Blog Archives

Business & Politics

Canada built its forest industry for one customer. Here’s how to change that

By Jordan Solomon and Fed Ghatala
iPolitics
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Canada’s forest industry is being dismantled in plain sight. …For decades, Canada built its forest economy around a single export market and a narrow set of commodity products. That strategy has now been exposed as dangerously fragile. Our closest trading partner has proven unreliable, and the cost of over-dependence is being paid by rural workers and regions across the country. Canada does not have a forestry problem. We have a market diversification problem. Ironically, today’s global uncertainty has created a once-in-a-generation opportunity. …Capital is mobile, and companies are actively looking for stable jurisdictions in which to build new production facilities. Canada can and should be at the top of that list—but we need to build the foundational infrastructure to make this happen. …The federal government’s new Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force opens a critical window to address structural weaknesses in Canada’s forest economy. 

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U.S. Lumber Coalition Calls on Trump Administration to Jettison USMCA Binational Panel Review System

By the US Lumber Coalition
PR Newswire
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The US Lumber Coalition urged the US Trade Representative to communicate to Canada and Mexico that the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement binational panel review system needs to be scrapped during the USMCA review process. The review system… can challenge actions taken to stop the unfair trade using this special dispute settlement panel process. The panel review gives powers to international tribunals that the Constitution reserves for US courts. …Canada, in a recent submission, argued that USMCA binational panel review replaces not only review by the US Court of International Trade (CIT), but also appellate review by the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC), effectively arguing that a USMCA panel does not need to concern itself with any US Appeals Court decisions or precedents. “The idea that a USMCA binational panel is not bound by a US Court of Appeals precedent is, quite frankly, outrageous,” stated Zoltan van Heyningen.

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Premiers meet in Ottawa ahead of CUSMA negotiations with Trump administration

By Kyle Duggan
The Canadian Press in BNN Bloomberg
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — Canada’s premiers are set for two days of huddling in the nation’s capital with the economy, affordability and trade expected to be high on the agenda. The premiers meet with Prime Minister Mark Carney on Thursday, and will want to show a united “Team Canada” front as trade tensions rise again with Canada’s largest trading partner. The meetings come a year after U.S. President Donald Trump assumed office and hit Canada with blistering tariffs, and just ahead of negotiations to renew the Canada-United States-Mexico agreement, due for its first formal review this summer. Trump threatened Canada in recent days with 100% across-the-board tariffs on exports, which would land on top of the sectors already hit by steep U.S. tariffs, such as steel, softwood lumber and vehicles. Ontario Premier Doug Ford said the premiers will show they stand united as the whole Canadian economy remains under attack.

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Cascades announces the sale of its Richmond, British Columbia, packaging plant to Crown Paper Group

Cascades Inc.
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades announced that it has entered into an agreement with Crown Paper Group for the sale of its corrugated packaging plant located in Richmond, BC, for a total value of $65.5 million, including the real estate assets and subject to working capital adjustments and the assumption of certain liabilities. The transaction is expected to be completed in the coming days, subject to customary closing conditions and adjustments. …Given its geographic position, the Richmond plant offered limited integration and synergy potential within Cascades’ operational network, but aligns with Crown’s current footprint, expanding its operations in the region. …With a long-established presence in BC and nearly a century of operating an integrated containerboard mill in Port Townsend, Washington, Crown is a natural long-term fit for the Richmond plant.

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B.C. First Nation sues to reclaim lands at the head of Kingcome Inlet

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A First Nation on B.C.’s central coast has filed a lawsuit looking to recover lands it claims were “alienated” more than a century ago. …Filed in a BC Supreme Court Jan. 26, the suit from the Dzawada’enuxw First Nation targets about five square kilometres of land at the head of the Kingcome Inlet. The lands are currently owned in fee simple by the Interfor, the Nature Trust of BC, and the province of British Columbia. The case also names the Government of Canada. …A spokesperson for Interfor said the company has “longstanding and ongoing discussions” with the Dzawada’enuxw, and that it is not engaged in any active forestry operations on its fee-simple parcels in the valley. …The lawsuit… builds off a landmark 2025 decision that found the Cowichan Nation had its Richmond, BC, village sites and fishing rights taken from it under colonial rule. …None of the claims have been tested in court.

