Blog Archives

Business & Politics

Joint statement from Canada, the UK, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Japan on the Strait of Hormuz

Prime Minister’s Office
The Government of Canada
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States, International

OTTAWA — We condemn in the strongest terms recent attacks by Iran on unarmed commercial vessels in the Gulf, attacks on civilian infrastructure including oil and gas installations, and the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iranian forces. We express our deep concern about the escalating conflict. We call on Iran to cease immediately its threats, laying of mines, drone and missile attacks and other attempts to block the Strait to commercial shipping, and to comply with UN Security Council Resolution 2817. Freedom of navigation is a fundamental principle of international law, including under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. …We emphasise that such interference with international shipping and the disruption of global energy supply chains constitute a threat to international peace and security. …We express our readiness to contribute to appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait. 

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Is Canada’s trade fate a three-sided circle?

By Stuart Culbertson, former BC deputy minister
The Vancouver Sun
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

In a world of colourful economic pie charts and slick bar graphs, the image of a three-sided circle is both awkward and uncomfortable. Yet this image may depict the emerging fate of the Canada-US-Mexico Trade Agreement. For Canada, the wild ride through Trumpian trade policy has now entered a decisive phase. …Some rules of the road ahead are beginning to take shape. First there is a recognition and begrudging acceptance that there will be some tariffs where CUSMA had none. …Secondly, despite warm commitments to the trilateral CUSMA relationship, Canada and Mexico are engaged in separate bilateral discussions with the US. …Enter the three-sided circle. Here the current comprehensive trilateral agreement would evolve into three bilateral trade agreements bound by a core centre that holds common rules and undertakings. …In triaging the trade-wounded, no sector deserves a bigger fix than Canada’s softwood lumber industry. Its market access to the US has been battered by 40 years of aggressive protectionism.

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Here are Canada’s biggest points of leverage in tariff and trade talks with the U.S.

By Mike Crawley
CBC News
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

While Canada’s economy is far more reliant on exports to the US than vice versa, Canadian negotiators have crucial ammunition in their efforts to land a trade deal that reduces or eliminates tariffs imposed by US President Trump. …Canada’s attempts to negotiate relief from Trump’s tariffs on such exports as steel, aluminum, automobiles and softwood lumber are now wrapped into fresh talks on renewing the Canada-US-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA). …Barry Appleton, says Canada needs to shift its strategy by exerting its leverage as a crucial U.S. customer. …Inu Manak, says the US needs Canadian natural resources to achieve the industrial policy goals set out by the US administration. …Canada is among the top sources of foreign direct investment in the U.S., largely as a result of decisions by pension funds. …The US has repeatedly emphasized the importance of steady access to a reliable supply of critical minerals.

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Greer says U.S. trade talks with Canada lagging behind those with Mexico

By Kelly Geraldine Malone
The Canadian Press in BNN Bloomberg
March 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Trade talks with Canada ahead of the mandatory review of the continental trade pact are lagging behind those with Mexico, US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said on Wednesday. …“We’re having talks separately with Canada, but we’ve moved along with Mexico,” Greer said. “Canada is behind on this.” Canada-US Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc met with Greer on March 6, days after the Trump administration announced it was officially beginning negotiations with Mexico. The meeting was seen by some as a sign of a thaw in Canada-US relations. …But no announcement of formal negotiations with Canada has emerged from the Trump administration since that meeting took place. …Greer has complained that Canadians maintain barriers that make it difficult to hold bilateral trade talks, citing provincial bans on US alcohol. …Greer also has floated the idea of abandoning the trade pact in favour of two separate bilateral agreements with America’s closest neighbours.

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‘The fix is in’: Trump’s latest tariff tactic shocks Washington trade watchers

By Tracy Moran
The National Post
March 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Trade watchers say they are shocked at the latest tactic being used by the US to shore up its tariff wall against Canada after a legal setback last month. US Trade Representative (USTR) launched investigations into 60 economies under Section 301(b) of the U.S. Trade Act of 1974 to determine whether they have failed to impose or enforce bans on imports produced with forced labour. But critics in the Washington beltway say the 301 probes are basically a “show trial” and that the verdict is sure to go against trading partners such as Canada. Canada is being grouped together with China and dozens of other countries for these investigations. The probes will examine whether Ottawa’s forced-labour rules and framework… are sufficient for screening goods produced by child or forced labour. …“This has nothing to do with forced labour,” said Inu Manak, at the Council on Foreign Relations. …He thinks the administration is constructing a pretext to defend the tariffs it’s already planning.

