Blog Archives

Today’s Takeaway

Metsä may curtail four Finnish sawmills for 90 days affecting 350

The Tree Frog Forestry News
December 2, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Metsä Fibre looks to curtail four sawmills for up to 90 days—affecting 350 workers. In related news: the fed’s tariff initiatives may help Canadian forestry stocks; Canada’s lawmakers get a forestry update; a fire damages Tolko’s Williams Lake mill; Sweden’s forest industry reports sharp decline; and construction prices rise despite lumber woes. 

In Forestry/Climate news: West Fraser faces a logging blockade in Alberta; and the Washington Forest Protection Association is suing over the state’s new stream buffer rule. Meanwhile: UBC names tree scientist Shawn Mansfield Distinguished Scholar; Western Forestry Contractors announce their 2026 AGM speakers; the Wood Pellet Association of Canada names Michael Fantillo a Safety Hero; and the latest news from FSC Canada and the Canada Wood Group.

Finally, a Chicago County tackles invasive species with grazing goats rather than herbicides.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

Read More

US industry groups strongly back renewing CUSMA trade agreement

The Tree Frog Forestry News
December 1, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Ahead of public hearings, US industry groups urge renewal of Canada-US-Mexico trade agreement. In other Business news: New Brunswick woodlot owner says the tariff situation is not sustainable; BC looks for new markets in the Far East; and no injuries reported at BiOrigin paper mill fire in Ontario. Meanwhile: Roy O. Martin III is recognized by Louisiana Tech; New Zealand welcomes the world’s first mass timber aircraft maintenance hangar; and Burnaby, BC, employs mass timber to add warmth to new ice arena.

In Forestry/Climate news: no roadmap emerged to end deforestation, but COP30 still delivered for forests; ENGO questions AAC determinations in BC; Montana thins to create grizzly bear habitat; ENGOs sue the US Forest Service over Nolichucky River logging; Colorado’s burned forests hold less snowpack; and Metsä Group sets up its own PEFC certification group. Meanwhile: the Forest History Association of BC’s AGM is tonight.

Finally, the BC Marmot Recovery Foundation is making progress, and it has the video to prove it

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

Read More

Conifex Timber to temporarily curtail Mackenzie, BC sawmill

Tree Frog Forestry News
November 28, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Conifex Timber announced it will temporarily curtail operations at its Mackenzie, BC sawmill. In related news: the United Steelworkers and Unifor welcomed Prime Minister Carney’s forest sector aid; New Brunswick and British Columbia leaders express worry over looming closures; and Nova Scotia’s Northern Pulp bid is defended as supporting forestry. Meanwhile: mass timber makes news in Castlegar and Penticton, BC; Japan’s housing starts turn positive, and Russia’s forestry is contracting.

In Forestry/Climate news: researchers says Africa’s forests have turned from a carbon sink to a carbon source; more arrests are made at BC’s Walbran valley protest; Arizona loggers want to keep thinning projects funded; Jason Fisher’s latest update on the Forest Enhancement Society of BC; the Wood Pellet Association of Canada’s Arctic Bioenergy Summit; and Tom Radovich is appointed Minnesota Forest Industries’ new CEO. 

Finally, how drones are making steep-slope layout and post-fire assessments safer in BC.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

Read More

Business & Politics

Canada’s trade resilience faces uncertainty as CUSMA renegotiation looms

By Tracy Moran
National Post
November 27, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Canada has fared pretty well amid U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade war so far. As Prime Minister Mark Carney likes to point out, the country has the best trade deal going with the United States, thanks to the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), with over 85 per cent of exports to America being tariff-free. The trouble is, that could change in the year ahead as the 2026 joint review of CUSMA gets underway. All three countries have launched consultation processes ahead of the renegotiation process to get stakeholders’ feedback on the trade agreement’s pros and cons. The next and crucial step in the U.S. involves in-person testimony at the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) hearings in Washington, D.C., from December 3 to 5, where more than 170 witnesses are scheduled to share their views. The proceedings will help the USTR gather information to inform its report to Congress, which could shape Trump’s approach to next year’s renegotiation talks.

Read More

Happy birthday, CUSMA. Is seven your lucky number?

By John Stackhouse
Royal Bank of Canada
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The much-pilloried Canada-U.S.-Mexico trade agreement was signed seven years ago this weekend—on November 30, 2018. A year later, it was amended to address rules of origin for autos, digital trade, IP, dairy and, who could forget, a sunset clause. We can all do the math. The December 10, 2019 amendments set in motion a 16-year term for the agreement, with a mandatory review every six years. Which means we’ll see more of a requiem than a birthday bash next week when Mark Carney is in Washington to help kick off the 2026 FIFA World Cup. But don’t bury CUSMA just yet. Despite the U.S. President’s freeze on negotiations, officials from both countries are talking every day and laying the groundwork for what will be an intense 2026. Not many insiders seriously expect CUSMA to go away; they’re working on changes—modifications, enhancements, renovations, depending on your point of view—that will continue to change the fabric of continental commerce.

