Blog Archives

Today’s Takeaway

New Brunswick timber companies appeal to have their land excluded from Wolastoqey title claim

The Tree Frog Forestry News
June 19, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Three New Brunswick timber companies are appealing to have their land excluded from Wolastoqey title claim. In other Business news: Weyerhaeuser breaks ground on its Arkansas TimberStrand plant; Sierra Pacific invests to upgrade its Eugene, Washington sawmill; and DS Smith employs biomass waste to power its Normandy, France paper mill.

In Economic & Finance news, perspectives abound courtesy of:

In Forestry news: FPAC welcomes G7 wildfire commitment; Oregon researchers monitor forest health; Yellowstone’s wolf reintroduction program is having an impact; what’s at stake for Alaska with Trump’s Big, Beautiful Bill; a new UN report on planting fast-growing trees; and changes to urban tree management comes to Whistler, BC and Portland, Oregon.

Finally, researchers turn forestry-waste into biopharmaceuticals, and agri-waste into cellulose fibres.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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US Housing Starts Fall 10% Amid Gloomy Builder Sentiment

The Tree Frog Forestry News
June 18, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

US housings starts fell 10% in May as US home builder sentiment sunk to its lowest level since 2022. In Business news: Mercer’s Peace River pulp mill is targeted for carbon sequestration; the defunct Ponderay Newsprint Mill assets are for sale; and International Timber & Veneer is closing its Pennsylvania facility. Meanwhile: Kelowna’s mass timber airport roof is complete; and Ireland considers Wood First Plan to solve its housing crisis.

In Forestry/Wildfire news: the G7 Leaders boost cooperation with Wildfire Charter; Canada’s wildfire crisis in displacing First Nations; BC Minister Parmar is appointed Canadian Council of Forest Ministers’ chair; David Elstone’s out of the box idea for wildfire resiliency; a BC logging contractor is fined for grave site damage; and wildfire updates from California, BC and Newfoundland.

Finally, June is National Safety Month in the US, and wildfire smoke can hurt your brain.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Canada’s Competition Act stifles corporate environmental efforts: McCain

Tree Frog Forestry News
June 17, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Michael McCain says Canada’s Competition Act stifles corporate environmental efforts. In related news: the Fraser Institute says rhetoric dominates Canada’s climate debate; the WWF says Ottawa’s focus on nation-building threatens nature; land ownership stifles carbon investments in the Philippines; and Iceland’s Mammoth carbon project is falling short. In Business news: the global economic burden of wildfires is staggering; New Zealand seeks forest trade with India; and the tallest timber tower in the Western Hemisphere breaks ground in Milwaukee.

In Forestry news: Manitoba, Saskatchewan and BC report progress on wildfires; California invests in forest health and resilience; an Oregon bill seeks new way to fund firefighting; a New York bill promotes forest easements; an ENGO lawsuit targets logging in North Carolina; and some species adapt to the boreal’s wildfire cycles—while others struggle.

Finally, wondering how bad the mosquitoes might be this summer? Try a skeeter meter!

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Froggy Foibles

This National Park uses a ‘Skeeter Meter’ to inform visitors about mosquitoes

By Laura Baisas
Popular Science
June 16, 2025
Category: Froggy Foibles
Region: United States, US East

Taking a peek at the UV index to gauge how much sunscreen and protective clothing to wear is par for the course during the summer. But predicting just how bad mosquitoes might be is another story. For visitors to the National Park unfairly voted the worst to visit due to its many mosquitoes, there is a way to anticipate just how bad these biters may be. The Mosquito Meter or “Skeeter Meter” at Congaree National Park near Columbia, South Carolina has six levels: All Clear, Mild, Moderate, Severe, Ruthless, and War Zone. …With the Skeeter Meter and educating people about safely visiting Congaree, the park has embraced their reputation for mosquitoes instead of fighting it. At least 20 different mosquito species are found in this park, which includes the largest remaining intact expanse of old growth bottomland hardwood forest in the southeastern United States. …To protect wildlife and biodiversity in the park, it will not spray pesticides to control the mosquito population.

