first quarter 2026 Operating EBITDA of $7.8 million, a decrease from $47.1 million in the same quarter of 2025 and an increase from negative $20.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. In the first quarter of 2026, net loss was $52.0 million compared to $22.3 million in the same quarter of 2025 and $308.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. Mr. Juan Carlos Bueno, CEO, stated: “Our pulp sales realizations showed resilience this quarter as softwood pulp markets held steady, while hardwood pulp performance trended upward on favorable demand-supply dynamics. However, elevated fiber costs across our supply chain and a slower-than-anticipated recovery in prices continued to weigh on our results. …Mass timber momentum continues to build, backed by an order book and commitments of $171 million that support a multi-year production plan. …European softwood pulp prices increased compared to the fourth quarter of 2025 due to supply constraints, although these gains were offset by higher discounts.

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Canfor reports Q1, 2026 net loss of $72.1 million

Canfor Corporation
May 6, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

VANCOUVER, BC — Canfor Corporation reported its first quarter of 2026 results. …The Company reported an operating loss of $72.5 million for the current quarter, compared to an operating loss of $415.9 million for the fourth quarter of 2025. After taking into consideration a $20.0 million reversal of a previously recognized inventory write-down, the Company’s adjusted operating loss was $92.5 million for the first quarter of 2026, compared to an adjusted operating loss of $145.0 million for the fourth quarter of 2025. These results largely reflected improved performance in both the lumber segment and, to a lesser extent, the pulp and paper segment. Canfor’s President and CEO, Susan Yurkovich, said, “While we saw an improvement in results, largely due to a supply-driven uptick in North American lumber pricing and higher production levels, demand remained relatively subdued. …Global pulp markets continued to face significant headwinds during the first quarter, with pulp producer inventories remaining elevated.”

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Falling consumer confidence and a softer housing outlook signal weaker lumber demand, but tight supply should keep prices firm

By Kevin Mason, Managing Director
ERA Forest Products Research
May 4, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Kevin Mason

As the US–Iran conflict rumbles into a third month and the global economy faces myriad challenges (rising energy prices, slowing growth, swelling inflation, geopolitical fragmentation, etc.), it comes as little surprise that US consumer sentiment is also in freefall. The latest University of Michigan survey showed consumer sentiment plummeting toward record-low levels in April: down 3.5 points to 49.8. …Closer to our forest products universe, the National Association of Homebuilders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), a metric that tracks homebuilder confidence in the single-family housing market, declined by 4 points to a reading of just 34 in April. Builder confidence had shown signs of recovery through the second half of 2025; however, with this latest sharp decline, the index is nudging back toward record lows. 

…Based on the resilience shown in the US housing market last month, we are maintaining our full year 2026 U.S. housing start forecast of 1.325MM units. With our revised forecast for 2026 and given expectations for lumber demand from R&R to be flat (at best) this year, we now anticipate that overall North American lumber demand will decline by 350MMbf y/y in 2026 (we had previously forecast flat demand versus 2025). However, despite this deterioration, we believe North American markets will remain well balanced, and that overall lumber prices will stay quite strong this year relative to historical averages given declining supply in several regions (note that profitability for Canadian mills will be challenged by ongoing, elevated duties and tariffs).

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Western Forest Products reports Q1, 2026 net loss of $19.9 million

Western Forest Products Inc.
May 6, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC — Western Forest Products reported a net loss was $19.9 million in the first quarter of 2026, compared to net income of $13.8 million in the first quarter of 2025 and net loss of $17.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. …The company reported Adjusted EBITDA of negative $13.6 million in the first quarter of 2026. In comparison, the Company reported Adjusted EBITDA of $3.5 million in the first quarter of 2025 and Adjusted EBITDA of negative $6.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. Other highlights include: Lumber production of 118 million board feet (versus 154 million board feet in Q1 2025), Lumber shipments of 113 million board feet (versus 156 million board feet in Q1 2025), Cedar lumber shipments of 25 million board feet (versus 31 million board feet in Q1 2025), Average lumber selling price of $1,422 per mfbm (versus $1,348 per mfbm in Q1 2025), and Average BC log sales price of $193 per m3 (versus $134 per m3 in Q1 2025).