Read More

‘More risky’ for Canada to wait for Trump’s call than to restart talks: Hyder

By Marco Vigliotti
iPolitics
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Goldy Hyder

Goldy Hyder, president and CEO of the Canadian Business Council, says if the federal government is comfortable with the status quo on trade with the U.S. it needs to be clear with businesses. If not, then it doesn’t make much sense to sit on the sidelines and wait for a call from U.S. President Donald Trump. Hyder, said U.S. officials familiar with the president’s thinking have told him that Trump is quite content with where things stand with Canada. That includes the significant exemption for goods that would qualify as compliant under the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement or CUSMA, which has effectively dropped Canada’s overall tariff rate to the U.S. to around five per cent. But that also means he’s feeling no pressure to lift the 50 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium and the additional 10 per cent tariff on softwood lumber that comes on top of a 35 per cent tariff on Canadian wood.

Read More

100 Mile House Mayor travelled to Victoria to meet with provincial government

By Misha Mustaqeem
100 Mile House Free Press
December 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The District of 100 Mile House’s mayor and one of its councillors went to Victoria for meetings with provincial government officials over the impending West Fraser Mill closures on Monday, Nov. 24. During the Mayor’s Report at the Nov. 25 District of 100 Mile House Council meeting, Mayor Maureen Pinkney and Coun. Donna Barnett both revealed details about a visit to Victoria regarding issues surrounding 100 Mile, including the impending permanent closure of the 100 Mile West Fraser mill, as well as frequent closures of the emergency department at the 100 Mile Hospital. On Nov. 6, West Fraser Lumber announced in a release that it would be closing its 100 Mile House lumber mill following a two-month wind-down.

Read More

Local MP advocates for softwood lumber industry

By Storrm Lennie
My Nelson Now
December 1, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Columbia-Kootenay-Southern Rockies MP Rob Morrison is accusing the federal government of failing forestry workers by allowing the Canada-U.S. softwood lumber dispute to drag on. Morrison criticized the Liberal government… saying Canadians have been left to absorb “punitive, unfounded and protectionist” U.S. duties while Ottawa offers little assurance in return. …The softwood lumber industry, according to Morrison, is not just another commodity. …He said the federal government has collected nearly $10 billion in duties since the last softwood agreement expired in 2015, money he argued should have stayed in Canadian communities to support reinvestment, innovation and jobs. …He pointed to impacts at mills within his riding, including Kalesnikoff Lumber, saying its CEO told him current tariffs are unsustainable. “Ken said the softwood lumber dispute is beyond our control. Current rates of 45% tariff are unsustainable. And he said businesses are drawing on their line of credit to pay payroll.”

Read More

Escalating lumber tariffs push B.C. to look to the Far East

By Eric Plummer
Ha-Shilth-Sa | Canada’s Oldest First Nation’s Newspaper
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

©BCGovFlickr

British Columbia is looking to the Far East to find more of a future for the forestry industry, as the sector continues to be hammered by escalating tariffs from its biggest trading partner. …“We’re looking at a difficult situation because so much of our timber…was ultimately bound for United States markets,” said John Jack, chief councillor of the Huu-ay-aht First Nations. “Because of the tariffs that’s dried up demand.” North of Huu-ay-aht territory sits Port Alberni, a hub of the region’s logging activity. But over the last generation the town has seen a succession of mill closures. “I’m a huge proponent of diversifying our markets because then we’re not so reliant on a country whose decision makers are not necessarily predictable and stable. I think of all the countries in the world, in places like Japan and South Korea stability are virtues,” he said. “I find that compatible with Maa-nulth culture.”   

Read More

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s new forestry sector aid helps, shy of new softwood lumber deal

By Derrick Penner
Vancouver Sun
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Mark Carney

B.C.’s forest sector counted Prime Minister Mark Carney’s latest round of support for their industry that was unveiled Wednesday, including $500 million in new funding for loans, as helpful. …Kim Haakstad, CEO of B.C.’s Council of Forest Industries said the measures Carney unveiled Wednesday in Ottawa “reflect an important recognition of the role forestry and forest products play in the economic strength of Canada.” …In Victoria, B.C. Forest Minister Ravi Parmar welcomed Carney’s commitment to create a forest sector transformation task force, among the measures. …How effective the programs are, though, will depend on how quickly the support can reach companies on the ground. …“The best way out of this is some sort of trade agreement between Canada and the United States,” Independent Wood Producers Association’s Brian Menzies said. “Because our industry doesn’t want to be bailed out. We don’t want support. We actually just want to do our business.”