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Business & Politics

Kananaskis Wildfire Charter

By the Prime Minister of Canada’s Office
Cision Newswire
June 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

KANANASKIS, AB – We, the Leaders of the G7, are deeply concerned that the world has experienced record-breaking wildfires across every forested continent over the past decade, often overwhelming available national resources and requiring governments to request assistance from other countries. These wildfires are endangering lives, affecting human health, destroying homes and ecosystems, and costing governments and taxpayers billions of dollars each year. We resolve to boost global cooperation to prevent, fight and recover from wildfires by taking integrated action to reduce the incidence and negative impacts of wildfires and ensure our readiness to help each other, and partners, when needed. We will take steps to prevent and mitigate the occurrence of wildfires by:

  • Adopting a whole of society approach… to share knowledge and drive research on reducing risks.
  • Implementing mitigation and adaptation actions… that reduce the risk of extreme wildfires…
  • Raising awareness of the different causes of wildfires and measures to prevent them….

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Canadian Institute of Forestry seeks Executive Director

The Canadian Institute of Forestry
June 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

The Institute is seeking an enthusiastic individual to provide strategic and operational leadership as Executive Director. The Executive Director leads the Canadian Institute of Forestry / Institut forestier du Canada (CIF-IFC), guiding the organization through strategic growth and operational excellence. This role ensures the long-term sustainability of the Institute through sound governance, financial stewardship, and stakeholder engagement. The Executive Director works closely with a small team, the Executive Committee, and a broad national network of members, volunteers and partners. They are accountable to the Board of Directors and collaborate with committees, staff, members, sponsors, and regions across Canada. This is a full-time, remote position. Individuals with the requisite qualifications are invited to apply by July 21, 2025.

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Historic court sentencing at shíshálh longhouse sees $230,000 in fines issued for grave site damages

By Connie Jordison
The Sunshine Coast Reporter
June 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

A contractor hired to oversee logging on a Sechelt property and that site’s numbered company owner were sentenced for violations of the Heritage Conservation Act June 16, in the first ever B.C. Provincial Court sitting held at the shíshálh Nation longhouse.   Grant Starrs, 55, of Sechelt and 0990199 B.C. Ltd. both pleaded guilty to the 2020 disruption of an identified heritage site. That area was occupied by the graves of 49 shíshálh people, according to federal Crown counsel Molly Greene.  Provincial Court Judge Robert Hamilton accepted the joint submission of the Crown and defence attorneys, and fined the company $200,000, payable within five business days. Starrs was fined $30,000 and given 90 days to pay. Each is also to pay a victim surcharge of 15 per cent of their fine amounts. …In issuing his decision, Hamilton stated the fine to the company was four times higher than previous ones issued for such violations of the Heritage Conservation Act.

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Minister Parmar’s statement on Canadian Council of Forest Ministers chair appointment

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
June 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar

Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests, released the following statement on the annual meeting of the Canadian Council of Forest Ministers (CCFM): I met with federal, provincial and territorial forest ministers from across Canada… It’s an honour to take on the role of incoming chair of the CCFM for the upcoming year. I want to thank the Honourable Lisa Dempster, Minister of Fisheries, Forests and Agriculture for Newfoundland and Labrador, for her leadership over the past year. …My priority will always be to put people first. Whether it’s protecting their homes from wildfire, adding more local jobs or ensuring forestry continues to be a source of pride and prosperity for our rural, remote and First Nations communities, this work must be rooted in the well-being of people. …The ongoing threat of U.S. softwood lumber tariffs continues to unfairly impact workers, families and communities in Canada. I’m committed to … push back against these unjust trade actions…

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Sierra Pacific reportedly plans $253 million investment to revamp mill

By Larry Adams
Woodworking Network
June 17, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

EUGENE, Oregon — Sierra Pacific Industries plans to spend $253 million on upgrades to its Eugene, Oregon, sawmill site, according to published reports. The Register Guard newspaper reported that the current sawmill houses three production lines in three separate buildings, and it plans to reconstruct the lines to be under one roof making the sawmill more efficient, and, as a result, retain its employees. …Sierra Pacific was awarded tax breaks as part of the Oregon Strategic Investment Program (SIP), which allows businesses to forgo paying property taxes for 15 years on capital investments, such as new equipment. Investments beyond the first $100 million are exempt from property tax for 15 years. Sierra Pacific would see savings of about $7.9 million during that time. In exchange, Sierra Pacific promises to maintain its current staff of 347 employees at the site for the SIP period, and pay a “service fee” worth 25% of its property tax savings to the local non-education governments. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

2025 Global Buyers Mission Update and Newsletter

BC Wood Specialties Group
June 19, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The Annual GBM is fast approaching, and we are happy to announce that this September 4th to 6th, we will once again invite international buyers and specifiers to meet our Canadian suppliers in Whistler, to celebrate our 22nd Anniversary! If you have not received your invitation link, email us at gbm@bcwood.com to receive it. Space is limited and only registered exhibitors get an opportunity to participate in our Sponsorship opportunities.  We are introducing the New Product Showcase, where all registered Exhibitors will be invited to present their innovations in a dedicated area on the show floor. We are expecting many new buyers this year. With the help of our overseas staff, along with the continued support of the federal International Trade Commissioner Service and the provincial Trade & Investment Representatives abroad, we anticipate a strong international attendance.

