Blog Archives

Today’s Takeaway

COP30 kicks off with call for action, absent the United States

The Tree Frog Forestry News
November 10, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Tuesday Note: Don’t forget to commemorate (virtually if need be) Remembrance Day in Canada, Veterans Day in the USA. The Frogs will be back on Wednesday.

Monday’s News: The UN climate talks kicked off today in Brazil, absent the United States. In related news: what does a successful COP30 look like; what’s Canada’s role; the US says the summit is misguided; and Germany supports UN’s tropical forest protection scheme. In Forestry news: Pacific Regeneration Technologies is concerned about the end of Canada’s 2B Tree program; California has a seed collection crisis; new research on how Redwoods fare amid wildfires; the unpredictability of Oregon’s landslides; and why Sweden’s forest policy matters.

In Business/Politics news: Zoltan van Heyningen says US duties exist because of past and ongoing harm; Bob Brash says BC needs to own its role in undermining the forest sector’s prosperity; Vaughn Palmer and Mayor Maureen Pinkney opine on West Fraser’s 100 Mile House mill closure; and CTV interviews Derek Nighbor on the fed’s support for lumber. Meanwhile: JD Irving’s Dixfield, Maine mill was damaged by fire; and Doman and Taiga report Q3, 2025 earnings.

Finally, WorkSafeBC fines the BC government for two wildfire fighting incidents from 2023.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Opinion / EdiTOADial

Canada-US Softwood Lumber Trade: When Trade Becomes Tactics

By Russ Taylor
Russ Taylor Global
November 12, 2025
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States

Russ Taylor

Over the course of my fifty-year career, I have never seen so much misinformation, distortion and political theatre as in 2025. …The recent surge in rhetoric and written attacks aimed at Canada and its softwood lumber industry has been both amusing and perplexing. …The momentum of misinformation continues, with US protectionism and the unrealistic notion of self-sufficiency in softwood lumber production being vigorously promoted. The underlying strategy is clear: penalize all exporters with tariffs to reduce imports, leverage US Trade Law to escalate Canadian duties, inflate US lumber prices, and thus force US lumber buyers to subsidize domestic timber and lumber producers. In this climate, free or fair trade has become undesirable for American lumber companies, especially since the burden of higher-priced lumber—both domestic and imported due to excessive tariffs—is ultimately borne by consumers, home builders and renovators.

US Trade Law has evolved into a permanent tool against Canadian lumber imports, relying on complex methodology to produce calculated duties. Paired with the current US tariff policy, these mechanisms serve to work against all lumber exporters to the US. …While hard facts are the foundation of sound analysis, the intentionally opaque nature of the duty and tariff system makes accessing reliable data difficult. …In conclusion, I urge people to revisit President Ronald Reagan’s 1987 speech on free trade and tariffs, as well as the reports of numerous economists who oppose tariffs. The United States will continue to require billions of board feet of Canadian and other imported lumber. Tariffs will only heighten price volatility and drive prices higher. Fair trade stands to benefit both consumers and producers on both sides of the border, whereas protectionism will result in distinct winners and losers.

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Editor’s Note: Following “Rigged by Design?” — Clarifying Commerce’s Method

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
The Tree Frog Forestry News
November 12, 2025
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States

Following Tree Frog News’ November 7 op-ed, Rigged by Design? How Method and Policy Keep U.S. Lumber Duties High, the US Lumber Coalition responded (Understanding Why Duties Persist — Not Because of Arbitrary Math, But Because of Past and Ongoing Harm) noting that the Department of Commerce did not use “zeroing” in its latest anti-dumping calculation. The note below clarifies what Commerce actually applied and what remains unresolved.

Following publication, the US Lumber Coalition pointed out that the Department of Commerce did not use “zeroing” in its latest anti-dumping calculation. In reviewing the record, Tree Frog News found that Commerce applied a differential-pricing framework, which uses statistical tests to determine comparison methods.¹ However, a 2020 WTO panel found that this framework could produce mathematically similar distortions to zeroing — in effect, “replicating the problem without using the name.”² but because the most recent review record is largely redacted and the WTO Appellate Body remains inactive, there has been no external review of how this method performed in the most recent review.

The more important question, then, is whether the procedural change has addressed the sources of bias identified in past WTO rulings — specifically in how Commerce calculates anti-dumping margins, measures subsidies, and selects its review periods — which continue to produce duty levels that appear inconsistent with actual market conditionsTree Frog News will continue to report as new information emerges.