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Acadian Timber reports Q1, 2026 net income of $3.5 million

Acadian Timber Corp.
May 6, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

EDMUNDSTON, New Brunswick – May 6, 2026 – Acadian Timber  reported financial and operating results for the three months ended March 28, 2026. During the first quarter, Acadian generated sales of $23.4 million compared to $24.8 million in the first quarter of 2025. Acadian generated $4.8 million of Adjusted EBITDA and $2.5 million of Free Cash Flow during the first quarter and declared dividends of $5.3 million or $0.29 per share to our shareholders. “Acadian delivered steady performance during the first quarter, despite challenging conditions across forest products markets,” said Malcolm Cockwell, Interim President and Chief Executive Officer. “Our team remains focused on improving our operations in Maine and unlocking the long-term, multi-use potential of our assets.”

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Cascades reports Q1, 2026 net earnings of $39 million

Cascades Inc.
May 7, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades reported its unaudited financial results for the three-month period ended March 31, 2026. Q1 2026 Highlights include: Sales of $1,125 million (compared with $1,197 million in Q4 2025 and $1,154 million in Q1 2025); Net earnings of $39 million or per common share of $0.38 (compared with $0.37 in Q4 2025 and $0.07 in Q1 2025); Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) of $118 million (compared with $155 million in Q4 2025 and $125 million in Q1 2025). …Hugues Simon, CEO, commented: “As disclosed in our revised outlook on April 10, weather‑related disruptions across the U.S., combined with heightened volatility in transportation and fuel costs, drove operating costs above plan. Additionally, recent geopolitical developments weighed on consumer confidence and spending, resulting in packaging volumes below our original assumptions.

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Stella-Jones reports Q1, 2026 net income of $60 million

By Stella-Jones Inc.
Globe Newswire
May 6, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTREAL — Stella-Jones announced financial results for its first quarter ended March 31, 2026. Sales for the first quarter reached $791 million, versus sales of $773 million in the corresponding period last year. Excluding the impact of 2025 acquisitions of $42 million and the unfavourable currency conversion effect of $30 million, pressure-treated wood sales increased by $10 million, or 1%, largely driven by an increase in wood utility poles volumes. …Eric Vachon, President and CEO said “Our performance continues to be supported by disciplined operations. As part of our commitment to continuous improvement, we are advancing targeted initiatives across the business, with a current focus on optimizing our Railway Ties production network, enhancing efficiency and supporting future growth. We are also progressing our strategic growth priorities, notably with the finalization of the site selection for our new U.S. steel lattice manufacturing facility.”

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GreenFirst Forest Products reports Q1, 2026 net loss of $20.7 million

GreenFirst Forest Products Inc.
May 5, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO — GreenFirst Forest Products announced results for the first quarter ended March 28, 2026. Highlights include: Q1 2026 net loss from continuing operations was $20.7 million, compared to net loss of $32.8 million in Q4 2025. Adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations for Q1 2026 was negative $15.1 million compared to negative $21.7 million in Q4 2025. Benchmark prices saw increases during the quarter which resulted in an average realized lumber prices of $666/mfbm for Q1 2026 which was higher than the $654/mfbm pricing realized in Q4 2025. On January 21, 2026, the Company entered into a $30 million term loan under the Softwood Lumber Program announced by the Government of Canada. 