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Groundbreaking Held For Tallest Mass Timber Tower in the Western Hemisphere

By Jeramey Jannene
Urban Milwaukee
June 16, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US East

A record-breaking apartment tower is under construction in Milwaukee. Neutral Edison will be the tallest mass timber building in the Western Hemisphere when completed in 2027. The 31-story building on Edison Street will include 353 high-end apartments and loads of environmentally-friendly features. Once complete, it will eclipse the height of the current world record holder, the 25-story Ascent building located just a half mile east. [Another building is] under construction in Sydney, Australia and is expected to claim the world record, limiting The Edison’s claim to the Western Hemisphere. …Neutral estimates that the carbon footprint of the building’s construction materials will be 54% lower than a structure built using conventional materials. It estimates that the building’s operational carbon footprint and energy consumption will be 45% lower. The firm intends to pursue Living Building Challenge 4.0 Core Certification and Passive House certification using the PHIUS 2021 Core Standard to formally measure the building’s environmental friendliness.

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Turning Forestry Waste into Biopharmaceuticals

By Mike May
Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News
June 18, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Although a casual observer just sees the bark on a tree, a lumber expert might envision the potential for boards inside, thinking of the bark largely as waste. In many cases, bark does turn into waste in the logging industry. That’s lots of waste, because bark can account for up to 15% of a tree’s weight, and “only a fraction of this is currently being utilized, primarily for landscaping or for energy; the rest is left at the harvest or handling site to naturally decompose,” according to Sumanth Ranganathan, Dr.-Ing, a biochemical engineer at Scion, a research institute in Rotorua, New Zealand, and his colleagues. For some trees, though, that wasted bark is a potential treasure-trove of biopharmaceuticals, from anti-inflammatories to cancer-fighting drugs. …Each year, the country’s logging industry produces about 2.5 million metric tons of bark. Ranganathan’s team envisions feeding that into a bark-based biorefinery.

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Materials rethink underpins architecture’s sustainability push

By Edwin Heathcote
The Financial Times
June 19, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The ultimate problem for architects is that the most sustainable building is always the one that is already there. There is a huge amount written about green buildings, much of it nonsense. There is some confusion about buildings layered in vines and living walls, and buildings that actually are green. Contemporary architecture’s issue is mostly embodied in one material: concrete. …The rate at which we are still using it is astonishing: half of all the stuff manufactured by weight is concrete. From 2011 to 2013, China used more concrete than the US had in the whole of the 20th century. …There are signs, however, that architects are beginning to shake things up. The first credible alternative is, perhaps a little ironically, that oldest of building materials, timber. [A Financial Times subscription may be required to read the full story]

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Forestry

Canada’s Forest Sector Welcomes G7 Wildfire Commitment

Forest Products Association of Canada
June 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Forest Products Association of Canada issued this statement to recognize the release of the Kananaskis Wildfire Charter at the G7 meetings: Canada’s forest sector welcomes the G7’s commitment to address the environmental, economic, health, and social challenges that come with the increase in catastrophic wildfires globally. Over 3.7 million hectares have already burned in Canada this year, putting us on pace for our second worst fire season on record. To put that in some context, more than five times the land base that Canada’s foresters would harvest in an entire year has already burned in 2025. And when Canada’s foresters do their work, they ensure the forest is regrown. Fires in some parts of Canada are now burning so hot that regeneration of these forests are challenged due to scorched soils. The time for action is now. Quite simply, fires will get worse if we are not more proactive in managing fuel loads and our aging forests.  