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David Eby to lead B.C. trade mission to China

By Daisy Xiong
Business in Vancouver
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

David Eby announced Thursday he will lead a trade mission to China later this year — his first visit to the country since becoming BC’s premier in 2022. Speaking at a media event in Surrey, Eby said the trip is part of the province’s efforts to grow the economy. “[We will be] talking about issues like how to increase agricultural trade, how to increase energy trade for mutual benefit and to help grow the economy here in British Columbia,” he said. …Eby did not provide details on the timing of the trip, but said he plans to deliver a message that has been underlined by the war in Iran. “We are a stable jurisdiction, that when we build things, we deliver,” he said. …Since taking office, Eby has led trade delegations to Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Malaysia and India.

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Princeton mill celebrates approval of tenure transfer to Gorman Group’s Similkameen Forest Products

By Brennan Phillips
The Mission Record
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Princeton’s mill celebrated not just new owners but a new name as well with the handover of forestry tenures from Weyerhaeuser to West Kelowna-based Gorman Bros on March 19. …The transfer of the timber tenures has happened quickly since being announced in September 2025, as far as tenure transfers go and especially with the new legislative requirements to consider public interest. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar said “Here you have a company that is continuing to make investments in BC in a time where things are tough right now in forestry. …That speaks well to the future of forestry and gives me the hope and optimism.” …The Ministry of Forests received nearly 300 letters in support of the Gorman tenure transfer from individuals, businesses, First Nations, contractors, community forests and unions during the public input period. “This is a good step forward for a sustainable forestry sector,” Princeton Mayor Spencer Coyne said.

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West Kelowna-based Gorman Brothers gains tenure in Okanagan from Weyerhaeuser

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The final step in a $120-million investment into BC’s forestry sector by a West Kelowna family-owned forestry company has concluded, following the Minister of Forests’ official approval of a tenure transfer from Weyerhaeuser to Gorman Group. “Gorman Group is investing in the future of forestry, investing in a new chapter for Princeton, and investing in the transformation of the community into a real forestry hub,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. …“By approving this tenure transfer, we are supporting a company that believes in value-added manufacturing, using every fibre to its fullest potential and keeping jobs here at home.” …The transferred tenures total approximately 682,000 cubic metres. …“We recognize that any Crown tenure transfer comes with important responsibilities and obligations to First Nations, communities and employees who depend on the long-term stewardship of the land and the careful use of the fibre,” said Nick Arkle, CEO, Gorman Group. 

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New Brunswick First Nation asks Supreme Court to hear case on Aboriginal title, private land

By David Ebner
The Globe & Mail
March 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Supreme Court of Canada is being asked to consider a clash between Aboriginal title and private land in a New Brunswick case that would have significant national implications. Last December, the New Brunswick Court of Appeal ruled that the Wolastoqey Nation could not seek a declaration of Aboriginal title over private property as part of its claim against the province. The decision was a sharp contrast to a lower-court ruling in BC last summer. After a trial that stretched five years, the BC Supreme Court declared that the Cowichan Tribes had Aboriginal title to about 800 acres in the Vancouver suburbs. In the Wolastoqey case, Justice Ernest Drapeau wrote that he was “unable to see” how Aboriginal title could co-exist with private land. He stated that a declaration of Aboriginal title over such land “would sound the death knell of reconciliation.” …The Wolastoqey are Tcalling on the top court to enter the fray to settle the legal uncertainty. [to access the full story a subscription is required]

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Domtar’s Glenwood, Arkansas sawmill to restart operations

By Michael Hibben
Talk Business & Politics
March 18, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

The Domtar Glenwood sawmill, which employed more than 100 people and temporarily shut down in October, says it will be resuming operations in the coming weeks. The company announced Wednesday that it will restart the sawmill. In September, Domtar cited market factors like a surplus of lumber, low prices and high interest rates in its decision to cease operations. …“The restart reflects recent improvements and the opportunity to support current customer needs. Operations will ramp up in a measured and phased approach over the next few weeks to ensure safe, reliable performance and alignment with current demand. Throughout the restart process, our focus will remain on operating safely and supporting our employees, customers and communities while managing our assets in a responsible way.” Company spokesperson Tammy Waters said “We started bringing a few employees back last week who are looking at the equipment that had been idled since then,” Waters said. 