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

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

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

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Remodeling Growth to Slow Sharply in Early 2027

Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University
May 5, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Annual spending on improvements and maintenance to owner-occupied homes is projected to slow sharply in early 2027, according to the latest Leading Indicator of Remodeling Activity (LIRA) from the Remodeling Futures Program at the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University. The new LIRA shows year-over-year growth in home renovation and repair spending of just 0.5% by the first quarter of 2027—a pace that remains positive in nominal terms but is less than overall inflation. “Growth in remodeling permits and retail spending on building products has been flat recently, signaling stagnant interest in home improvement,” said Rachel Bogardus Drew, Director of the Remodeling Futures Program at the Center. “Even so, homeowners are expected to maintain spending at roughly last year’s levels, with total improvement and repair expenditures edging up modestly to $523 billion in early 2027.” 

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NAHB Debuts New Resource that Estimates Quarterly Remodeling Spending by State

By Eric Lynch
May 5, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

There is a research gap in localized remodeling data. To address this, NAHB is debuting a new economic resource: the State Projections of Remodeling (SPR). …SPR will provide a quarterly, state-level estimation of the market share and total dollar value of remodeling spending one month after the release of the NAHB Remodeling Market Index (RMI). …During the fourth quarter of 2025, remodeling spending at the national level came in at $280.1 billion on a seasonally adjusted annualized rate (SAAR), accounting for 37.7% of total private residential fixed investment. Even though spending fell for the second consecutive quarter from $282.6 in Q3 2025, remodeling spending has been larger than single-family construction spending for five straight quarters. California had the largest market share of remodeling spending at 7.9%, or $22.1 billion. This is followed by Texas (7.0%, or $19.7 billion), Florida (5.5%, or $15.3 billion), New York (3.9%, or $11.0 billion), and North Carolina (3.0%, or $8.4 billion).

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US Mortgage Rates Climb as Inflation Rebounds and Yields Rise

By Catherine Koh
NAHB Eye on Housing
May 4, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

US mortgage rates continued to increase in April as ceasefire negotiations remain inconclusive. According to Freddie Mac, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.34% in April, 16 basis points (bps) higher than March. The average 15-year rate also increased by 13 bps to 5.69%. Despite the recent increase, both rates remain lower than a year ago by 39 bps and 21 bps, respectively. The 10-year Treasury yield, a key benchmark for long-term borrowing, averaged 4.31%, up 7 bps from the previous month. Ongoing blockades in the Strait of Hormuz have kept oil prices above $100 per barrel. This has passed through to inflation which climbed to 3.3%, nearing a two-year high. Energy components led the increase with fuel oil prices rising 30.7% and gasoline up 21.2% in March. At its latest meeting, the Federal Reserve held the federal funds rates unchanged at 3.5% to 3.75% as inflation remains elevated alongside continued economic expansion. 

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Boise Cascade reports Q1, 2026 net income of $17.8 million

By Boise Cascade Company
Businesswire
May 4, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

BOISE, Idaho — Boise Cascade reported net income of $17.8 million on sales of $1.5 billion for the first quarter ended March 31, 2026, compared with net income of $40.3 million on sales of $1.5 billion for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025. …Building Materials Distribution (BMD) sales decreased $18.2 million, or 1%, to $1,388.9 million, from $1,407.1 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025. The decrease in sales was driven by net sales price decreases of 3%, offset partially by net sales volume increases of 2%. BMD segment income decreased $15.5 million to $32.9 million, from $48.4 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025. …Wood Products’ sales, including sales to BMD, decreased $17.6 million, or 4%, to $398.2 million for the three months ended March 31, 2026, from $415.8 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025. Wood Products’ segment income decreased $9.2 million to $8.5 million, from $17.7 million for the three months ended March 31, 2025.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

How Modern Methods of Construction can help solve Canada’s housing crisis

By Stephanie Shewchuk
RBC Thought Leadership
May 6, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

Modern Methods of Construction (MMC) refers to innovative homebuilding approaches to improve the efficiency, sustainability and quality of construction. It includes of off-site construction, including 3D volumetric modules, 2D panels and pre-fabricated components, as well as innovative on-site approaches, such as robotics and digital tools. It can help build homes up to 50% faster and 40% cheaper than traditional methods. Yet current conditions actively prevent adoption at scale—leaving Canada’s housing crisis unresolved. MMC currently makes up 7.5% of the Canadian construction market. Forecasts show it’s set to grow at a compounded annual growth rate of 5% by 2029. Deploying these new methods could meaningfully contribute towards Canada’s housing needs. Raising MMC ‘s contribution to 15% of annual supply needs (about 72,000 units a year), would require developing dozens of new factories at current production capacities. 