Additional coverage by Matthew Scace at the Canadian Press: G7 leaders agree to ‘charter’ on wildfires, pledging global co-operation

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Canada’s wildfire crisis is displacing First Nations at alarming rates

The Grist
June 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Since mid-May, wildfires across Canada have burned 9.6 million acres, prompting the evacuation of approximately 40,000 people. According to Indigenous Services Canada, a government ministry, more than half of those evacuees are from First Nations communities, and nearly 34 tribes in almost every province are affected. The sudden rush of refugees has challenged the country’s crisis response infrastructure as people seek shelter and services in cities far from their homes, with little information of when they may return to their communities. …Indigenous Services Canada has been authorized to release $20.9 million to disburse to First Nations. …According to an Intact Centre report in 2023, 60 percent of Canadian communities are now vulnerable to wildfires, a third of which are Indigenous living on reserves. 

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We don’t have to tear down nature to ‘Build Canada’

By World Wildlife Fund Canada
Cision Newswire
June 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

TORONTO – The federal government’s proposed Build Canada Act, a plan to fast-track “nation-building” development projects, from critical minerals mines and oil and gas pipelines to habitat-fragmenting highways and Arctic deep-water ports, risks damaging the nature that is at the core of Canada’s economy and identity — threatening the wealth of the nation it is supposed to defend. World Wildlife Fund Canada is deeply concerned about the bill, which would allow Cabinet to override key environmental protections, such as the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, the Fisheries Act, the Species at Risk Act, and the Migratory Birds Convention Act, for projects deemed in the national interest. We are also concerned that this legislation could undermine the federal government’s obligations under the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), including the right to Free, Prior and Informed Consent. Development decisions that bypass Indigenous consultation risk perpetuating the very harms that reconciliation is meant to address.

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Canada’s forests may be burning faster than they can grow back

By Ruby Mellen
The Washington Post
June 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Scientists say wildfire could transform parts of the Canadian landscape, as more intense and more frequent fires push forests to adapt and prevent certain common Canadian trees from regrowing…. Canada’s native plants are hardwired to endure the effects of wildfire — to an extent. But … drier conditions and warmer weather due to climate change are making these fires more frequent and hotter. …What could happen is a shift from tall forests to grassland or savanna in some parts of the country… This would in some ways be a return to the past, said Marc-André Parisien, a scientist with the Canadian Forest Service — and not necessarily a bad thing. …“We’re moving to a place that has no historical analogue,” said Mike Flannigan, the science director of the Canadian Partnership for Wildland Fire Science at the University of Alberta. “We’re in new uncharted territory,” as climate change has exacerbated wildfires’ pace and scale. [Full story access requires a subscription to the Washington Post]

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Nakusp open house welcomes public into wildfire fuel break work

By Evert Lindquist
Revelstoke Review
June 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Residents curious for an update and behind-the-scenes on local forest fuel mitigation this wildfire season are invited to attend a free open house in Nakusp this Wednesday, June 17. Hosted by the Nakusp & Area Community Forest (NACFOR), the event unites voices from forestry, conservation, wildfire management and FireSmart to educate participants on work happening northeast of Nakusp at the Wensley Creek Cross Country Ski Trails to minimize fire-spreading foliage. “NACFOR contractors have been working on both the commercial harvesting patches that were planned for the Wensley Creek area, and continuing hand treatment of understory and ground fuel in other areas,” communications specialist Skye Cunningham shared by email.

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Documentary ‘B.C. is Burning’ set to premiere in region feeling the heat

By Jen Zielinski
The Northern View
June 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

An independent documentary on the causes and consequences of British Columbia’s escalating wildfire crisis will premiere in Kelowna and Vernon this month. The 45-minute film, B.C. is Burning, was put together through community funding and will attempt to investigate what’s fuelling today’s mega-fires and look into the science-based solutions that could protect the province’s forests, communities, and future. Produced and written by retired forester Murray Wilson, the film was initiated by associate producer Rick Maddison… Featuring forest professionals, wildfire officials, and researchers, B.C. is Burning reveals the growing urgency—and the real solutions—to managing fire in an age of climate change, said Wilson. …The Kelowna screening will take place Tuesday, June 24 at 7 p.m. at the Mary Irwin Theatre. The Vernon screening will take place Thursday, June 26,  at 7 p.m. at the Vernon Performing Arts Centre

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Flourish or flounder: How wildfires affect Boreal forest wildlife

By Jeremy Warren
CBC News
June 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

There’s an entire cycle of life that helps some wildlife thrive when the boreal forest burns, but experts say climate change and human activity have led to larger, more intense wildfires, exacerbating the negative effects on some species. While it’s too early to know exactly how one of the worst wildfire seasons in Saskatchewan history is affecting wildlife, research shows some species have evolved over millennia to take advantage of forest fire cycles. “It’s almost essential, particularly in the boreal forest, to have some degree of fire on the landscape, because it is important to create that sort of regenerative habitat for species that depend on it,” said Jean-Michele DeVink, an environmental consultant and adjunct professor at the University of Saskatchewan. “The challenge, is that for other species that do require more mature forest, the extent of fires that we’re seeing throughout the boreal forest is a bit of a problem.”