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Finance & Economics

International Energy Agency head says global economy faces ‘major, major threat’ from Iran war

By Charlotte Graham-McLay
The Associated Press
March 23, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

Fatih Birol

The head of the International Energy Agency said Monday that the global economy faces a “major, major threat” because of the Iran war. “No country will be immune to the effects of this crisis if it continues to go in this direction,” Fatih Birol said. The crisis has had a worse impact on oil than the two oil shocks of the 1970s combined, and a worse effect on gas than the Russia-Ukraine war. …One major fear is that the war could knock out oil and gas production in the Middle East for a long time, which would mean high prices could last a while and cause inflation to rip higher. The US stock market has a history of bouncing back… as long as oil prices don’t stay too high for too long. …“Some of the vital arteries of the global economy, such as petrochemical, such as fertilizers, such as sulfur— their trade is all interrupted.

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Bank of Canada holds key interest rate at 2.25 per cent

The Canadian Press in CityNews Toronto
March 18, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

The Bank of Canada held its benchmark interest rate at 2.25% today as the economy performs below expectations, but war in the Middle East threatens higher inflation. The central bank’s decision to keep to the sidelines today was widely expected, but the future path for the policy rate is much less clear. Governor Tiff Macklem says in prepared remarks that the Bank of Canada is in a “dilemma” with U.S. trade uncertainty keeping the economy soft, but the Iran war sending global oil prices surging and likely spurring higher inflation in the months to come. Macklem says the central bank will look through the immediate inflationary hit from the war, but monetary policymakers will move to prevent persistent price hikes if the conflict persists or broadens. Statistics Canada reported an economic contraction in the fourth quarter of the year and sharp job losses in February.

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Mercer vs International Paper: Paper and Packaging Giants Go Head-to-Head

By William Temple
24/7 Wall St. in Yahoo Finance
March 17, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

Mercer posted Q4 earnings per share (EPS) of -$4.61 against a consensus estimate of -$0.83, a miss that signals the commodity cycle has gone from painful to existential. The headline driver was a $238.7 million non-cash impairment charge, including a $203.5 million write-down on its Peace River hardwood pulp mill. …International Paper’s Q3 2025 losses look alarming on the surface, with a $1.01 billion impairment on its Global Cellulose Fibers business and $675 million in accelerated depreciation from mill closures. But adjusted EBITDA came in at $859 million, up 28% sequentially. IP is taking pain by choice. Mercer is absorbing pain it cannot control. …IP’s pivot to pure-play global packaging via DS Smith gives it pricing leverage and diversified end markets. Mercer’s mass timber order book, at roughly $163 million in contracts including data center projects, is a genuine bright spot, but it cannot offset a pulp business bleeding cash.

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Markets rally, then pull back after Trump and Iran give conflicting reports of talks

By Steve Kopeck
NBC News
March 23, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

US stocks were set to surge at the opening bell Monday, after President Donald Trump announced that he was postponing all military strikes on Iranian power plants for a 5-day period. Iranian state media responded to Trump’s post by saying the US president has “backed down” after Iran’s firm response. Iran’s semi-official Mehr news agency also relayed a message from the nation’s foreign ministry that, “there is no dialogue between Tehran and Washington.” S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures initially soared about 3% on Trump’s post, but those gains faded to about 1.6% after the statements from Iranian media. …Oil prices also fell about 5%, with U.S. crude oil trading down to around $92 per barrel around 8:15 a.m. ET. International Brent crude oil fell to around $105 per barrel. Initially, oil prices had plummeted 10% on Trump’s post.

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New Home Sales Decline in January on Weather Disruptions

By Jing Fu
NAHB Eye on Housing
March 19, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

New home sales declined in January, reflecting typical monthly volatility as well as weather-related disruptions. On a three-month moving average basis, sales remain broadly in line with a year ago, suggesting underlying demand conditions have been relatively stable despite the month-to-month fluctuations. Meanwhile, builders continue to rely on incentives to attract buyers and sustain demand. The January NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index showed that 64% of builders used sales incentives, marking the 12th consecutive month this share exceeded 60%. Sales of newly built single-family homes fell 17.6% in January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 587,000 from a downwardly revised December reading. The pace of new home sales is down 11.3% from a year earlier. On a three-month moving average basis, sales were 688,000, remaining broadly in line with the 685,000 pace seen a year ago.