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Ideological attacks on David Eby for reconciliation don’t help: Ex-Liberal cabinet minister

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
January 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Geoff Plant

VICTORIA — Premier David Eby should be praised, not criticized, for trying to reconcile Indigenous relations in light of court decisions, says former BC Liberal attorney general Geoff Plant. “The drumbeat of complaints… reveals a profound misunderstanding of Canadian law that supposes political ideology is the cause of the current state of legal affairs,” says Plant. “In reality, when it comes to questions of Indigenous claims and rights, it is the judges who have the last word, not politicians.” …“Courts always say negotiation is the better path to reconciliation. Regrettably, their decisions often have the opposite effect.” Plant doesn’t try to predict what the courts will do when they have the last word on the Eby government’s appeal of the Cowichan Tribes decision on private property or the attempt to rein in judicial use of the Declaration Act. But… I wouldn’t bet on the province emerging as the victor in either proceeding.

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B.C. forest sector faces ‘another tough year’ in 2026

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A federal task force announced earlier this month will attempt to save Canada’s stricken forest industry from further decline through product and market diversification. While the support will no doubt be welcomed by the industry, in BC the more immediate need is access to timber. Canada’s forestry sector has been pummeled by a one-two punch of low lumber prices, and US duties on softwood lumber. The situation is particularly dire in BC where an integrated industry of lumber, remanufacturing, pulp and pellet mills has been collapsing like a row of dominos. …The industry is in crisis, a number of speakers said at the Truck Loggers Association convention. …Policies introduced by the NDP government have contributed to driving up the cost of harvesting. …At last week’s BC Resources Forum, Premier David Eby said his government is working to increase markets for B.C. wood products there, as well as China.

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Union calls for Thunder Bay, Ont., paper mill to diversify amid newsprint operations shutdown

Sarah Law
CBC News
January 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Union leaders say there are opportunities for Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper to pivot to other paper products once it stops producing newsprint — but support from all levels of government is needed. The company announced on Thursday that it will be discontinuing its newsprint mill operations due to a significant decline in demand, a decision that will affect 150 workers. Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper will continue to operate as a single-line Softwood Kraft mill and generate renewable energy for sale to the Ontario grid, it says. Rob St. Jean is president of Unifor Local 257, which represents 31 workers at Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper. …“The opportunity for news print has been lost, but not the need for paper product,” he said. …CEO Norm Bush says the company is exploring whether it makes sense to produce something like liner board. However, he says that would take years of preparation and several hundred million dollars. 

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Rayonier and PotlatchDeltic Announce Stockholder Approvals for Merger

By Rayonier and Potlatch Deltic
Business Wire
January 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

WILDLIGHT, Florida & SPOKANE, Washington — Rayonier and PotlatchDeltic announced that their respective stockholders approved all the proposals necessary to close their previously announced merger. The final voting results on the proposals voted on at the special meetings will be set forth in each company’s separate Form 8-Ks filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.  The combined company will initially retain the Rayonier name and its common stock will trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol “RYN”. The combined company intends to announce a new name and ticker symbol later in the first quarter of 2026.

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Postponing the timber tax increase: An opportunity for Vietnamese businesses to transform

Vietnam News
January 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

VIETNAM — The United States has decided to postpone the tariff increase on certain finished wood products, including upholstered chairs, kitchen cabinets, and bathroom cabinets, from January 1, 2026, to January 1, 2027. The postponement of the tax increase on some finished wood products helps Vietnamese businesses temporarily avoid the policy shock at the beginning of 2026. However, this is not a sign of loosening, but rather a tactical retreat, requiring the wood industry to be more proactive and cautious in policy planning and restructuring the overall development strategy of the entire industry. …Mr. Ngo Sy Hoai, Vice President of the Vietnam Wood and Forest Products Association (VIFOREST), commented that if postponing the tariff increase is considered an “opportunity,” then extreme caution is needed. In reality, tariff pressure has spread throughout the entire supply chain, from domestic manufacturers to importers and retail systems in the US.