In related coverage:

Read More

B.C. forests minister calls new federal lumber industry supports ‘a good start’

By Mark Page
Nanaimo Bulletin
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar @BCgov

B.C. ministers expressed conflicting feelings about a range of tariff response measures announced by the federal government on Wednesday, Nov. 26. On the one hand, an additional $1 billion is being offered to support the forest industry, which faces 45 per cent combined tariffs and duties on softwood lumber. The money for lumber is split into two $500 million funds, one for a loan program for companies through the Business Development Bank of Canada, and the other through a tariff loan program. This money comes in addition to $1.2 billion in previously announced support. It is not known how much of this money will wind up in B.C. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar reckons that if it is fairly distributed, B.C. would get about 50 per cent. Parmar applauded this extra support being announced so soon after federal tariff envoy Dominic LeBlanc came to B.C. for a forestry summit.

Read More

Williams Lake mayor says city ‘blindsided’ by pellet plant closure

By Ruth Lloyd
The Williams Lake Tribune
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

©Drax

The closure of a Williams Lake wood pellet plant “blindsided” the city, according to Mayor Surinderpal Rathor. The shut down is being attributed to a combination of external market and supply chain pressures, making operations at the location “no longer commercially viable” according to comments from Caroline Bleay, communications manager for Drax in Canada. The Drax-owned wood pellet plant…announced the planned closure of the Williams Lake facility to staff and the public on Nov. 26, impacting 30 direct employees and a number of contractors. Rathor said the city had reached out to the company after hearing rumours of a potential closure, but hadn’t gotten a response. The city supported Atlantic Power’s Williams Lake Biomass Plant to secure viable contracts after they announce a possible closure…. Rathor said the city would have worked to try and help Drax as well had they been in the know.

Read More

New Brunswick woodlot owner says current tariff situation not sustainable for forestry industry

By Laura Brown
CTV News
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Private woodlot owner Andrew Clark says this year is one of the toughest he’s seen in the six decades he’s worked in the woods. For him, sales are ‘maybe 50 per cent’ of what they were last year. “It is the lack of markets which are the result of the tremendous uncertainty that the industry is in now because of the actions of the American government,” he said. He feels some of the federal government’s new supports – announced this week – could help. Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Wednesday a $500-million increase to the previously announced Softwood Lumber Development Program, which gives companies access to government-backed loans, totaling $1.2 billion. He also said Ottawa is working with railway companies to cut freight rates when transporting Canadian lumber across the country by 50 per cent. But Clark says the current situation – with the U.S. duties and tariffs amounting to 45 per cent – isn’t sustainable.

Read More

Unifor Submission to Bill 46 Protect Ontario by Cutting Red Tape Act

By Samia Hashi, Ontario Regional Director, Unifor
Unifor Canada
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

I am writing regarding Bill 46, Protect Ontario by Cutting Red Tape Act, 2025, specifically regarding proposed amendments to the Crown Forest Sustainability Act, 1994. Unifor’s 24,000 forestry sector members – including more than 4,000 in Ontario – work in a variety of forestry, logging, and firefighting occupations as well as wood product, bioenergy and pulp and paper manufacturing facilities. Ontario’s forestry sector continues to experience a perfect storm of repeated and intersecting crises… and global challenges continues to destabilize the broader sector. The ongoing softwood lumber dispute and … intensified trade war are causing disastrous repercussions across the forestry sector. …Defending and rebuilding Canada’s forestry sector requires a comprehensive industrial strategy, spearheaded by the federal and provincial governments and informed by all relevant stakeholders, especially workers. It is in this context that I wish to provide some comments on Bill 46, Protect Ontario by Cutting Red Tape Act, 2025, especially regarding related amendments to the Crown Forest Sustainability Act, 1994 (CFSA).

Read More

Shockwaves felt in N.B. forestry sector as Maine mill halts Canadian imports

By Aidan Cox
CBC News
November 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

A 10 per cent tariff that U.S. President Donald Trump slapped on timber imports this fall has prompted at least one mill in Maine to suspend shipments from New Brunswick, sending shockwaves through parts of the province’s forestry industry. Woodland Pulp LLC halted its purchases of New Brunswick timber starting Oct. 14, in light of the new tariff on softwood and certain hardwood timber, said company spokesperson Scott Beal. “It certainly adds cost to the business and, you know, like other wood users, I mean we’re always looking and hoping and trying to source fibre at the least cost,” Beal said. Beal said the company’s purchase of wood had already been reduced in recent months due to a downturn in the global pulp market. That downturn more recently prompted the company to pause receiving wood for 60 days, in addition to a planned 26-day long suspension of operations at its Baileyville, Me., which started over the weekend.