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Forestry

SFI Panel Puts Disclosure Pressure in Focus: Certification Necessary but Not Sufficient

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

A panel at the 2026 SFI Annual Conference — Leveraging SFI Certification for Global Reporting Frameworks and Market Assurances — took on one of the more pressing questions facing the forest sector: as global disclosure frameworks multiply and investors demand quantifiable outcomes, does forest certification still do the job? Shenandoah Johns, Chief Environment and Sustainability Officer at West Fraser, walked through five major disclosure frameworks that have arrived in the last five years and identified the gap between what certification was designed to demonstrate and what regulators are now asking for. Paige Goff, VP Sustainability at Domtar, made the case for not overcomplicating what is already working. Kirsten Vice, Senior VP Sustainability and Canadian Operations at NCASI, framed 2026 as a year of influence — with key nature-related frameworks being finalized — and called on the sector to shape its own targets before others do it for them. Jason Metnick, President of SFI, moderated.

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SFI Tribute to Kathy Abusow: A Forestry Community Says Thank You

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

The opening event of day two of the SFI Annual Conference was a tribute to outgoing President and CEO Kathy Abusow, who has led the organization since 2007. Colleagues and board members gathered to mark the end of a tenure that has shaped sustainable forestry certification in North America — and the ceremony clearly caught Kathy off guard, with the surprise guest turning out to be her own daughter, Nina Andrascik, a forester and biologist early in her career. Speakers included SFI Board Chair Dan Lamb, who presented Kathy with a gift on behalf of the board; Lennard Joe, CEO of the BC First Nations Forestry Council; SFI President Jason Metnick; and Christine Leduc, SFI VP Canadian Operations and President of PLT Canada.

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SFI Panel: Challenging Times and New Opportunities in Forest Sector Markets

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The opening panel at the 2026 SFI Annual Conference in Montréal brought three senior executives to the stage under the moderation of outgoing SFI CEO Kathy Abusow. The conversation covered trade policy and tariffs, forest sector transformation, investment, and the role of certification in a period of structural change. Derek Nighbor is President and CEO of the Forest Products Association of Canada. Pete Madden is President and CEO of the US Endowment for Forestry and Communities. Lenny Joe is CEO of the BC First Nations Forestry Council. Abusow opened by noting that sector decline predates the current trade dispute, placing the scale of the problem on the table before the first question: 43 pulp and paper mill closures in the US — a figure she attributed to Madden — with 20 more expected, and 27 mill closures in Canada alongside 22 permanent sawmill shutdowns.

Abusow then turned to tariffs, asking Joe how trade policy and softwood lumber disputes uniquely affect First Nations. Joe said most First Nations operate as market loggers, with fibre moving through relationships with major licensees — meaning tariff-driven slowdowns hit rural communities, where most First Nations are located, directly and quickly. Nighbor noted that Canadian lumber volumes to the US dropped roughly 12% in 2025, with about eight percentage points of that loss being filled by European supply. He said he did not think it needed to be this way, and that the opportunity lies in growing the pie for the continent. Madden pointed to unintended consequences in rural communities, where mills trying to reinvest in their own infrastructure are finding imported machinery too expensive under the new tariff environment, causing capital projects to stall.