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$24.5M expansion to bring 82 jobs to Port Huron paper mill

WPHM News
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

PORT HURON, Michigan — A long-idle paper manufacturing site in Port Huron is moving closer to redevelopment with new state support. Governor Gretchen Whitmer announced Wednesday that Legacy Port Huron Paper Company plans a 24.5-million-dollar investment at the former Domtar paper mill site in Port Huron. …According to the Michigan Economic Development Corporation, the Port Huron project will be supported by a one-million-dollar performance-based grant. The full funds will only be distributed if the company meets agreed-upon investment and job-creation milestones. Legacy Port Huron Paper, a subsidiary of the Ontario-based BMI Group, plans to repurpose nearly 400,000 square feet across nine buildings at the former Domtar site, converting the space for paper manufacturing, warehousing, and other industrial uses.

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International Paper to Split Into Two Listed Companies

By Ryan Gould and Ilena Peng
Bloomberg Markets
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East, International

International Paper plans to break up and spin off its European packaging business as the 128-year-old company seeks to strengthen its operations amid weak macroeconomic conditions. Memphis-based IP will create two independent, publicly traded companies, it said Thursday confirming an earlier report. The split is one of the most dramatic changes for the packaging giant that was founded in 1898 through the combination of 17 pulp and paper mills. It comes less than two years after IP rebuffed an offer from Brazil’s Suzano SA. It also follows the completion a year ago of IP’s acquisition of UK-based DS Smith. …IP said the new companies will comprise its current business in North America, including both legacy IP and DS Smith assets, and an EMEA packaging business, again comprising legacy DS Smith and IP assets. 

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Combining Arkansas’s industrial strengths

By Matthew Pelkko, University of Arkansas at Monticello
The Arkadelphian
January 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Matthew Pelkki

MONTICELLO, Arkansas — As Arkansas enters 2026, forest industries, much like agriculture, are facing important and difficult challenges. Declining timber harvests are contributing to overstocked forests and the increasing threats of insect infestations, disease outbreaks and wildfires – risks that threaten both economic stability and public safety. At the same time, prices for standing timber continue to decline, with pine sawtimber and pulpwood prices at their lowest point in the last 25 years. In 2025, wood manufacturing facilities… were closed or idled, causing further strain on rural economies. There are three primary ways to address the renewal of our forest products industries in Arkansas: Strengthening timber markets, improving rural roads and training the forestry workforce for the future. Arkansas needs to develop stronger markets for fiber from small-diameter trees and sawmill residues. …Biochar offers a promising solution for both the forestry and poultry industries. …Wood pellets, used for energy production, represent another potential market. 

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Britton Lumber acquires manufacturer of Eastern White Pine boards

By Brian Moses
Britton Lumber Company
January 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

FAIRLEE, Vermont — Britton Lumber Company, a distributor of building materials throughout New England and Upstate New York and a manufacturer of Eastern White Pine boards, announced its planned acquisition of Denison-Cannon Company, a Billerica, Massachusetts-based distributor of building materials. The transaction is expected to close in February 2026. …Founded in 1920, Denison-Cannon serves packaging and pallet manufacturers and lumber dealers throughout the New England region. The acquisition expands Britton’s presence in Massachusetts and opens new markets in Rhode Island and Connecticut, currently served by Denison-Cannon. …Founded in 1946, Britton Lumber currently operates two divisions: Manufacturing, which produces Eastern White Pine boards in Bath, New Hampshire; and Wholesale Distribution, which sells building materials from existing warehouses in Fairlee, Vermont and Gray, Maine. 

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Fibre Excellence’s unions in meetings with the French government to save the paper group

By Faustine Loison
Print Industry News
January 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

FRANCE — Fibre Excellence’s unions are stepping up their meetings with the French government and local elected representatives to save the paper group from receivership. Wood, electricity and CO2 quotas are the main topics of discussion. …In Saint-Gaudens as in Tarascon, Fibre Excellence described a narrow window of opportunity. According to the trade unions, the pulp manufacturer could be wound up by March 31, or even as early as mid-February if no commitment is secured. …The Saint-Gaudens paper mill, which produces bleached kraft pulp, employs 270 people, with a further 80 at Fibre Excellence SEBSO, part of the Group’s wood division. At the UKP paper production site in Tarascon, 250 people are employed by Fibre Excellence Provence. …In three years, the price of wood has risen by 50%,” warned the trade union in December. …The Group also pointed out that demand for pulp had fallen by more than 20% over the past six months.