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Understanding Why Duties Persist — Not Because of Arbitrary Math, But Because of Past and Ongoing Harm

By Zoltan van Heyningen, Executive Director
The US Lumber Coalition
November 10, 2025
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States

Zoltan van Heyningen

TreeFrogNews recently published an opinion by its Editor Kelly McCloskey. As is often the case for those trying to defend Canada’s softwood lumber trade practices, they must rely on arguments that are irrelevant to the current round of antidumping and countervailing duty cases against unfairly traded Canadian lumber imports. In this instance, Mr. McCloskey’s criticism of the zeroing methodology is beside the point, because the US Department of Commerce did not use zeroing when calculating the antidumping duty rates that are currently in place.

Canada’s unfair trade practices are real. The harm to US companies, workers, and communities is real. Government aid to Canada’s lumber industry, whether provincial or federal, is a subsidy, because providing government money to an industry is the very definition of a subsidy no matter how it is presented. Canada is entitled to its own system and to decide what role the Canadian government plays with respect to its lumber industry. Canada is not entitled to unrestrained access to the US market for its massive excess lumber capacity and production while that industry benefits from subsidies and engages in well-documented dumping practices. Canada is also not entitled to maintain a USMCA Chapter 10 dispute settlement system that is different from any other bilateral or multilateral dispute settlement system.

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Business & Politics

Canada to reroute lumber exports as Trump’s tariffs bite

By Ilya Gridneff
The Financial Times
November 13, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Canada’s forestry industry plans to divert a significant share of its wood exports from the US to new international markets. …The aim to send some 1bn board feet to alternative markets underscores how Trump’s tariffs are starting to reshape some global supply chains, although tensions between the US and Canada over wood exports have simmered for more than half a century. …“The US simply needs to fact-check better before they end up with a large shortage of lumber that may cause further housing shortages,” said Rick Doman, chair of FII BC. …Zoltan van Heyningen for the US Lumber Coalition said the American timber industry could replace 1bn board feet of Canadian imports “without batting an eyelid”. …The NAHB says at just 64% of capacity it “will take years” for US domestic lumber production to expand to meet industry demands. …Mike McDonald, a UK-based consultant, acknowledged it would take time to establish confidence among European consumers. [to access the full story a FT subscription is required]

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Trump’s trade war is pushing Canada closer to China

By Lex Harvey
CNN News
November 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, International

HONG KONG —  It is an image that just a year ago would have seemed unfathomable: the Canadian and Chinese leaders standing side by side. …The tide began turning early last month… Prime Minister Carney and leader Xi Jinping met on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit in South Korea – the first time leaders of the two countries had met in eight years. …That has since been followed by another ministerial visit to China. China also reinstated Canada to its approved travel list for tour groups. …But as leaders in Ottawa and Beijing signal it may be time to start doing business again, some experts warn China could be attempting to exploit Canada at a vulnerable moment. …Meanwhile, the US has increasingly ramped up its economic war on its northern neighbor. …Beijing has said it will drop the canola tariffs if Ottawa does the same for Chinese electric vehicles.

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How the feds plan to support the forestry sector

By Sarah Plowman
CTV News
November 9, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Sarah Plowman with a look at the support the federal budget is offering the forests sector after being hit hard by US tariffs. Includes an interview with Derek Nighbor, President and CEO of the Forest Products Association of Canada.

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West Fraser answers questions on 100 Mile House mill closure

By Patrick Davies
The Williams Lake Tribune
November 13, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Members of the management team for West Fraser’s 100 Mile Lumber appeared in front of the District of 100 Mile House Council to answer questions about the permanent closure of their 100 Mile House mill by the end of December. …Mayor Maureen Pinkney began the meeting, noting that the closure is sad news and that she was surprised they were going straight to closure without any curtailment. …Rob Baron, West Fraser’s regional manager of operations, said “The conditions that precipitated the decision to go to permanent closure are really entirely related to long-term viability related to the high cost of saw logs coming to this mill”. …They’re currently getting their shutdown coordinator set up and have resources on site to help their employees through the transition. …Baron said West Fraser doesn’t have any plans for what they’ll be doing with the property in the future, but welcomes anyone interested in the facility to contact them.