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SFI 2026 Conference Kicks Off in Montreal with Growth Theme and Call to Action

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Kathy Abusow

The Sustainable Forestry Initiative opened its 2026 annual conference in Montréal —titled The Next Ring of Growth—featuring a traditional welcome from Chief Stephen Angus McComber, Ratsénhaienhs of the Mohawk Council of Kahnawà:ke, followed by opening remarks from CEO Kathy Abusow, who reviewed three decades of organizational milestones including growth in certified forest area, Indigenous partnership, and youth education programs. SFI Board Chair and Arbor Day Foundation CEO Dan Lambe spoke to the theme of legacy in the sector, while Catherine Grenier, President and CEO of the Nature Conservancy of Canada and SFI board member, outlined concrete pathways — including Other Effective Conservation Measures, carbon revenue models, and spatial data tools — for the forestry sector to gain formal recognition and financial return for conservation outcomes already being delivered on certified lands.

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

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

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

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U.S. Endowment Calls for Balanced Forest Markets

By US Endowment for Forestry and Commu
Morning Ag Clips
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Pete Madden

GREENVILLE, South Carolina — As forest-sector leaders continue discussions about woody biomass, the US Endowment for Forestry and Communities is encouraging a broader conversation about the markets needed to keep working forests healthy and forest-reliant communities strong. Recent conversations have focused on whether expanded use of woody biomass could increase competition for fiber used by existing pulp and paper mills. That concern is important. Pulp and paper mills anchor local economies, provide markets for forest owners and produce essential products used every day. But the discussion must also account for the communities already living with the consequences of lost markets. Since 2015, more than 40 US pulp and paper mills have closed, removing tens of millions of green tons of annual wood demand. …“Working forests depend on working markets,” said Pete Madden, CEO. “Existing mills are essential to the forest economy, and their concerns about fiber affordability and competitiveness deserve careful consideration.

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Forest Service Chief fields questions on Milwaukee office closure, deep budget cuts

By Danielle Kaeding
Wisconsin Public Radio
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Tom Schultz

US Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz provided details to lawmakers Thursday on employees affected by the closure of its regional office in Milwaukee, as well as President Donald Trump’s budget that cuts 75 percent of the agency’s funding. Schultz fielded questions from members of a Senate appropriations subcommittee. Last month, the Forest Service announced it would close 57 research facilities in 31 states and close nine regional offices, including in Milwaukee. The agency is proposing to shift operations to Madison as one of six nationwide hubs. Wisconsin Democratic US Sen. Tammy Baldwin, noted she had written to Schultz about the Milwaukee office closure as Senate Democrats have demanded answers on the reorganization. Schultz told Baldwin. …“We are proposing to move this to Madison, where we have the existing Forest Products Lab. We think it’s a better location,” Schultz said. “There’s been discussions over the last 10 years to relocate from Milwaukee to Madison.”

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Trump administration falls behind on wildfire prevention with risky fire season ahead

By Lauren Sommer
National Public Radio
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

With wildfires already burning and drought persisting across much of the US, fire experts are bracing for what could be an extreme fire season. The U.S. Forest Service is going into it having done far less work than in recent years to manage the dry, flammable vegetation that can fuel catastrophic fires. In 2025, the Forest Service reduced vegetation on almost 1.5 million fewer acres than in 2024, according to an analysis of the agency’s data by NPR and firefighting experts. …The Forest Service said in a statement that the drop in prevention work is mostly due to staff being occupied with firefighting and because environmental conditions were not right for doing prescribed burns in the Southeast. The agency lost 16% of its workforce as of last summer, with 5,860 personnel leaving in the first six months of 2025 as part of the Trump administration’s efforts to reduce the size of government. 

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New UN report urges accelerated forest action before 2030

By the Department of Economic and Social Affairs
United Nations
May 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

At the start of this year’s UN Forum on Forests, the United Nations will launch the Global Forest Goals Report 2026, the latest global assessment of progress towards the six Global Forest Goals and 26 targets of the United Nations Strategic Plan for Forests 2017–2030. With less than five years remaining to 2030, the report provides current evidence on progress, gaps and the urgent need to scale up action to halt deforestation, restore degraded lands and advance sustainable forest management. It underscores the critical role of forests in supporting climate stability, biodiversity, the livelihoods of over a billion people and the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Drawing on voluntary national reports and the latest forest-related global data, the report also identifies key gaps in finance, governance and data and sets out policy recommendations to accelerate action in the final years leading to 2030.