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Finance & Economics

Bank of Canada governor warns of unusual potential for new economic shock

By Reuters in CTV News
January 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Tiff Macklem

OTTAWA — Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem told Reuters he saw unusual potential for a new shock to the economy, given elevated geopolitical risks and US trade policy. Macklem said on Wednesday that more factors than usual could deter Canada from achieving the bank’s economic forecasts, citing US President Trump’s threats toward Greenland, his removal of Venezuela’s leader, and repeated threats to impose more tariffs on Canada. “There is unusual potential for a new shock, a new disruption,” Macklem said. “Geopolitical risks are elevated.” …The BoC, which on Wednesday said it would keep its interest rate on hold, released new projections for the economy and inflation in its monetary policy report. These forecasts for modest growth in 2026 and 2027 were largely similar to its estimates released in October, but Macklem believes there are more risks these projections could go wrong.

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Bank of Canada maintains key interest rate at 2.25%, as CUSMA negotiations loom

By John MacFarlane , Jeff Lagerquist and Leah Golob
Yahoo! Finance
January 28, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The Bank of Canada held its overnight interest rate steady at 2.25 per cent on Wednesday in a move widely expected by economists. The announcement comes amid ongoing trade uncertainty, with increased focus on the negotiation of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement and a murky outlook for the Canadian economy later in the year. Ahead of the announcement, economists polled by Reuters were unanimous in their expectations for a hold today, and nearly 75% forecast the central bank will stay on hold through 2026. In its December decision the Bank also held its policy rate stable. …“While this rate hold provides some stability, other factors such as economic uncertainty, potential job loss and affordability are continuing to put downward pressure on the housing market,” Rates.ca mortgage and real estate expert Victor Tran said in a statement following today’s decision.”

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Canada could gain nearly 7% in real GDP by removing internal trade barriers, says IMF

By Jenna Benchetrit
CBC News
January 27, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

Canada’s economy could gain nearly 7%, or $210 billion, in real GDP over a gradual period by fully removing internal trade barriers between the country’s 13 provinces and territories, according to a report published Tuesday by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). On average, regulation-related barriers are the equivalent of a 9% tariff nationally, estimates the report, which was co-authored by IMF researchers Federico J. Diez and Yuanchen Yang with contributions from University of Calgary economist Trevor Tombe. …Because of the trade barriers between provinces, “Canada isn’t really one economy. It’s really 10 economies,” said Alicia Planincic, director of policy and economics at the Business Council of Alberta in Calgary. …The report points to finance, telecom, transportation and professional services as far-reaching sectors that “ripple through the economy” and raise costs for all of the businesses they touch. 

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Canadian railway carloading ticked up in November, lumber loading fell 22%

Statistics Canada
January 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

In November, the volume of cargo carried by Canadian railways was up slightly (+0.5%) from November 2024 to 31.4 million tonnes. Higher volumes of intermodal shipments (mainly containers) as well as higher carloadings of wheat largely contributed to the increase in November 2025. The overall freight volume in November was on par with the five-year average of 31.5 million tonnes for the month. …Growth in non-intermodal freight loadings in November was moderated by declines in several commodities. Loadings of other oil seeds and nuts, and other agricultural products were down sharply by 35.4% (-312 000 tonnes) year over year—the largest drop in tonnage since December 2018. In November 2025, loadings of iron ores and concentrates decreased 6.4% (-287 000 tonnes) compared with November 2024, while loadings of lumber were down 22.1% (-143 000 tonnes), a fourth consecutive month of year-over-year decline.

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Bank of Canada expected to keep key rate steady this week — and maybe all year long

By Craig Lord
The Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
January 26, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — Many economists expect no change in the Bank of Canada’s benchmark interest rate later this week — and, possibly, for the rest of the year. The central bank will make its first interest rate decision of 2026 on Wednesday. Financial market odds for a rate hold this week stood at nearly 90 per cent as of Monday morning, according to LSEG Data & Analytics. The Bank of Canada held its policy rate steady at 2.25 per cent in December, coming off two consecutive quarter-point cuts in the second half of 2025. At that decision, governor Tiff Macklem said the central bank believes monetary policy is at “about the right level” to balance a turbulent economy and lingering inflationary pressures. TD Bank economist Rishi Sondhi said in a note Friday that forecasters ought to take the Bank of Canada at its word when it comes to rate expectations.