Read More

The American Building Materials Alliance Unveils Federal Housing Proposal: Building Homes, Not Costs

American Building Materials Alliance
December 1, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Rensselaer, N.Y.—The American Building Materials Alliance (ABMA) announced the national rollout of its federal housing proposal, Building Homes, Not Costs—a comprehensive plan designed to tackle drivers of America’s housing affordability crisis. The proposal has already earned the support of more than 200 businesses and organizations nationwide and has been shared with senior White House staff. “Families can’t afford new homes when red tape and mandates pile up,” said ABMA chair and vice president of human resources at Hammond Lumber Company Rod Wiles. “This plan tackles both and puts affordability front and center, allowing builders to deliver homes within reach for the average American family.” The rollout follows ABMA Director of Government Affairs Francis Palasieski’s address to legislative leaders from across the country during the State Government Affairs Council (SGAC) Policy Leaders Conference, where he outlined ABMA’s vision for restoring housing affordability by cutting red tape and reducing government-driven costs.

Read More

Roy O. Martin III surprised with Louisiana Tech Honorary Doctor

Louisiana Tech University News
December 26, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

Louisiana Tech University conferred an honorary doctorate of Humanities for Roy O. Martin III, chairman and CEO of RoyOMartin in recognition of his decades of leadership, service, and his transformational support of the University’s Forestry program. Martin was honored in a surprise ceremony by President Jim Henderson and College of Applied and Natural Sciences Dean Gary Kennedy. The presentation took place at Martin’s retirement celebration as CEO of RoyOMartin… Martin’s partnership with Louisiana Tech has had a profound impact on the University’s academic and research enterprise. His vision and advocacy were instrumental in the development of the Forest Products Innovation Center, a facility now under construction on Tech’s South Campus. Set to open in Fall 2026, the FPIC will advance forestry education, research, and cutting-edge discovery while supporting interdisciplinary research and workforce development tied to one of Louisiana’s most essential industries.

Read More

Radovich named forest industries executive VP

By Lee Bloomquist
Mesabi Tribune
November 28, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

Tom Radovich

Minnesota’s forest products producers will have a new leader representing the industry. Tom Radovich has been named incoming Minnesota Forest Industries (MFI) executive vice president. Radovich, formerly operations manager at Sappi paper mill in Cloquet, takes over Dec. 9 for Rick Horton, retiring MFI executive vice president. …Radovich has decades of experience in the forest products industry. Radovich holds a bachelor’s degree in Paper Science and Engineering from the University of Minnesota in the Twin Cities. He has 30 years of experience at the Sappi mill. …MFI is a trade organization that represents Minnesota’s primary forest products mills. Minnesota’s forest products industry is the fifth largest sector in the state, employing more than 72,500 people with gross sales over $26 billion annually, according to MFI. However, like many other industries and businesses, the forest products industry is facing workforce challenges.

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canada Wood Market Insights – December 2025

Canada Wood Group
December 2, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

B.C.’s largest-ever forestry trade mission to Asia wrapped up with strong momentum, as more than 60 delegates from government, First Nations, industry, and labour traveled through Japan and South Korea to strengthen partnerships and open new market opportunities. Organized by FII and Canada Wood, with support from BC Wood and the Wood Pellet Association of Canada, the mission showcased B.C.’s innovation, sustainable forestry practices, and high-value wood products. Key outcomes included new Memoranda of Understanding with Japan’s 2×4 Home Builders Association to expand mid-rise and non-residential wood construction, and with Korea’s Land and Housing Research Institute to advance wood and hybrid building systems in public housing. Additional highlights spanned other priority markets: an award-winning Canadian hemlock pavilion unveiled in Beijing, growing demand for B.C. cedar and hemlock in India’s luxury wellness sector, and industry workshops in Japan promoting Canada’s coastal Hem-Fir. The newsletter captures a busy and highly productive month for B.C.’s global wood-products outreach.

Read More

United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners of America Delivering Nationwide Mass Timber Training

By Carpenters’ Regional Council
Cision Newswire
December 1, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

VAUGHAN, ON- As Canada’s construction industry evolves towards more sustainable and efficient building methods, the United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners of America (UBC) is training workers for the future with the UBC Sustainable Jobs Mass Timber Project. The UBC Sustainable Jobs Mass Timber Project, funded by Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) as part of the Union Training and Innovation Program (UTIP), will establish 10 mass timber training modules delivered at select UBC training centres across Canada. …These training modules will equip UBC members with specialized skills in hoisting and rigging, mass timber product handling and assembly, and exterior envelope and curtain wall installation – areas that are critical to the success of modular, mass timber construction projects. Each course is designed to combine classroom instruction with hands-on training, allowing participants to gain practical experience using the latest mass timber technologies and techniques.