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Building Material Price Growth Remains Entrenched Above 3%

By Jesse Wade
NAHB Eye on Housing
March 18, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Residential building material price growth accelerated in February after slowing a month prior, according to the latest Producer Price Index release from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Since the BLS collects pricing data during the week of the 13th, these figures were finalized before the onset of the conflict in Iran. The Producer Price Index for final demand increased 0.7% in February, after rising 0.5% in January. The index for final demand services rose 0.5% in February, while the index for final demand goods rose 1.1% over the month. The monthly increase in the index for final demand goods was the largest since it rose 1.6% back in August of 2023. The price index for inputs to new residential construction rose 0.7% in February and was up 3.4% from last year. The price of goods used in new residential construction was up 1.1% over the month and 3.0% from last year, while the price of services was up 0.1% over the month and up 4.2% from last year.

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Holding Pattern Continues for the Fed

By Robert Dietz, Chief Economist
NAHB Eye on Housing
March 18, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

The Fed continued its current pause for rate reductions at the conclusion of the March 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 of last year. This marked the second policy pause since the Fed resumed easing in September of 2025. Characterizing current economic conditions, the Fed stated that “uncertainty about the economic outlook remains elevated.” …NAHB had forecasted two additional rate cuts for 2026, based on the expectation of modest easing of inflation and a cool labor market. However, consistent with market expectations, our forecast will reduce this to just one rate cut for 2026 due to higher inflation pressure related to headline issues, including increased oil prices due to the Iran war. A longer conflict will have a relatively greater impact on the delay for future Fed rate cuts.

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Fed likely to leave rates unchanged as Iran war shocks policy debate

By Howard Schneider
Reuters
March 18, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve officials, convening in a wartime setting that began less than three weeks ago, are expected to hold interest rates steady on Wednesday even as a fresh jump in oil prices and data showing a rise in some aspects of inflation even before ​the start of the war with Iran may prompt them to recast the outlook for the U.S. economy, inflation and monetary policy. New projections to be released by the U.S. central bank at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) ‌will show how policymakers assess the economic impact of President Donald Trump’s decision to launch an open-ended conflict in the Middle East, but the environment remained volatile even as they began the second day of their latest two-day policy meeting. …US producer prices rose in February by 3.4% on a year-over-year basis. Rising producer prices can feed into retail ⁠costs and signal higher future inflation.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Architect Caroline Inglis navigates Passive House targets and embodied carbon limits in Vancouver’s new community centre

Passive House Canada
March 12, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

A new mass timber community centre rising in Vancouver’s Marpole neighbourhood is a showpiece of a number of progressive goals shaping public architecture in Canada today. The building is designed to meet high performance Passive House standards, ambitious embodied carbon reductions, and reach high levels of accessibility standards, while also responding to the needs of community members who will use the facility every day. ….The Marpole Community Centre is the first new community centre commissioned by the city in about a decade. The project combines Passive House certification, LEED Gold targets, a 40 percent embodied carbon reduction goal, and Rick Hansen Foundation Accessibility Certification. Landing these impressive targets, while keeping the community at the heart of the project has come with trade-offs but also amazing learning opportunities, said Inglis, who will be sharing more about this project at the upcoming Passive House Canada Conference in May.

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Researchers develop biodegradable, plant‑based packaging from natural fibers

By Carson Meredith, Georgia Institute of Technology
The Conversation
March 17, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

Jie Wu, an engineering graduate student, was studying a type of striking white beetle found in Southeast Asia and attempting to figure out how to mimic its brilliant color when an unexpected discovery upended the experiment. Jie and I had been hoping to identify naturally occurring whitening pigments that could be used in paper and paints. …But instead of creating a white material as intended, Jie produced dense, transparent films. The nanofibers more readily assembled in tightly packed films than in the porous structures Jie desired. That serendipitous finding in 2014 shifted my team of engineering students’ focus from color to packaging. …In the years since, our team has used this discovery to create biodegradable films that offer a more sustainable and effective alternative to plastic packaging. …The materials are renewable, biodegradable and compostable. Our team has filed several patent applications, and we are working with industry partners to develop specific packaging uses.

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Top-Down Construction, Mass Timber, and Nanotechnology Reshape Building

By Mick Cornett
Urban Land Institute
March 18, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

AUSTIN, Texas — Four ULI panelists took to a stage in Austin, Texas, recently to discuss techniques that are already available to the industry, even if adoption is slower than necessary. …During the panel, Daniel Esparza, principal of Easton, Maryland–based TGE Group, explained a method of construction in which the roof and all floors of a high-rise building are built no more than 6 feet off the ground and then moved into place. The safety features of this approach are obvious. …Lisa Podesto—director of mass timber and sustainable construction innovation for Aptos, California–based Swinerton—highlighted mass timber construction and the benefits that can make these prefabricated products stronger than concrete and steel on a per ton basis. …Chris Bishop, president of the National Concrete Refinement Institute, said nanotechnology, in which nanoparticles are added to concrete mix to provide strength and durability, is not new to the concrete industry, is gaining more attention.