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Fed holds interest rates steady for the first time since July

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
January 28, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The Fed paused its easing cycle at the conclusion of the January meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, the central bank’s monetary policy body. The Fed held the short-term federal funds rate at a top rate of 3.75%, the level set in December. This marked the first policy pause since the Fed resumed easing in September of last year. The Fed characterized the economy as being in solid health. The January statement noted: Available indicators suggest that economic activity has been expanding at a solid pace. Job gains have remained low, and the unemployment rate has shown some signs of stabilization. Inflation remains somewhat elevated. …There was little forward guidance in today’s statement. …NAHB is forecasting two additional rate cuts for 2026, based on expectation of modest easing of inflation and a cooled labor market.

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Federal Reserve may keep rates unchanged for months as economy shows signs of health

By Christopher Rugaber
The Associated Press in ABC News
January 27, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Jerome Powell

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve officials are expected to keep their short-term interest rate unchanged Wednesday after three cuts last year, ignoring huge pressure for lower borrowing costs from the White House in favor of waiting to see how the economy evolves. The central bank’s rate reductions last year were intended to shore up the economy and prevent a sharper deterioration in the job market, after hiring slowed to a near-crawl in the wake of President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs last April. Yet there are signs that unemployment has stabilized and the economy could be picking up. At the same time, inflation remains stubbornly above the Fed’s 2% target. All those trends argue for keeping rates where they are. A key issue that Chair Jerome Powell will likely address at his news conference Wednesday is how long the Fed will remain on hold. The rate-setting committee remains split.

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US consumer confidence fell sharply in January, surpassing pandemic depths

The Conference Board
January 27, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index® fell by 9.7 points in January to 84.5 (1985=100), from an upwardly revised 94.2 in December. A 5.1-point upward revision to December’s reading of the Index resulted in a slight increase last month, reversing the initially reported decline. However, January’s preliminary results showed confidence resumed declining after a one-month uptick. The Present Situation Index—based on consumers’ assessment of current business and labor market conditions—dropped by 9.9 points to 113.7 in January. The Expectations Index—based on consumers’ short-term outlook for income, business, and labor market conditions—fell by 9.5 points to 65.1, well below the threshold of 80 that usually signals a recession ahead. The cutoff for preliminary results was January 16, 2026. …Dana M Peterson, Chief Economist, said “All five components of the Index deteriorated, driving the overall Index to its lowest level since May 2014 (82.2)—surpassing its COVID-19 pandemic depths.” 

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US Consumer Sentiment rose marginally in January

The University of Michigan
January 23, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Consumer sentiment lifted about 3.5 index points this month, with minor gains seen across all index components. While the overall improvement was small, it was broad based, seen across the income distribution, educational attainment, older and younger consumers, and Republicans and Democrats alike. However, national sentiment remains more than 20% below a year ago, as consumers continue to report pressures on their purchasing power stemming from high prices and the prospect of weakening labor markets. …Year-ahead inflation expectations fell back to 4.0% this month. This is the lowest reading since January 2025 but remains well above that month’s 3.3%. Long-run inflation expectations inched up from 3.2% last month to 3.3% this month. 

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Weyerhaeuser swings to an adjusted loss in Q4, 2025 on weak wood product prices

Reuters
January 29, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

SEATTLE — Weyerhaeuser swung to an adjusted quarterly loss, pressured by lower commodity wood ​product prices and sluggish demand in major end-markets. …Weyerhaeuser reported fourth quarter net earnings of $74 million on net sales of $1.5 billion. This compares with net earnings of $81 million on net sales of $1.7 billion for the same period last year and net earnings of $80 million for third quarter 2025. Excluding an after-tax benefit of $141 million for special items, the company reported a fourth quarter net loss of $67 million. This compares with net earnings before special items of $40 million for third quarter 2025. …For full year 2025, Weyerhaeuser reported net earnings of $324 million on net sales of $6.9 billion. This compares with net earnings of $396 million on net sales of $7.1 billion for full year 2024.