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B.C. cancels lumber tariff ads to little effect as another mill closes

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
November 7, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vaughn Palmer

VICTORIA — Premier David Eby started the week by abandoning his threat to target Americans with a direct advertising campaign against the US’s hefty tariffs on softwood lumber from BC. …No sign of backing off last week. But there he was Monday doing just that at the wrap up of the summit with the federal ministers. …As to what the premier got for this show of humility, it was mostly a working group. …The same day, the leading industry group, COFI, reminded Eby of his promise to increase the annual allowable cut from the current 30 million cubic metres to 45. …Eby agreed the province has work to do but cautioned that even where the annual cut has been allocated, it may not be economic to harvest because of the looming threat of tariffs. …Both concerns were underscored by the end-of-the-week news of the permanent closure of West Fraser’s mill in 100 Mile House.

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International Paper to close five German sites, cut 500 jobs

By Katie Pyzyk
Packaging Dive
November 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

International Paper announced it plans to close five sites in Germany as part of its integration with DS Smith, the London-based packaging company it acquired in January. The manufacturing sites included are a conventional box plant, a display and offset site, and three sheet plants; another display site also will partially close. IP expects roughly 500 roles to be affected by the closures, which it anticipates will occur by the end of 2026. IP is engaging with labor representatives, and until that activity progresses it will not comment further. …IP launched the streamlining stateside last year prior to the DS Smith acquisition and in Europe this year following the deal finalization. [Editors note: the planned closures are outlined in a UK regulatory notice linked to IP’s DS Smith integration. German labour law requires formal consultation with employee representatives, and outcomes can change during that process.]

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US Building Material Dealers press for new softwood lumber agreement

By National Lumber and Building Material Dealers Association
Door & Window Market Magazine
November 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The National Lumber and Building Material Dealers Association (NLBMDA) submitted comments to the Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR) ahead of next year’s joint review of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA). “While USMCA recognizes the interconnectivity of the lumber and building materials sector… raw and semi-processed Canadian lumber remains exposed to market instability without a new Softwood Lumber Agreement (SLA). NLBMDA strongly recommends that the US prioritize negotiating a new, long-term SLA with Canada and integrate it into the USMCA framework. Since the previous agreement expired in October 2015, duties on Canadian lumber have fluctuated year to year, creating uncertainty for LBM dealers and the broader industry. …Establishing a new, long-term SLA that safeguards the US wood products sector and workforce while recognizing the essential role ofCanadian lumber in the North American marketplace would help restore pricing stability, ensure predictable access to critical building materials, and strengthen the supply chain.

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Chinook Forest Partners to Acquire South Coast Lumber Company

South Coast Lumber Co.
November 5, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

GRANTS PASS and BROOKINGS, Oregon — Chinook Forest Partners, a forestland investment manager located in Southwest Oregon, announced it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire South Coast Lumber Co. and affiliates. This acquisition encompasses 104,000 acres of premium coastal forest with modern manufacturing facilities. …Mike Beckley, CEO and President of South Coast said, “We are confident they will honor the legacy the Fallert family has built over four generations, while helping South Coast reach new levels of growth and opportunity.” …The transaction is expected to finalize before year-end 2025, pending customary closing conditions.

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Legault warns 30,000 Quebec forestry jobs could be lost as trade war continues

By Nicolas van Praet and Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
November 13, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, US East

François Legault

Quebec Premier François Legault is warning that 30,000 forestry jobs could be lost in the province because of Canada’s trade war with the US, an estimate equivalent to half the work force in that industry. His comments have set off alarm bells in various Quebec regions and logging towns. The sector represented 9.6% of Quebec exports by value in 2023 as well as GDP of $6.4-billion. …“What we want is that Trump pulls back [on tariffs] and that we’re able to diversify a part of our forest industry sales. But at the same time, we have to be realistic.” That includes having forestry workers retrain for mining jobs, he said. Political observers have remarked in recent days on what they characterized as… a reckless pronouncement. “When the captain of the ship says ‘It’s done’ and tells workers ‘Don’t go into that industry,’ it sets off a panic.” [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Augusta mill closing: Canadian timber company shutting down off Doug Barnard Parkway

By Joe Hotchkiss
The Augusta Chronicle
November 10, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

An Augusta lumber mill is closing permanently. The West Fraser Timber mill is expected to shutter by the end of 2025, putting 130 employees out of jobs, the company announced. “The closure of the Augusta lumber mill is a result of challenging lumber demand, and the loss of economically viable residual outlets, which combined has compromised the mill’s long-term viability,” the company said. …West Fraser said it “expects to mitigate the impact on affected employees by providing work opportunities at other company operations, where available.” The Canadian company’s lumber mill operations closest to Augusta are in the Georgia cities of Blackshear, Dudley, and Fitzgerald, all at least 100 miles away. West Fraser also runs facilities in Cordele and in Allendale, South Carolina, that produce oriented strand board. …“The announcement is difficult news for employees, their families, suppliers, and the community,” Georgia Forestry Association’s Tim Lowrimore said.