Read More

Mass timber keeps performance high and costs low

naturally:wood
November 27, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

This month’s update from naturally:wood spotlights some of the most impressive recent advances in mass-timber construction in B.C. — including the striking example of The Confluence in Castlegar. As one of Canada’s first public-spaces to combine mass timber with Passive House certification, it shows how high-performance design, local wood and smart planning can deliver efficient, beautiful civic buildings. You’ll also find cutting-edge guidance from Canadian Wood Council and WoodWorks BC on light-frame mid-rise construction for high-seismic zones — including high-capacity shearwall systems and lightweight floor assemblies that keep costs down without compromising safety. Plus, don’t miss a look at the rapid-construction prowess of a six-storey timber hotel at Penticton Lakeside Resort and Conference Centre — completed in under a year using CLT panels and tall-timber framing. This issue proves how timber, innovation and local expertise are shaping the future of sustainable construction in B.C.

Read More

$60M mass timber office in the works for Penticton’s Innovation District

By Grant Cameron
Journal of Commerce
November 28, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

©naturally.wood

Plans are in the works for a six-storey mass timber office building in Penticton, B.C., which the developer says could serve as a blueprint for more climate-conscious designs across the province. The $60-million structure is proposed for the Innovation District, a new master-planned community between Okanagan and Skaha lakes, and located across from Penticton Regional Hospital. The building, dubbed Nexus, will feature retail, medical and office space as well as day care space and offices tailored to medical and professional tenants. “The Innovation District master plan for Penticton envisions a 10-acre mixed-use community with more than 1,500 homes, offices, medical services, retail and more,” explains Rocky Sethi, managing director with Stryke Group, developer of the venture. “Nexus is a key piece of that.” He says Nexus was born from a vision of sustainable, modern development, backed by provincial support. The project received a $500,000 grant through B.C.’s Forestry Innovation Investment.

Read More

Forestry

Forest Stewardship Council News and Views

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
December 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The December edition — issued by FSC Canada — includes several major updates: the Canadian home-improvement and construction retailer RONA has become the first such retailer in Canada to use DoorDash for distribution; there’s news that Chantiers Chibougamau reaffirmed its commitment to FSC certification; Esri donated $1.65 million worth of geospatial technology to FSC; and there are recap highlights from the 2025 General Assembly in Panama. The newsletter also announces the launch of a new registry for certificate holders (ES Registry), publishes a new “Advice Note” on Indicator 55 of the Risk Assessment Framework, and opens two major consultations — one on Indigenous Cultural Landscapes and another to revise FSC’s Chain-of-Custody standards.

Read More

Christmas tree farmers forced to adapt to climate change and affordability crisis

By Tyler Cheese
CBC News
November 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Modern-day circumstances are slowly transforming the Christmas tree farming industry. …weather is a challenge Michael Cormack faces on the Christmas tree farm he owns and operates in Ontario. … “Mother nature is a big, big factor in the business,” Cormack said. “This year in July, we were averaging over 29 C. So we had trees from two to three years ago that just died. … Four years ago, we had a tornado here that wiped out a bunch of our stuff.” …Another major factor is the cost of living crisis. …“Right now many of the farms are owned by elderly growers, and they’re aging out. So we’re losing a lot of farms year after year, which is unfortunate,” said Kelsey Leonard, founder and director of the Christmas Tree Lab at the University of Waterloo. …U.S. tariffs are also likely to have an impact on the costs associated with growing Christmas trees this year, Leonard said.

Related coverage from UBC Faculty of Forestry: How Warming Winters Could Reshape B.C.’s Christmas Tree Choices

Read More

Dr. Shawn Mansfield Named Distinguished University Scholar

By the Faculty of Forestry
The University of British Columbia
December 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

University of British Columbia’s Faculty of Forestry wishes to congratulate Dr. Shawn Mansfield on being named a UBC Distinguished University Scholar! The Distinguished University Scholar (DUS) awards recognize exceptional members of faculty who have distinguished themselves as scholars in research and/or teaching and learning. Dr. Shawn Mansfield is a leading expert in tree biotechnology, focusing on the relationship between gene expression and phenotypic traits related to cell wall development. His research spans plant metabolism, including cellulose and lignin biosynthesis, sucrose metabolism, and overall tree metabolism. He also explores how trees interact with their environment, investigating their potential for remediation of anthropogenic contaminants such as phosphorus, salt, and heavy metals. Conferred by the President every two years, DUS appointees receive one-time research support in the amount of $20,000, plus a stipend of $20,000 per year for five years. 