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Colorado Commissioners adopt wildfire code, table decision on other building codes

By Clayton Chaney
The Pagosa Springs Sun
March 18, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

COLORADO — The Archuleta County Board of County Commissioners (BoCC) unanimously voted to table its decision on adopting eight new building-related codes. Those are the 2024 editions of international codes, including the residential code, building code, energy and conservation code, mechanical code, fuel and gas code, existing building code, property maintenance code, and the swimming pool and spa code. During the meeting, the BoCC also considered, and unanimously approved, Resolution 2026-27, adopting the 2025 Colorado Wildfire Resiliency Code (CWRC), along with amendments to snow load requirements for manufactured structures. …Commissioner John Ranson described them as an “unfunded mandate,” adding, “there’s no two-ways about it.” He mentioned that in conversations with local builders, many are preparing for these codes to make construction costs go up.

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Milwaukee mass timber project, billed as nation’s tallest, reportedly faces foreclosure

Multifamily Dive
March 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

The future of a Milwaukee high-rise once billed as “the tallest mass timber building in America” is in doubt after the general contractor sued the developer’s affiliates on March 6 for allegedly owing $11.3 million, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported. Fond du Lac, Wisconsin-based C.D. Smith Construction seeks the foreclosure sale of the parcel at 1005 N. Edison St. Madison, Wisconsin-based developer Neutral stopped construction of the 31-story, 357-unit apartment building in September, according to the newspaper. The contractor is suing Neutral affiliates The Edison SPE and The Edison Project LLC. In October, a city official told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that the project faced a $25 million funding gap. The suit names 11 other firms that have filed for unpaid bills connected to the development, including Chicago-based Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture. Neither C.D. Smith Construction nor Neutral replied to Multifamily Dive’s request for comment.

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Denmark’s Tallest Timber Tower Tests Circular Construction at Scale

By Petra Loho
Metropolis Magazine
March 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

In Denmark’s second-largest city, a former industrial harbor—now redeveloped as a mixed-use district— hosts a roughly 260-foot-tall building that confronts one of architecture’s hardest questions: can the high-rise, arguably the most carbon-intensive urban typology, be rethought as a circular, low-emissions system? Recently completed, TRÆ is now recognized as the nation’s tallest timber structure, with mass timber at the heart of a broader experiment in material reuse and construction logistics across its approximately 3.62-acre development. The project is conceived as a prototype for how dense urban construction might reduce its dependence on carbon-intensive materials. The name is the brief. In Danish, træ means tree, timber, and three. …T1 reaches 256 feet and is joined by two six-story volumes. All are structured with cross-laminated timber (CLT) slabs and glulam columns anchored by concrete cores. The hybrid system balances timber ambition with structural and regulatory demands.

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Sawdust waste turned into fire-resistant building panels, could reduce construction waste

By Bojan Stojkovski
Interesting Engineering
March 22, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

SWITZERLAND — Across the global timber industry, vast quantities of sawdust are generated as a byproduct of processing wood. …Researchers at ETH Zurich have developed a method to transform this overlooked waste into durable, fire-resistant panels. By combining compressed sawdust with a mineral-based binder, the team has created a material suitable for interior walls and partitions. At the core of this new material is struvite, a mineral more commonly associated with wastewater treatment facilities than construction sites. While it is typically known for clogging pipes, struvite also possesses inherent fire-resistant properties. Its use, however, is far from straightforward: the mineral is highly brittle on its own, and achieving a uniform blend with wood particles presents a significant technical hurdle. ETH Zurich addressed this by using an enzyme derived from watermelon seeds to control how struvite crystals form and bind, resulting in a more stable material.

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European Paper Industries says recycling sector ready for ‘Made in Europe’ policy

By Brian Taylor, Editor
Recycling Today
March 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The Brussels-based Confederation of European Paper Industries (CEPI) has released a statement indicating the forests and “state-of-the-art recycling system” of Europe stand ready to serve European Union policies supporting “Made in Europe” objectives. “A ‘Made in EU’ competitiveness model should be anchored in sustainably sourced biomass, high quality recycled materials and European technological leadership across these sectors,” states CEPI. The forest products and paper sectors can help Europe “build a more resilient, future proof growth model,” continues the group, that can be less reliant on coal, gas and other fossil fuels. Among resources the continent has in abundance, according to CEPI, are “sustainably managed forests, efficient recycling systems and the industrial know how that powers them. This pragmatic approach aligns industrial policy with Europe’s bio-based, circular strengths and advances some of the Clean Industrial Deal’s (CID’s) original ambitions.”