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Fire causes heavy damage at Maine sawmill

By Wendy Watkins
The Bangor Daily News
November 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

DIXFIELD, Maine — A fire at the Irving Forest Products sawmill in Dixfield caused heavy damage to part of a building Saturday, according to the Dixfield Fire Company. No one was hurt. “The damage is extensive but contained to the northwest side of the sawmill building,” the fire company said in a statement. “Mill personnel are assessing damage and already planning r​​epairs.” ​Firefighters from several towns — including Rumford, Peru, Mexico, East Dixfield, Jay, Wilton, Canton, Roxbury and Carthage — helped battle the blaze, according to the department. Irving Forest Products bought the Dixfield sawmill in 1998 and has invested more than $40 million into the mill. The Maine State Fire Marshal’s Office is investigating. [END]

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Metsä Group considers 3-month curtailment at four Finish sawmills

Metsä Group
November 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Metsä Fibre will start change negotiations on possible layoffs of up to 90 days at the company’s sawmills in Lappeenranta, Rauma, Renko and Vilppula. The negotiations are prompted by challenging market conditions for sawn timber and harvesting, which have created a need for production downtime. According to the estimate, if implemented, the planned measures could lead to the lay-off of all personnel at Metsä Fibre’s Lappeenranta, Rauma, Renko and Vilppula sawmills for a maximum of 90 days during 2026. The change negotiations cover the entire staff of Lappeenranta, Rauma, Renko and Vilppula sawmills, approximately 350 people.

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Finance & Economics

Lumber prices expected to spike by Q2 2026 as tariffs restrict imports

By Russ Taylor, Russ Taylor Global
Lesprom Network
November 12, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

Russ Taylor

Lumber prices are expected to increase sharply as early as Q2, 2026 due to continued US trade restrictions and tariff policies, based on analysis by Russ Taylor. Taylor forecasts that the current system of countervailing and anti-dumping duties imposed by the US will restrict Canadian exports, reducing available lumber supply in the US market. …According to Taylor, the combination of excessive tariffs and persistent duties under US Trade Law will continue to penalize Canadian producers and discourage imports. This protectionist strategy is designed to increase profits for US timberland and lumber producers at the expense of buyers who face higher material costs. The analyst explains that the United States aims to reduce Canada’s share of the US lumber market from about 23% to single digits. …Such production growth is unlikely in the near term. When US demand rises, imports will still be required, which will cause price spikes by Q2 2026. 

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Canada’s lumber industry at a crossroads: Shrinking capacity and challenging market diversification

By Håkan Ekström, Global Wood Trends and Glen O’Kelly, O’Kelly Acumen
The American Journal of Transportation
November 12, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, International

Canada’s lumber industry is heavily export-dependent. Roughly 65% of Canadian lumber production is sold abroad, and the US remains by far the largest customer, accounting for about 87% of exports in 2025 . This reliance leaves Canada highly exposed to US trade policy. …Canada’s lumber and forest sector is expected to continue contracting through 2030. Sawmill capacity will decline, particularly among smaller and older operations in regions affected by insects and fires, and export patterns will slowly rebalance away from the US. Rural communities will bear the greatest impacts. If US tariffs are eventually removed, the surviving modern mills could benefit from improved margins as lumber prices are likely to increase in the US. Meanwhile, opportunities exist in gradually growing overseas markets and in the domestic construction sector, where housing starts would need to roughly double by 2035 to meet projected demand. 

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Doman Building Materials reports Q3, 2025 net income of $18.1 million

Doman Building Materials Group Ltd.
November 6, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, Canada – Doman Building Materials Group announced its third quarter 2025 financial results for the period ended September 30, 2025. Consolidated revenues increased to $795.1 million, compared to $663.1 million in 2024, largely due to the impact of the results from the Doman Tucker Lumber Acquisition. …Net earnings for the three-month period ended September 30, 2025, were $18.1 million versus $14.6 million in the comparative period of 2024.

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Taiga Building Products reports Q3, 2025 net income of 12.8 million

Taiga Building Products Ltd.
November 7, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

BURNABY, BC –– Taiga Building Products reported its financial results for Q3, 2025. The Company’s sales for the quarter were $431.3 million compared to $423.9 million over the same period last year. The increase in sales by $7.4 million or 2% was largely due to a higher average lumber pricing as well as changes in product mix during the quarter. …Net earnings for the quarter ended September 30, 2025 decreased to $12.8 million from $14.3 million over the same period last year primarily due to increases in selling and administrative expenses and interest costs from renewed borrowing under Taiga’s credit facility, as a result of the dividends paid out in the second quarter.