Read More

Western Forestry Contractors’ Association 2026 Annual Conference, Tradeshow & AGM

By John Betts
Western Forestry Contractors’ Association
December 2, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Kim Connors

Jason Fisher

Derek Nighbor

We’re excited to introduce the first lineup of speakers joining us for the 2026 WFCA Conference! This year’s program brings together industry leaders, researchers, policy experts, and innovators who will share insight into the challenges and opportunities shaping the future of forestry in Western Canada. Their expertise will support meaningful dialogue and actionable takeaways for everyone—from field contractors to licensees to government partners. 

  • Kim Connors, Former Executive Director, Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre
  • Jason Fisher, Executive Director, the Forest Enhancement Society of BC
  • Derek Nighbor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Forest Products Association of Canada

Read More

Forest History Association of BC – Annual General Meeting Tonight

Forest History Association of BC
December 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Forest History Association of BC is hosting its 43rd Annual General Meeting tonight, December 1, 2025 at 7:00 pm PST. All members are warmly invited to attend this virtual gathering and take part in shaping the direction of the organization for the coming year. The AGM will include key updates on current projects, board activities and election, and ongoing efforts to preserve and share BC’s forest and community history. For those interested in learning more about the FHABC’s mission—promoting research, storytelling, and education about the province’s rich forest heritage—visit their objectives page here. Members are encouraged to join the meeting via the link in the >>Read More and support the continued work of this unique and important BC organization.

Read More

Cheakamus Community Forest embraces climate-driven shift toward ‘more complex and resilient’ ecosystems

By Luke Faulks
Pique News Magazine
December 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Cheakamus Community Forest (CCF) is moving toward a more climate-driven forest management strategy, following a climate-risk assessment that forecasts significantly higher wildfire activity, worsening drought and increasing tree stress across much of the tenure through mid-century. The findings, prepared by Frontera Forest Solutions, Inc., mark the beginning of an operational shift for the 33,000-hectare tenure jointly managed by the Resort Municipality of Whistler, Lil’wat Nation and Squamish Nation. “[The assessment] identified going out to 2060 where the community forest is going to become more at risk due to climate change and from our key risks, which are wildfire and drought. And on the heels of those things, when the forest is stressed, pest infestation comes,” said CCF executive director Heather Beresford. …CCF plans to release its 2026 harvest plan by year-end, with draft 2027 plans to follow. The climate resiliency plan will play into the CCF’s harvest plans moving forward.

Read More

Open letter to Premier Eby: concern for the fate of B.C.’s remaining old growth

Letter by Carol Latter, Kimberly, BC
East Kootenay News Weekly e-KNOW
November 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

I am writing to express my concern for the fate of B.C.’s remaining old growth forests, including the globally rare and at-risk Inland Temperate Rainforest.  Most of this endangered forest is still not protected, and thus all creatures who dwell therein are equally unprotected. The Valhalla Wilderness Society … is putting forth a plan to protect the remaining intact Inland Temperate Rainforests through its three park proposals: the Rainbow-Jordan Wilderness proposal; the Selkirk Mountains Ancient Forest Park proposal; and the Quesnel Lake Wilderness proposal. This protection is crucial for the survival of these rare temperate rainforests. David Eby, you are undoubtedly well informed as to the many scientific reasons for protecting more forest, especially old growth forests…Importantly, only the BC Park Act and the BC Protected Areas Act can provide secure protection to preserve forest for future generations. Please adopt and implement the VWS park proposals as quickly as possible. 

Read More

Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

By Jason Fisher
Forest Enhancement Society of BC
November 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jason Fisher

British Columbia’s forests play a key role in mitigating the impacts of climate change and contributing to a more sustainable future. At FESBC, we are proud to invest in projects that contribute to the health and resiliency of B.C.’s forests for generations, which in turn generate lasting economic and social benefits for our local communities while helping take action on this global issue. 

In this newsletter:
  • A Safety Tip from our friends at the BC Forest Safety Council. 
  • An opportunity to submit an Expression of Interest for projects due November 30, 2025.
  • A Special Feature on Indigenous youth at the heart of wildfire resilience.
  • A news release on the work done by East Fraser Fiber to maximize the recovery and utilization of uneconomical fibre.
  • Meet our Faces of Forestry featured person, Jake Power.