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Forestry

Amid Trump logging push, will Oregon enter new timber era?

By Zack Urness
The Statesman Journal
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

In Oregon… fights over how much to cut defined the 1980s and ’90s. Steep declines in timber harvest, meant to save Oregon’s last ancient forests, ripped an urban-rural divide that still festers. Today, Oregon still produces the most softwood lumber in the US. But the state’s timber harvest has hovered near historic lows, at least seven mills have closed since 2024 and logging on federal lands has been limited. President Trump’s administration wants to change that. …The moves have been met with cautious optimism in Oregon’s timber industry. …Environmental and outdoors groups, meanwhile, are gearing up to fight. …Battles between timber and environmental groups are quieter now than during the pitched height of the Forest Wars, but they never went away. A lot else has changed, however. Wildfires have become the state’s biggest issue, there have been historic agreements between the two sides and there’s a new industry, mass timber.

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Sustainable Forest Supply Chain Collaborative launches

By Max Esterhuizen
Virginia Tech News
March 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

BLACKSBURG, Virginia — The College of Natural Resources and Environment has launched the Sustainable Forest Supply Chain Collaborative, a new interdisciplinary effort designed to strengthen one of the commonwealth’s most important natural resource systems, from working forests to the wood products used every day. The goal of the collaborative is to bring together faculty, students, industry partners, landowners, and communities to connect research, teaching, and Virginia Cooperative Extension in support of a forest supply chain that is sustainable, resilient, and prepared to meet the needs of future generations. …Scott Barrett, director of the Sustainable Forest Supply Chain Collaborative said “By working across disciplines and with partners on the ground, we can help ensure this supply chain remains strong, viable, and sustainable for the long term.” …Affiliated faculty represent multiple departments across the college, including the Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation and Department of Sustainable Biomaterials.

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Pests and storms in changing forests bring new problems for Maine woodlot owners

By Elizabeth Walztoni
The Bangor Daily News in Digest Wire
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Years after logging at his Mariaville woodlot, Bob Seymour expected to see new hardwood trees growing in the understory. In fact, he took it as a given after decades in the Maine woods that natural regrowth would crop up. Instead, almost all of the young trees in some sections are eastern white pines he had planted. He believes that’s largely because deer populations are growing and eating more hardwood saplings, which means fewer trees and less diversity in the future. …It’s one of the most concerning changes that Seymour, a retired UMaine silviculture professor, has seen in almost five decades of experience researching forest management. …Such challenges to understanding and managing the Maine woods have grown in recent years amid climate change, which has brought destructive new pests, fast-moving diseases, invasive plants that take over, and warmer winters that change growing, harvesting and wildlife conditions.

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A ‘shocking’ carbon discovery in Sweden’s forests

By Josie Garthwaite
Stanford School of Sustainability
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The boreal forest belt stretching across Scandinavia, Russia, Alaska, and Canada ranks among Earth’s largest carbon repositories. A first-of-its-kind study in Sweden finds wood harvesting and forest management are depleting carbon storage in these northern woodlands more than previously understood. Researchers found undisturbed primary forests store 83% more carbon per acre than the managed forests that are replacing them, with soil accounting for most of the difference. The world’s northern forests act as massive carbon vaults, locking away greenhouse gases in spruce, pines, and needle-covered soils. But industrial logging is quickly eroding their ability to mitigate climate change, according to a major new study led by scientists at Lund University and Stanford University. The biggest losses are happening in soils beneath the forest floor. …Major questions remain, including how much specific forest management practices may contribute to carbon storage capacity. Drainage ditches, plowing.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Carney climate plan at risk as Canadian oil companies stress need to boost production

By Amanda Stephenson
Reuters
March 18, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

A key plank of Canadian Prime Minister Carney’s climate plan will likely miss its target implementation date, industry sources said, raising new doubts about Canada meeting its environmental goals in the face of higher oil prices and uncertain US trade policy. Carney, a former UN ​climate envoy, committed last fall to negotiating a stronger industrial carbon pricing policy with Alberta by April 1. He is counting on a strengthened pollution pricing scheme to keep ‌Canada’s emission reduction targets on track after rolling back many of his predecessor Trudeau’s climate policies to restore friendlier relations with the oil-and-gas producing province and prioritize economic growth. Two industry sources say these negotiations have been challenging, and that no deal will be struck by the April 1 deadline because large oil sands companies are pushing back on parts of the federal proposal. …Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodgson has acknowledged there may be a slight delay.