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October Southern Pine Lumber Exports Report

The Southern Forest Products Association
January 27, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US East

Southern Pine lumber exports (treated and untreated) are almost equal to 2024 year to date through October 2025 at 488 MMBF, according to October 2025 data from the USDA’s Foreign Agriculture Services’ Global Agricultural Trade System. October 2025’s 60 MMBF of exports were up 47% over October 2024 and up 33% compared to September 2025. When looking at the report by dollar value, Southern Pine exports are up 4% YTD ($190 million) compared to 2024. Meanwhile, the October value of $25 million is the highest mark since June 2022, when the value hit $29 million. Mexico leads the way YTD 2025 at $56 million, followed by the Dominican Republic at $39 million, and India at $18 million. Treated lumber exports, meanwhile, are down 4% through the first 10 months of the year compared to 2024. The Leeward-Windward Islands market leads the way through October at $18 million, followed by Jamaica at $16 million, and Belize at $10 million. Softwood lumber imports are running 8% behind 2024 levels.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Mass timber construction in scope and diversity

By John Bleasby
The Journal of Commerce
January 28, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

In the construction industry, ideas or materials first seen on the margins of construction processes later become an established part of those processes. …And so it seems to be with Mass Timber Construction (MTC). MTC entered the construction industry as an intriguing approach to reduce embodied carbon. …Today, MTC has become a mainstream building method. Across North America, there are reportedly 2,500 MTC buildings already built or in the planning stages. Similar levels of acceptance are seen in Europe. The world’s leading architects and designers have embraced MTC by incorporating wood components into a wide range of building types and sizes, from commercial offices to housing, campuses, infrastructure and even data centres. Interest and acceptance have moved beyond the pure environmental benefits of using MTC. Economics, simple dollars and cents, are now recognized as a persuasive factor as well. This is because mass timber changes the mechanics of construction.

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Home Depot Launches Material List Builder AI

Building Products Digest
January 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, United States

The Home Depot introduced Material List Builder AI, a new capability that helps professional renovators, remodelers, builders and specialty tradespeople create actionable project material lists within minutes. Material List Builder AI leverages AI technology to interpret the project intent and generate an accurate, grouped list of materials needed for the entire job – helping Pros stay on time and on budget. Before Material List Builder AI, creating a product list could take Pros hours of searching for the right SKUs, comparing prices and manually rebuilding lists across spreadsheets or multiple project management platforms. This tedious, error‑prone process often pulled Pros away from other critical work on the job. With Material List Builder AI, that same workflow happens in minutes. There are multiple ways for Pros to quickly and easily input project details for material list generation.

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Study addresses opportunities and challenges for hardwood CLT

By Rich Christianson
The Woodworking Network
January 29, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — A study published in the November 2025 Journal of Forestry explores the potential use of hardwood species in place of softwood to manufacture cross laminated timber. The study, “Stakeholders’ Attitudes and Perceptions Regarding the Viability of Hardwood Cross Laminated Timber (CLT),” focuses on the key takeaways from interviews of 20 wood industry professionals, as well as related studies and scientific literature, to shed light on opportunities and barriers related to the viability of hardwood in CLT. According to the abstract of the study, “There is growing interest in understanding the technological, economic, social and environmental viability of CLT manufactured from hardwood lumber. Many states across the Southeastern United States produce hardwood lumber but demand for hardwood items has decreased.” …While the “findings show promise for hardwood CLT,” the study notes a host of potential barriers. 

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Forestry

Ducks Unlimited Canada presents the North American film premiere of Mission to Marsh in honour of World Wetlands Day

By Ducks Unlimited Canada
Cision Newswire
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

STONEWALL, Manitoba — German filmmakers Anni and Alex Kornelsen set out on a road trip from Canada all the way to Patagonia to showcase how the Americas were conserving and restoring wetlands. The result is the award-winning documentary Mission to Marsh, which is being brought to North America on World Wetlands Day, February 2, 2026. Ducks Unlimited Canada invites Canadians to get a candid view of some of the world’s most treasured wetlands, including sites where DUC has supported conservation and restoration like the Oromocto River in New Brunswick; la Grande plée Bleue in Quebec; and Oak Hammock Marsh in Manitoba. …The film focuses on peatlands, an ecological powerhouse. It is estimated that one square metre of peatland in Canada’s boreal region stores about five times more carbon than one square metre of tropical Amazon rainforest. When intact and healthy, peatlands play a vital role in mitigating floods, drought and wildfire.