Read More

Protesters return to Upper Walbran logging blockade after arrests

By Michael John Lo
Victoria Times Colonist
November 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A game of cat-and-mouse between old-growth activists and RCMP is unfolding in the Upper Walbran Valley, after police cleared a blockade on Tuesday and arrested four people, but were unable to prevent protesters from retaking the road and re-establishing the blockade overnight.  Fresh fires burned around a ­five-metre-tall cougar sculpture overnight as protesters built a wooden barrier on a forestry road where protesters have been camped out since late August. Police were back at the site Wednesday morning, working to extricate ­people who had chained themselves to the barrier to prevent logging in the valley. …The cut blocks, which hold an ­estimated $3 million in harvestable timber, are in Pacheedaht territory, and the nation stands to receive stumpage ­revenue from the logging. Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership is a joint venture between Western Forest Products Inc. and a company controlled by the Huu-ay-aht First Nations, with Western Forest Products as the majority shareholder. 

In CTV News by Anna McMillan: RCMP continue enforcement at logging blockade on Vancouver Island

Read More

North Cowichan’s council vote on public forests was 7-0

By Robert Barron
The Cowichan Valley Citizen
November 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

North Cowichan, BC — The vote for North Cowichan to reaffirm its commitment to the development of a co-management plan for the municipal forest reserve with the Quw’utsun Nation at the meeting on Nov. 19 was unanimous. Coun. Bruce Findlay did advocate for the municipality to develop a five-year forestry plan for the 5,000 hectare MFR without committing to forestry activities, and including other options for revenue generation, while in discussions with the Quw’utsun Nation on the co-management plan at the same time. “It’s just a little more prescriptive in how we move forward in parallel tracks along the way,” he said. …But the motion didn’t preclude the option of resuming harvesting in some form in the MFR at a later date in conjunction with the Quw’utsun Nation, which includes Cowichan Tribes, Halalt First Nation, Lyackson First Nation, Penelakut Tribe, and Stz’uminus First Nation.

Read More

New Brunswick researchers find lichen species in most eastern place on record

By Oliver Pearson
CBC News
November 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Researchers with the Nature Trust of New Brunswick are on the hunt for four different types of lichens and they’ve found one – in an unusual spot. The scaly fringe lichen, known scientifically as heterodermia squamulosa, was found between Alma and Riverside-Albert, east of Fundy National Park. “As far as I know, it’s the most eastern recorded occurrence of the species to date,” said Ilana Urquhart, a conservation coordinator with the Nature Trust. …Urquhart said lichens can be a good indicator of a healthy environment that can support a variety of species. “We might not directly see what the importance of them is, but they’re often found in areas that are really rich, that are biodiverse.” The biggest threat to lichens is habitat loss, according to Urquhart, which can be caused by logging and harvesting.

Read More

Forest Service sued by conservation orgs over Nolichucky River logging

By Ryley Ober
Asheville Citizen Times
December 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

North Carolina — Two conservation organizations sued the U.S. Forest Service alleging the agency unlawfully entered into a contract with a logger to harvest timber near the Nolichucky River in the Pisgah National Forest, including within 20 acres of old-growth forest. The lawsuit claims the U.S. Forest Service sold timber through an unauthorized salvage logging operation on 135 acres of national forest land as part of post-Tropical Storm Helene debris removal within the Nolichucky River Gorge, which runs along North Carolina’s northwestern border with Tennessee. Helene caused “moderate to catastrophic” damage to more than 187,000 acres of national forest land, totaling around $44 million in lost vegetation and land damage in the Pisgah and Nantahala National Forests. The Southern Environmental Law Center filed the suit Nov. 6 in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina on behalf of the Center for Biological Diversity and MountainTrue. 

Read More

Grazing goats could replace herbicides

By Mick Zawislak
The Daily Herald
December 1, 2025
Category: Forestry

Illinois — Four-legged reinforcements may be enlisted to help battle invasive buckthorn in Lake County forest preserves. The idea is in the formative stage, but forest district commissioners appear amenable to launching a pilot program to determine if grazing goats or sheep can help manage the pesky invaders. Buckthorn and other woody invasive species are considered among the greatest threats to natural areas across the region, and in Lake County comprise more than 52% of all trees, according to the Lake County Forest Preserve District. …“While grazing is not anticipated to fully replace herbicides or other invasive control practices, it could provide a potential alternative to accomplish objectives in a cost-effective manner,” according to information being presented this week to forest board committees. The pilot agreement likely would allow six to eight sheep or goats to graze on two or three acres of district land for up to four years. 