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GreenFirst reports Q3, 2025 net loss of $57.4 million

GreenFirst Forest Products Inc.
November 11, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO —  GreenFirst Forest Products announced results for the third quarter and three quarter ended September 27, 2025. Highlights include: Q3 2025 net sales from operations was $70.2 million, compared to $84.5 million in Q2, 2025. Q3 2025 net loss from continuing operations was $57.4 million compared to net loss of $9.6 million in Q2 2025. Adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations for Q3 2025 was negative $47.2 million, compared to negative $5.2 million in Q2 2025. Benchmark prices saw decreases during the quarter which resulted in an average realized lumber prices of $695/mfbm for Q3 2025. …“Q3 2025 results were impacted by a weak lumber market and ongoing uncertainty surrounding higher duty rates and tariffs,” said Joel Fournier, GreenFirst’s Chief Executive Officer.

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State-Level Analysis of Canadian Softwood Lumber Trade

By Jesse Wade
NAHB Eye on Housing
November 11, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

International trade remains a source of volatility across the building materials sector, particularly in the softwood lumber market. …The average duty rate on Canadian softwood lumber entering the US has tripled, now hovering around 45%. These elevated trade barriers pose additional challenges for home builders who rely on Canadian lumber to meet construction demand. In 2024, Canadian softwood lumber exports to the U.S. totaled $5.1 billion, accounting for approximately 74% of the total value of softwood lumber imports. Canada remains the dominant supplier. Trade data from the U.S. Census Bureau enables tracking of import destinations at the state level. …This analysis invites the question of where Canadian softwood lumber imports are ultimately headed within the United States. In 2024, Washington state was the top destination, receiving $560.1 million worth of imports. Texas followed closely behind with $451.7 million, reflecting strong demand in the southern housing market. On the other end of the spectrum.

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Remodelers on the Rise: How Renovation is Reshaping US Residential Construction

By Natalia Siniavskaia
NAHB Eye on Housing
November 10, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

As the nation’s housing stock continues to age and new homes remain out of reach for many buyers, remodeling is capturing a growing share of the residential construction market, both in terms of the number of firms and employment. …Renovation has become a more practical and cost-effective alternative to improve housing conditions, driving demand on the consumer side. …NAHB’s analysis of the quarter-century of Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages data suggests that the rise of remodelers is a sustained structural shift rather than a temporary post-pandemic surge. Over the past 25 years, the number of remodeling establishments has nearly doubled—from fewer than 69,000 in 2000 to more than 128,000 in the first quarter of 2025. Remodelers now represent over half (56%) of all residential building construction (RBC) establishments. By contrast, during the mid-2000s housing boom, remodelers’ share consistently hovered around 38–39%.

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PotlatchDeltic’s Merger With Rayonier to Dilute Benefit From Canadian Lumber Duties, US Tariffs. RBC Says

Fidelity.com
November 10, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

PotlatchDeltic is set to benefit from rising softwood lumber duties on Canadian lumber and US tariffs on imports from all countries, but its pending merger with Rayonier will dilute the impact, RBC Capital Markets analysts said in a Monday note. “We expect some straightforward benefits of scale as the company comes together with Rayonier, although we think it will take some time for an inflection in timber demand to play out,” analysts said. Despite some potential headwinds on loss of incentives, the company expects to increase its solar development land area to 40,000 to 45,000 acres by the end of the year, analysts said. …RBC is positive on the company’s ramp-up at the Waldo sawmill and thinks its lumber business is running well, but noted that a soft commodity backdrop has been unsupportive. RBC downgraded the stock’s rating to sector perform from outperform.

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Asia’s packaging boom risks flooding global paper markets

By Markku Björkman
Pulp Paper News
November 10, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

The global pulp and paper industry is entering a new period of uncertainty after several turbulent years marked by supply chain shocks, rising costs, and shifting market dynamics. While packaging demand continues to grow, analysts warn that the rapid build-up of new capacity could soon trigger a global oversupply of fibre-based products. According to a recent market analysis, the global paper and pulp market was valued at 500 billion USD in 2024 and is expected to reach 650 billion USD by 2033, representing an annual growth rate of around four per cent. The trend, however, hides deep structural divides – strong expansion in packaging and tissue paper, but continued decline in printing and writing grades. …Analysts agree that the coming decade will determine whether the paper and pulp sector can balance growth with sustainability – or whether the combination of overcapacity, energy costs, and environmental constraints will usher in a new era of consolidation.