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Urgent fixes to Canada’s industrial carbon pricing systems needed to protect billions in clean investment

By Chris Severson-Baker, Executive Director
The Pembina Institute
March 17, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

With the April 1, 2026, deadline for the Alberta-Ottawa memorandum of understanding fast approaching, leading climate policy experts are calling on Prime Minister Mark Carney to restore the strength and integrity of Canada’s industrial carbon pricing system to increase competitiveness and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The joint letter warns that recent changes to Canada’s climate policy framework undermine the country’s ability to tackle pollution, protect people from climate change and continue progress on legislated climate targets. As other measures have been weakened, paused or outright scrapped, strong, credible industrial carbon pricing systems play an even more decisive role in determining whether Canada can meaningfully reduce industrial emissions and remain competitive in a low-carbon global economy. Industrial carbon pricing… is widely agreed to be the most efficient road to industrial decarbonization and for that reason it is key to Canadian industry competitiveness.

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Hydrogen at the pulp mill will not make it more efficient

By David Charbonneau
Armchair Mayor
March 19, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Owner of Kamloops pulp mill, Kruger, is partnering with two others to reduce greenhouse gasses by generating hydrogen on site and using it as fuel. It’s an interesting pilot project but it won’t increase efficiency or significantly reduce greenhouse gasses. Others are the project developer, Elemental Clean Fuels; and Sc.wén̓wen Economic Development, the economic arm of Tk̓emlúps te Secwépemc. Zachary Steele, chief executive of New York-based Elemental Clean Fuels, says: “We believe our approach, which has received years of thought, is the right solution in terms of safety and economics and operational capabilities to decarbonize our process.” The Economic Development arm of Kamloops Indian Band is equally enthused. …The $ 21.7- million project is seeking financing from Natural Resources Canada. …However, 7,000 tonnes is a small amount of the CO₂ produced by the mill, mostly by the lime kiln. 

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Extreme heat has extreme effects–but some like it hot

By Alex Walls
UBC News
March 19, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

A sweeping new study of the 2021 heat wave reveals major ecological losses—but also surprising species that thrived, offering crucial insight into how climate extremes reshape ecosystems. …Some species did just fine during the 2021 North American heat wave, according to a new study published today in Nature Ecology and Evolution. With such events projected to become more frequent and intense due to climate change—and 2026 on track to be the hottest year ever—understanding these differing effects is vitally important, the researchers say. “The heat wave had widespread ecological effects, including an almost 400-per-cent increase in wildfire activity and negatively affecting more than three-quarters of the species studied,” said co-author Dr. Diane Srivastava, professor in the UBC department of zoology and Biodiversity Research Centre. …The researchers also found that cooler, wetter areas of the province were able to absorb 30% more carbon than usual, while warmer, more arid areas absorbed 75% less than usual. 

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Climate change is already happening in Colorado. Here are 10 signs we can see right now.

By Michael Booth
The Colorado Sun
March 22, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

COLORADO — Here is just a sampling of things happening right now in Colorado that we can’t attribute solely to climate change, but that we know will be happening more and more often precisely because of climate change. …State Forester Matt McCombs calls it “an end of innocence,” as he travels the state warning people of the unstoppable demise of beloved forest tracts. …The looming, climate-related loss of Colorado’s entire band of ponderosa forest truly worries Gent and his birding colleagues. …Matt McCombs is an eternal optimist about the collective: the gathering and harnessing of human intelligence and ingenuity in adapting to threats. But as the state forester, he knows too much about the looming death of Colorado’s entire ponderosa forest to be optimistic about the individual: This majestic specimen in front of him is doomed, and he points at a small eruption of sap to prove it. 