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NATO Intelligence Confirms Russian Timber Worst Hit by Sanctions

By Jason Ross
Wood Central Australia
May 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Russian timber and cellulose exports have collapsed by 50% between 2021 and 2025, the steepest fall of any sector tracked by NATO-frontline intelligence across four years of Western sanctions, with the same Latvian assessment revealing that sanctions have cost Moscow more than US$130 billion as it scrambled to source banned goods between 2022 and 2025. That is according to a new analysis published in April by the Constitution Protection Bureau (SAB), one of Latvia’s three security intelligence services, drawing on internal Russian institutional forecasts obtained through intelligence collection alongside SAB’s own assessment. Russia was the world’s largest softwood lumber exporter in 2021, ahead of its February 2022 invasion of Ukraine. …According to the analysis, Russia paid an additional US$32.5 billion each year to acquire sanctioned Western goods through intermediaries at inflated prices, excluding cases where no substitute was available. 

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Timber group calls EU Deforestation Regulation simplification inadequate in curbing “ramping bureaucrcacy”

By Stephen Powney
Timber Trades Journal
May 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Commission attempts to retrospectively curb “rampant bureaucracy” in the EUDR are “inadequate”, according to the German Sawmill and Timber Industry Association (DeSH). DeSH says the new simplification package for the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) falls far short of the goal of genuine simplification and continues to create uncertainty rather than clarity in practice. Instead of solving structural problems, DeSH says the Commission is attempting to retrospectively curb the rampant bureaucracy with ever-new guidelines, FAQs, and exemptions. …Ms Möbus says the goal of the EUDR – to combat global deforestation – is correct and important. “However, the EU has taken a wrong turn on the way there. The regulation has developed into a bureaucratic behemoth that poses enormous challenges for the companies affected.” …“The association call  for a significant reduction in bureaucratic requirements, practical solutions for implementation in the supply chain, and genuine risk-based approaches that adequately consider regions without deforestation risk.”

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Health & Safety

Workers reach breaking point as new report reveals quiet mental health crisis in forestry

By Joe Roberts
Royal Forestry Society
May 6, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: International

UK — The Royal Forestry Society published the Breaking Points survey report, which shows the forestry and arboriculture sector is experiencing a mental health crisis. …Official data show suicides have risen over the last 15 years and that men, particularly those in middle age, are at heightened risk of poor mental health. The survey warns this is especially relevant to forestry, where many workers fall into this demographic and experience the compounding stressors of lone working and the transient nature of job roles. The Forestry Commission-funded report paints a picture of a sector under immense strain. Financial instability, physical risk and rural isolation are heightening the risk of poor mental health among those who manage the nation’s trees and woodlands. …The survey shows a workforce struggling under multiple pressures. 76% of all respondents cited financial issues as their top stressor and only 43% have regular (weekly) access to someone they trust to talk to.

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Forest Fires

Wildfire season takes early toll on dry New Brunswick forests

By Alan Cochrane
The Telegraph-Journal
May 6, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada East

New Brunswick’s wildfire season has begun with more forests burned than at this time last year, according to the government’s wildfire dashboard. As of Wednesday afternoon, the dashboard reported there has been 178 fires so far this season, which have burned 343 hectares of forest. At the same date in 2025, there had been 100 fires burning 87.7 hectares of forest. The 10-year average for the period up to May 6 is 84 fires burning 105 hectares. As of 9 a.m. Wednesday, there were no out-of-control fires in the province, compared with six Tuesday night. …New Brunswick’s wildfire season begins in early April and continues through the summer. Last year, several fires resulted in restrictions on forest trail use. In Moncton, municipal fire departments joined with provincial firefighters. …“Record-low precipitation, minimal snowpack, and prolonged drought have pushed fire risks higher than normal,” the Department of Natural Resources said.

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