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Suzano reports Q3, 2025 net income of R$ 2 billion (US$ 115 million)

Suzano
November 6, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: International

São Paulo, Brazil — Suzano reported its results for the third quarter of 2025 (3Q25), reporting sales of 3.6 million tonnes of pulp and paper combined, a 20% increase on the same quarter last year (3Q24). The positive result is driven by the operations of the Ribas do Rio Pardo pulp mill, inaugurated in 2024, and by the integration of paper production from assets acquired in the United States in October 2024. Net revenue for the quarter totalled R$12.2 billion, broadly flat on the comparable period last year. Adjusted EBITDA totalled R$5.2 billion and operating cash generation was positive at R$3.4 billion. The movement is mainly influenced by lower pulp prices and a weaker exchange rate for exports. Net profit totalled R$2 billion.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Fire Destroys Under-Construction Apartment Project in Utah

By Jim Parsons
ENR Mountain States
November 10, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah — Investigators are searching for the cause of a fire that engulfed an under-construction apartment project in Lehi, Utah, south of Salt Lake City. The 304-unit multi-family complex, called Alta Vista, broke ground earlier this year. …Flames at a four-story wood-framed building were first reported at 10:17 am Sunday, Nov. 9, by the project’s on-site security guard. The fire quickly spread to the rest of the building, most of which eventually collapsed, according to a statement from the city of Lehi. …A statement from Wood Partners read: “The project was under construction and did not have any residents. There were no fatalities in the fire…. We are working closely with local officials through the investigation, cleanup and recovery processes.” …Fire department officials say it may take several days before they can determine the blaze’s cause and point of origin.

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Joe Giddings on the ‘mind-blowing’ growth of bio-based materials

The Architects’ Journal UK
November 12, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Built by Nature’s Joe Giddings, a co-founder of ACAN, talks about building responsibly with timber and sustainable forestry initiatives On the eve of Cop 30 in northern Brazil. …Giddings takes a deep dive into BbN’s five principles for responsible timber construction, which provide a holistic framework for building with timber without unintended consequences. He also describes BbN’s workstreams to quantify and promote lean use of timber. Current research includes the development of two new metrics for assessing the impact of building with timber: the use renewal ratio (the time that timber remains locked up in a building compared with how long it takes the tree that supplied it to grow) and wood use intensity (the volume of timber used per square metre of building). Giddings challenges numerous tropes. Local is not always best, he says. …To catch up on all episodes of AJ Climate Champions, click here.

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Forestry

B.C.’s century-long feast on big, old trees has sent forests into freefall

By Zoë Yunker
The Narwhal
November 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

BC’s NDP government has recently lent a steadying hand to its beleaguered forestry sector, pausing stumpage fees, expediting permits and investing in mills to prevent its looming fall — but some say to no avail. “Why does it keep getting worse?” Prince George-Mackenzie Conservative MLA Kiel Giddens asked during the spring legislative session. …A new report commissioned by the Sierra Club BC points to a theory: BC’s supply of unlogged, high-value trees that industry has long relied on is dwindling, rendering short-term fixes and freebies inadequate. …Pressure on BC’s most at-risk forests appears to be intensifying. The report says the province’s efforts to temporarily pause logging in rare forests through old-growth deferrals have failed. Instead, BC forests were four times more likely to be logged inside recommended deferral zones than outside over the past four years. …The report suggests BC’s century-long feast on big, old trees is approaching its end.

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C̕awak ʔqin Forestry questioned for fires

By David Wiwchar
Nanaimo News Now
November 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A First Nations joint-venture forestry company is under fire for its burning practices. C̕awak ʔqin Forestry recently lit up a series of burn piles only a few metres from where a local company turns post harvest wood waste into much needed hogfuel for the Catalyst paper mill. Under provincial guidelines, forest harvesters are supposed to look for grinding or chipping opportunities ahead of burning. Keith Wyton from the local air quality council says local governments should push foresters to not burn. …Forest companies are allowed to pile and burn slash at this time of year, but Wyton wants the BC Government to step in. …C̕awak ʔqin General Manager Geoff Payne said they were operating within provincial guidelines and were permitted to burn. C̕awak ʔqin Forestry is a joint venture between Western Forest Products and the Huu-ay-aht First Nation.