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Lack of funds drive changes to BC’s FireSmart program

Union of BC Municipalities
January 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The FireSmart Community Funding and Supports (FCFS) program will be closing its current intake for applications on January 30 due to a lack of funding. The program will reopen on February 2 with a competitive adjudicated grant process. This intake will receive applications until April 30. The FCFS program provides provincial funding to First Nations and local governments in BC to increase community resiliency by undertaking community-based FireSmart planning and activities that reduce the community’s risk from wildfire. …Councillor Cori Ramsay, UBCM president said “As the province prepares its 2026 Budget, I have asked the Premier to prioritize renewing this funding. …Details on the specific changes to program delivery are now available. …In addition, several other changes are being introduced, including: fuel management and impacts from wildfire will no longer be funded; eligible FireSmart activities were modified; and all funding requests will now also be limited to one-year projects.

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B.C.’s commitment to biodiversity put on hold

By Cori Lausen, Wildlife Conservation Society Canada
The Vancouver Sun
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government’s Look West strategy is to get four new mines, three new natural gas projects and eight new renewable energy projects built in the next six years. The same sense of urgency hasn’t been applied to protecting BC’s ever-increasing number of species at risk. Hundreds of species have been identified as threatened or endangered since 2006, yet it has been two full decades since the provincial government last updated BC’s Species at Risk list, often referred to as the Identified Wildlife list. Few protections exist for wildlife in BC that aren’t on this “Noah’s Ark” list. …While such short-sightedness may be baked into our political system, we can’t let it dictate the fate of our ecosystems and the biodiversity upon which they (and we) depend. If we throw species and their habitats overboard, we will impoverish not just our province, but our world.

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Democrat or Republican, Americans want their National Forests kept intact

By Mike Dombeck, Dale Bosworth, Tom Tidwell & Vicki Christiansen
The Hill
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Together, we have served as US Forest Service chiefs for both Republican and Democratic administrations. We know that forest management decisions never come without debate, opinions and — more often than not — disagreement. Each of us has had to strike the difficult balance between leaving some forests intact, while sustainably using others to benefit communities and economies. But regardless of who is in the White House, one thing has always remained true: Americans value their national forests, and they want to see them protected for the benefits they provide us, like clean air, water, abundant recreation opportunities and sustainable economies. …The current administration needs to know: Repealing the Roadless Area Conservation Rule would not be in the long-term interest of the American people, the National Forests or the communities they serve. Each of us has been faced with tough decisions. Keeping backcountry and healthy forests free of unnecessary roads was never one of them.

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Oregon’s new forest plan will guide logging, conservation for decades

By April Ehrlich
Oregon Public Broadcasting
January 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Oregon’s forestry department has proposed a flexible approach to managing state-owned forests west of the Cascades over the next 70 years. Staff say it will allow them to adapt as scientific understanding evolves — and as the climate changes. But environmental groups say the department has drafted a plan that’s too vague. They would like to see more focus on saving the mature and complex forests. Members of the public can submit their input. …This forest management plan is meant to accompany the Western State Habitat Conservation Plan — a 70-year agreement with the federal government that ensures state logging projects comply with the Endangered Species Act. That plan, often referred to as the HCP, outlines conservation measures the state will take to offset the environmental harms of logging. It’s awaiting federal approval, expect edby the end of March. If approved, it would prohibit logging on about 43% of western state forests.

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North Bay old-growth redwood preserve set for expansion

By Martin Espinoza
Marin Independent Journal
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CALIFORNIA — A San Francisco conservation group has reached an agreement to purchase 200 acres in northwest Sonoma County that will expand its existing old-growth redwood reserve. The Save the Redwoods League will buy the property for $4 million from the family of the late Harold Richardson. The land will be added to the group’s Harold Richardson Redwoods Reserve, a 730-acre forest that was acquired from the family in 2018, bringing the combined reserve to nearly 1,000 acres. The reserve… is one of the oldest known coast redwoods south of Mendocino County and the widest south of Humboldt County, according to Save the Redwoods. …The old-growth forest provides habitat for a number of rare wildlife species, including the northern spotted owl and marbled murrelet as well as the California giant salamander, Skilton’s skink lizard and tree-dwelling bats.