Read More

Logging is less valuable to B.C. communities and the B.C. economy than tourism

Letter by Megan Ardyche
The Comox Valley Record
November 26, 2025
Category: Forestry

Conservative Forestry Critic Ward Stamer wants to decrease regulation of the logging industry and an increase to the annual allowable cut. Logging proponents love to cite how important and valuable the industry is to B.C. communities. The reality, however, is quite different. Here are some figures that show clearly – in almost every metric – that logging is less valuable to B.C. communities and the B.C. economy than tourism. … These figures of the logging industry are from 2022 and the tourism figures are from 2022 and 2023, so they are roughly comparable. Tourism employed over 125,700 people; logging and related industry employed approximately 100,000. Tourism resulted in $5.9 billion in wages and salaries in 2023, 11.8 per cent higher than in 2022; Logging and related industries resulted in approximately $9.1 billion. There were 16,860 tourism businesses in operation in 2023, mostly in small communities, many of them remote and, increasingly, more of them Indigenous owned.

Read More

Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Arctic Bioenergy Summit and Tour: Advancing Renewable Energy in Canada’s North

By Gordon Murray and Mark Heyck
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
November 27, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, will host a premier in-person event for Canada’s bioenergy sector from January 26 to 28, 2026—the Arctic Bioenergy Summit and Tour. Organized by the Arctic Energy Alliance (AEA) and the Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC), and sponsored by the Government of Northwest Territories (GNWT), with media sponsor Canadian Biomass. This event is in lieu of the 2026 edition of the online Northwest Territories Biomass Week, traditionally held the last week of January, which attracts upwards of 300 participants each year. The event, which profiles Sustainable Bioenergy for Northern Communities: Reliable. Affordable. Local., kicks off with a full-day tour of civic buildings, schools, and community centres across Yellowknife, to look at how bioenergy is reducing reliance on fossil fuels in northern climates. Following the tour is a two-day Summit filled with informative presentations by speakers from the Northwest Territories, across the rest of Canada, and as far away as Alaska and Finland. 

Read More

Domtar, Eastman to continue reporting certain gases despite Environmental Protection Agency plans

By Jorgelina Manna-Rea
The Times News
November 26, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US East

Domtar Corp. and Eastman Chemical Co. said they will continue to record and report climate-warming emissions even with the Environmental Protection Agency’s move to end a reporting program for them. The EPA’s Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program, which went into effect in 2010, requires about 8,000 facilities to annually report their greenhouse gas emissions. That includes chemical plants and pulp and paper manufacturing facilities like Eastman and Domtar’s Kingsport locations. …Domtar said in a statement to Six Rivers Media that it plans to continue reporting greenhouse gas data and reducing those emissions are part of the company’s objectives. “Many of our customers and stakeholders are concerned about climate issues, and carbon footprints are increasingly being considered in purchasing decisions,” said Jan Martin, Domtar’s director of U.S. Public Affairs. …Other industry trade groups have shared their own concerns over the end of the program, saying it could complicate their processes or add new costs. 

Read More

Health & Safety

Recognizing Safety Excellence: WPAC Names Michael Fantillo of Premium Pellet as a Safety Hero

By Gordon Murray, executive director
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
December 1, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

Michael Fantillo

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada is proud to announce its latest Safety Hero: Michael Fantillo, Production Supervisor with Premium Pellet in Vanderhoof, British Columbia (a part of Sinclar Group Forest Products). Michael’s notable dedication makes his workplace safer for his coworkers. Over the past two years, Michael has successfully led his four-shift team to maintain a recordable incident-free workplace. He hosts every monthly safety meeting, ensuring that all employees are fully engaged as active participants in Premium Pellets’ Safety Culture. Michael also organizes annual safety drills, reinforcing preparedness and fostering a safety culture. Alongside his operational responsibilities, Michael also serves as co-chair of the Nechako Lumber/Premium Pellet Joint Health and Safety Committee. “Michael consistently goes above and beyond,” says Tim Boyes, Environmental, Health & Safety Manager, Lumber Operations with Sinclar. “He leads by example and ensures the team keeps safety top of mind.”

Read More

Forest Safety from the BC Forest Safety Council

BC Forest Safety Council
November 27, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

The December issue of Forest Safety News is here, bringing timely insights and practical tools for safer forestry work this winter. One standout feature explores how RPAS drones are transforming field safety, reducing worker exposure during steep-slope layout, post-fire assessments, and difficult terrain navigation. It’s a look at technology that’s not just impressive — it’s making real crews safer in real time. This issue also recaps the 18th Annual Vancouver Island Safety Conference, where powerful keynote speakers shared stories of perseverance, leadership, and the importance of mental and physical well-being. The message was clear: safety culture is built person by person, conversation by conversation. You’ll also find a useful update on winter driving and hauling preparedness, including tips for planning routes, managing changing conditions, and supporting drivers during the toughest season of the year. Packed with practical advice, inspiring stories, and forward-looking innovations, this issue offers a strong finish to 2025 for BC’s forest sector.

Read More