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Managing a matchstick forest

Letter by David McIntyre
The Calgary Herald
November 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

ALBERTA — Crowsnest Pass, the lowest pass through the Rocky Mountains between New Mexico and Jasper National Park, is home to Alberta’s rarest, most tree-species-rich forest. Some species growing here are as rare in Alberta as sage grouse and woodland caribou. …Trees don’t thrive within this forest. They cling to life. …A question I’ve long posed to society and the managers of southwestern Alberta’s matchstick forest is this: Is it economically viable to manage this forest for timber production? …Some years ago, I was selected to sit on a Government of Alberta advisory committee creating a vision for future management of this forest. …Alberta’s forest managers, responding to the problem they helped create, have now placed a new prescription on the pharmacist’s cutting block. The old prescription — clear-cut logging. The new prescription — profoundly expanded clear-cut logging.

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Washington forestland owners in ‘most contentious’ battle in quarter century

By Don Jenkins
The Capital Press
November 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Washington Forest Practices Board may vote Nov. 12 to widen and lengthen riparian buffers, taking millions of dollars worth of timber out of production. Forest landowners and the wood-products are mounting a last-ditch effort to persuade the board to not adopt what they say would be a massive taking of private property. The state Department of Ecology says wider and longer buffers would keep timber harvests from raising temperatures in non-fish bearing streams in most cases. Timber groups haven’t been in a battle this divisive since the industry, state agencies and tribes settled on seminal logging rules in 1999, Washington Forest Protection Association’s Darin Cramer said. …Studies confirmed logging raises water temperatures. The timber industry argues that even if temperatures rise, they soon go down and generally do not exceed acceptable levels.  Massachusetts-based consultant Industrial Economics estimates the rule will take somewhere between 67,000 acres and 170,000 acres out of production.

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California forests have a labor crisis: Not enough people willing to climb trees

By Michelle Peng
The San Francisco Standard
November 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Miles Ryan checked his harness one last time, gave an assured look to his ground crew, and started to climb. …There, balanced at the top of the forest, Ryan leaned out toward the tips of the limbs to get what he’d come for: cones. It was one of Cal Fire’s last cone samplings of the season, which usually runs from August to October across state forests and conifer species. Each cone contains anywhere from a few dozen to hundreds of precious seeds. These have become more important in recent years, as an uptick in severe wildfires and the spread of insects and diseases have led to mass deaths of pines across California forests. But there are just a few dozen professional tree climbers like Ryan trained for high-elevation seed collection in California. …Cal Fire needs to collect 55,978 bushels of cones across species and locales to fully stock its seed bank.

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Landslides ‘are everywhere’ in Oregon and more unpredictable than earthquakes

By Miranda Cyr
The Register-Guard
November 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, US West

Every year, there are thousands of landslides in Oregon. Geologists say the number is increasing due to climate change. …Swaths of the Pacific Northwest are particularly prone, thanks to a combination of mountainous landscape and heavy rainfall. “Over the last couple decades, the landslides and the surface processes and surface hazards that I’ve been working on have become much more prominent, primarily due to climate change and humans inhabiting more areas in hazardous terrain,” said Josh Roering, a professor of earth sciences at the University of Oregon. …Roering is one of the geologists involved in the newly formed Center for Land Surface Hazards (CLaSH). A $15 million NSF grant jumpstarted the center that will study landslides and other surface hazards. While CLaSH is housed in the University of Michigan, it is a collaboration with more than a dozen academic, governmental and community partners across the country. 

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European Parliament backs simplification of EU’s anti-deforestation rules

By Marta Pacheco
Euronews
November 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The controversial law was supposed to come into force in December last year but the latest proposal would see its implementation delayed for a second time to late 2026. European lawmakers backed on Thursday a proposal to slash due diligence requirements for business operators under the European Union’s anti-deforestation law, after pressure from industry groups and countries outside Europe claimed the law was too burdensome. The ballot followed the European Commission’s announcement last month of an IT glitch that effectively delayed the law’s implementation until the end of 2026. …Under the new draft bill to simplify the law, lawmakers backed a Commission proposal that seeks to reduce the data load handled by the IT system linked to the EU’s anti-deforestation law and to cut the administrative burden for farmers, foresters and other economic operators. …While most member states back the delay to 2026, many others continue to hold divergent views.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

A pivotal moment for climate action: what to expect at COP30 in Belém

By Fiona Harvey
The Guardian
November 10, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, United States, International

Rich countries have lost enthusiasm for combating the climate crisis while China is surging ahead in producing and using clean energy equipment, the president of the UN climate talks has said. More countries should follow China’s lead instead of complaining about being outcompeted, said André Corrêa do Lago, the Brazilian diplomat in charge of the Cop30 conference, which begins on Monday. …Top of the agenda will be national plans on cutting greenhouse gas emissions, which currently would lead to a devastating 2.5C of heating. Vulnerable countries want to draw up a plan that will show how countries can outdo their current inadequate efforts and meet the Paris agreement targets. …The Brazilian hosts are focused on “implementation” – that is, putting into practice commitments that have already been made. Despite efforts by Brazil, bitter disagreements over what the conference should focus on are still likely on Monday.