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How fire, people and history shaped the South’s iconic longleaf pine forests

By Andrea De Stefano, Mississippi State University
The Conversation US
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

For thousands of years, one tree species defined the cultural and ecological identity of what is now the American South: the longleaf pine. The forest once stretched across 92 million acres from Virginia to Texas, but about 5% of that original forest remains. It was one of North America’s richest ecosystems, and it nearly disappeared. As part of my job with the Mississippi State University forestry extension, I help private landowners, public agencies and nonprofit conservation groups restore these ecosystems. The forests’ story begins before European settlement, when Native peoples shaped and sustained this vast landscape using one of nature’s oldest tools: fire. Longleaf pine trees depend on fire for survival and regeneration. Fire reduces competition from other plants, recycles nutrients into the soil and maintains the open structure of the landscape where longleaf pines grow best. 

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

How to make sure the nature credits you buy are real – new research

By Sophus zu Ermgassen, University of Oxford
The Conversation Canada
January 26, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, International

Nature markets are systems for measuring an ecological improvement on some land, then creating a representation of that improvement as a credit, which can then be bought and sold. In theory, they allow governments to attract more private investment and diversify funds that help restore nature. The reality is much more complicated. I recently co-published a paper that outlines a checklist that can be used to sense-check whether a nature or nature-based carbon credit is likely to be real – and to make sure you really do get what you’re paying for. …Examples include the EU’s nature credits roadmap, England’s biodiversity net gain policy and the international voluntary carbon market. …So if you want to capture more carbon, it often makes sense to have a credit that measures changes in tree cover or biomass, because there’s plenty of evidence that forests store atmospheric carbon.

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Drax hit as Japan pivots away from burning wood pellets for energy

By Harry Dempsey
The Financial Times
January 27, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

UK energy company Drax’s ambitions of becoming a significant wood pellet supplier to Asia are in danger of faltering as Japanese policymakers wind back generous subsidies for the biomass sector. Japan is set to soon surpass the UK as the world’s largest wood pellet importer after a post-Fukushima push to diversify power sources that caused hundreds of plants to spring up that burn wood pellets, palm kernel shells — a palm oil byproduct — and other organic materials. But policymakers in Japan are pulling support for the controversial industry after realising the hurdles to bringing down fuel costs. Tokyo has already cut subsidies for new projects of more than 10 megawatts. “The real intention is quite simple: no new government support, phasing out. We don’t see any clear path of bringing down costs in the foreseeable future,” said one government official. “Existing projects might survive but no new projects are coming.”

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Health & Safety

University of Maine student dies in gas incident at Woodland Pulp Mill

WABI TV5
January 28, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

BAILEYVILLE, Maine – A University of Maine student has died following a gas incident at Woodland Pulp in Baileyville. Kasie Malcolm, a chemical engineering student participating in a co-op program through UMaine, died at the hospital Tuesday night from injuries sustained at the plant. Malcolm had worked at the mill since June. According to a mill spokesperson, the incident occurred Tuesday night inside the Bleach Mill Plant. The Baileyville Fire Department responded to the scene. Scott Beal from Woodland Pulp said “We are devastated with this tragic turn of events.” Another person injured in the incident remains hospitalized. Officials have not released their identity at this time. Mill representatives characterized the incident as isolated. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) is currently on-site conducting an investigation into the cause of the accident.

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Forest History & Archives

International Collaboration to Investigate Early 17th-Century ship Timbers Found in Lower Manhattan

The City Life, New York
January 27, 2026
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: United States, US East

NEW YORK — An international research collaboration led by the Museum of the City of New York and the Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed (Netherlands) will undertake a comprehensive new study of ship timbers long believed to belong to the Tyger, a Dutch vessel commanded by famed explorer Adriaen Block. The Tyger was a ship captained by Block (1567–1627), a Dutch private trader and navigator renowned for his exploration of the American Northeast. Departing Amsterdam in 1613, the Tyger met an untimely end later that year when it was accidentally destroyed by fire while anchored in what is now New York Harbor. In 1916, during subway construction at the intersection of Greenwich and Dey Streets in Lower Manhattan, workers uncovered a charred keelson and three rib frames of a wooden ship. …In recent decades, however, there has been renewed interest in attribution. …The research will focus on identifying the wood species used in the timbers and determining through dendrochronological analysis when and where the trees were cut.

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