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Lawmakers’ wood pellet wishes clash with their anti-carbon storage proposals

By Elise Plunk
Lousiana Illuminator
March 20, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US East

LOUISIANA — Legislation to expand wood pellet manufacturing in Louisiana is gaining traction despite concerns over the industry’s connection to underground carbon storage, which has attracted a growing number of critics among state lawmakers. Louisiana is a burgeoning producer of wood pellets, which have been branded as a sustainable alternative to coal for generating electricity in overseas markets. As of 2023, mills in the South produced about 85% of the America’s wood pellet exports, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Reps. Chuck Owen, R-Rosepine, and Rodney Schamerhorn, R-Hornbeck, are carrying the proposed Louisiana Wood Pellet Manufacturing Strengthening Act. It directs the Louisiana Economic Development agency to promote the expansion of the industry throughout the state. …Legislators who have become hostile to carbon dioxide sequestration projects in their local districts openly disagree with economic development officials on whether the wood pellet industry even needs to store the CO2 they generate.

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The EU court supports the green finance designation for biomass energy investments

EMP Energy Market Price
March 19, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

The EU’s General Court has rejected a legal challenge aimed at reversing the European Commission’s decision to categorize forest biomass energy as a sustainable investment within the bloc’s green finance framework. The court’s decision, issued on 18 March 2026 dismissed an attempt to annul a Commission ruling from July 2022, which had turned down a request for an internal review of Delegated Regulation (EU) 2021/2139. This regulation set the technical criteria for determining which forestry management and bioenergy practices can be regarded as environmentally sustainable. The plaintiffs, including Robin Wood and six other environmental NGOs, contended that the Commission’s designation of forestry and forest bioenergy as sustainable was illegal and violated EU legislation, particularly the Taxonomy Regulation. These rulings affirm that the Commission possesses significant discretion in establishing and implementing the taxonomy’s technical criteria, allowing politically sensitive sectors like bioenergy.

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Health & Safety

Mother of mechanic killed on the job calls for change as charges are laid

By Wallis Sharpe
CBC News
March 20, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ryan Sharpe

Two years after an Edmonton man sustained fatal injuries while on shift at a northern Alberta pulp mill, workplace safety charges have been laid in his death. Ryan Sharpe, a heavy duty mechanic, died March 13, 2024, while servicing a wheel loader at the pulp mill in Slave Lake, about 450 kilometres north of Edmonton. The 30-year-old was positioned underneath the Caterpillar heavy construction machine, which was elevated on wooden blocks, when it unexpectedly shifted. He died of his injuries. Provincial safety investigators announced charges in his death earlier this month, alleging the companies involved in Sharpe’s work at the pulp mill failed to ensure his safety. Pacesetter Equipment and West Fraser Mills operating as Slave Lake Pulp are facing a total of five counts under the Occupational Health and Safety Act.  Sharpe’s mother, Terri-Lynn Sharpe, said, “I’m still trying to process the charges but hoping that they make a difference.”

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West Fraser charged in Alberta workplace death incident

By Tim Kalinowski
The Cochrane Eagle
March 16, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

COCHRANE, Alberta — West Fraser Mills has been charged in relation to a workplace death in Alberta two years ago. According to Alberta’s Operational Health And Safety (OHS), the workplace fatality took place at West Fraser’s Slave Lake Pulp on March 13, 2024. The charges stated that a worker servicing a CAT wheel loader “was positioned underneath the machine, which was elevated on wooden blocks. The equipment unexpectedly moved, resulting in a fatal injury to the worker.” The co-charged in the incident include West Fraser Mills, West Fraser Mills Slave Lake Pulp and Pacesetter Equipment. All three entities are facing five counts. …Pacesetter Equipment is also facing one additional count: Failure to ensure the worker was not under a suspended load unless the load was supported by a vehicle hoist designed for that purpose. …The charges were officially laid on March 5, 2026.

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Forest Fires

Louisiana remains ‘tinderbox’ for wildfires after Winn fire contained

By Greg Hilburn
Shreveport Times
March 19, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: United States, US East

A wildfire that destroyed about 1,500 acres of mostly timberland in Winn Parish was contained Thursday morning, but Louisiana Agriculture and Forestry Commissioner Mike Strain said the state remains “an absolute tinderbox.” Strain said his forest firefighters and personnel from other local and state agencies battled the Winn Parish fire until 10 p.m. March 18. He said the Winn fire bordered Louisiana 34 and primarily damaged timberland owned by Weyerhaeuser. “The high winds caused the fire to keep jumping our fire lines,” Strain said. He said investigators believe the fire was started from sparks from a blown tire on an 18-wheeler. The Winn fire follows recent large wildfires in Livingston Parish and St. Tammany Parish, which caused Interstate 12 to be temporarily closed. Strain said there already have been 350 wildfires in 2026. There are an average of 752 fires for an entire year in Louisiana.

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