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Drax still burning 250-year-old trees sourced from forests in Canada, experts say

By Jillian Ambrose
The Guardian UK
November 9, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West, International

Drax power plant has continued to burn 250-year-old trees sourced from some of Canada’s oldest forests despite growing scrutiny of its sustainability claims, forestry experts say. A new report suggests it is “highly likely” that Britain’s biggest power plant sourced some wood from ecologically valuable forests as recently as this summer. Drax, Britain’s single biggest source of carbon emissions, has received billions of pounds in subsidies from burning biomass derived largely from wood. The report, by Stand.earth, claims that a subsidiary of Drax Group received hundreds of truckloads of whole logs at its biomass pellet sites throughout 2024 and into 2025, which were likely to have included trees that were hundreds of years old. The report could raise fresh questions for the owner of the North Yorkshire power plant, which has been forced in recent years to defend its sustainability claims while receiving more than £2m a day in green energy subsidies from UK bill payers.

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Trump’s energy secretary slams UN climate conference in Brazil, where US absence is glaring

By Derek Gatopoulos Theodora Tongas & Mauricio Savarese
The Associated Press
November 7, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, International

Chris Wright

US Energy Secretary Chris Wright condemned the COP30 environmental summit as harmful and misguided — defying the global scientific consensus and concern by governments worldwide on climate change. “It’s essentially a hoax. It’s not an honest organization looking to better human lives,” Wright said in Athens. …Wright’s comments came as world leaders gathering over 5,000 miles away, on the edge of the Amazon in Brazil, blasted President Trump for his absence from the UN-sponsored discussions on climate change. His remarks echoed the US administration’s rejection of global climate agreements and Trump’s prioritization of fossil fuels. …At the Athens forum, top US officials criticized European Union carbon reduction policies, arguing they undermine economic growth, democratic alliances, and global leadership in AI and energy innovation. It was a stark contrast with Brazil, where world leaders at COP30 issued urgent warnings about the accelerating pace of global warming.

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Germany promises support for Brazil’s tropical forest protection scheme at UN climate talks

By Gavin Blackburn
Euronews
November 7, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Germany’s Chancellor Friedrich Merz has pledged support for a Brazilian initiative to support the conservation of the world’s endangered forests, at international talks on the edge of the Amazon rainforest ahead of the annual United Nations climate conference, COP30. The initiative, dubbed the Tropical Forest Forever Facility, drew $5.5 billion (€4.7 billion) in pledges, with Norway and France promising to join Brazil and Indonesia in investing. Merz said that Germany would make a “considerable” pledge, but didn’t specify an amount. The fund eventually seeks to leverage investments into $125 billion (€108 billion) that can be used to pay 74 developing countries for every hectare of forest they conserve. Dozens of governments have expressed support for the fund and are engaged in talks to learn more about it, Brazil’s Finance Minister Fernando Haddad said, including China and the United Arab Emirates.

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Health & Safety

WorkSafeBC fines B.C. government over $750K for two wildfire fighting incidents from 2023

By Victor Kaisar
CFJC Today Kamloops
November 8, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

WorkSafeBC has fined the Provincial Government over $750,000 in connection with a pair of incidents involving the BC Wildfire Service that date back to 2023. An administrative penalty of $759,369 was levied on Sept. 25 following investigations into the two incidents – one of which led to the death of a firefighter near Fort St. John, while the other could have killed or injured multiple firefighters in the North Shuswap. In that North Shuswap incident, previous inspection reports by WorkSafeBC determined that a group of five Brazilian firefighters became “trapped by extreme fire behavior” during a planned ignition. …WorkSafeBC determined that a lack of planning, training, and communication were all contributing factors. …The other incident dates back to July 28, 2023, when 25-year-old firefighter, Zak Muise, was killed while fighting the Donnie Creek fire. WorkSafeBC determined that neither worker was wearing a helmet, the passenger had not been using a seatbelt, and the passenger-side retention netting had been damaged.

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