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Remembering a key player behind the Sault’s ‘bug lab’

By Darren Taylor
The Soo Today
June 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Family members and local scientists gathered at the Great Lakes Forestry Centre on Monday to remember James MacBain Cameron. Cameron spearheaded the Centre’s growth from modest roots to its modern day status as a large, respected scientific facility. An entomologist, Cameron was born in Scotch Hill, Nova Scotia in 1910. He moved to the Sault in 1945 and was the original director of the Insect Pathology Research Institute, dedicated to protecting forests in the ongoing fight against threats posed by insects.  The Insect Pathology Research Institute eventually became known as the Great Lakes Forestry Centre in 1976, one year after Cameron’s death in 1975. Cameron is remembered in a professional sense for making the Centre grow through his ability to recruit scientists to work at the Queen Street East lab.

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State foresters take to skies to survey forest health

KEZI News 9 Oregon
June 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SALEM, Ore. – Researchers are taking to the skies this month to survey Oregon’s forests for damage from pests and other threats, according to the Oregon Department of Forestry and USDA Forest Service. Forest officials said that the Pacific Northwest Aerial Detection Survey is the longest continuous annual survey of its kind in the U.S. Airborne researchers use fixed-wing aircraft to identify trees in distress, flying between 1,500 to 2,500 feet above ground. “Oregon has about 30 million acres of forest so flying in a grid pattern over it allows us to find problems even in remote areas hard to reach by vehicle or on foot,” said Christine Buhl, ODF Forest Entomologist. The survey has highlighted a concerning trend of increasing tree deaths due to drought stress and beetle attacks.

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Oregonians deserve a smarter approach to wildfires

By Derek Johnson & Lorelei Juntunen, Nature Conservancy
The Oregon Capital Chronicle
June 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Each year, Oregon braces for wildfire season. And each year, we spend tens of millions (sometimes hundreds of millions) trying to put those fires out. But despite our best efforts, the fires keep getting worse — more dangerous and more destructive.  Science tells us that suppression alone isn’t enough. To meaningfully reduce risk, we must invest in proactive mitigation, restoring the health and resilience of fire-prone landscapes, and helping communities prepare for wildfire and smoke.  This legislative session, Oregon lawmakers have a chance to make an important initial investment to protect our forests, our homes, and our public health in the long run.  A package of bills now under consideration would provide $280 million per biennium for a comprehensive wildfire response. These bills reflect recommendations from the Wildfire Funding Work Group, convened by the State Fire Marshal, Oregon Department of Forestry, Governor Tina Kotek, Tribal Nations, and shaped by a wide array of stakeholders.  

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California’s 2025 wildfire season was already going to be dangerous. Trump has made it worse

By Hayley Smith
The Los Angeles Times
June 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

As California continues to reel from the historic firestorm that decimated portions of Los Angeles, the state is now facing the prospect of an exceptionally active wildfire season fueled by hot, dry conditions. It may not be ready: Experts say sweeping changes at federal agencies that play key roles in California’s wildfire preparation and response could make a challenging season even worse. …The forecast arrives as the Trump administration is enacting budget cuts, layoffs, office closures and restructuring at the U.S. Forest Service, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Trump says changes will help eliminate federal waste and save tax dollars. However, these three agencies are critical components of California’s wildfire response capabilities… Weakening them at the start of fire season — and at a moment when human-caused climate change is driving larger and more destructive blazes — puts California at a dangerous disadvantage, multiple experts said.

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Whitefish Creek Enterprises Named 2025 Minnesota Logger of the Year

Minnesota Logger Education Program
June 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Brady Hasbargen & Rick Horton

Whitefish Creek Enterprises, Inc. of Baudette has been named the 2025 Minnesota Logger of the Year by the Minnesota Sustainable Forestry Initiative Implementation Committee. The award was presented to Brady Hasbargen of Whitefish Creek at the Minnesota Logger Education Program workshop held in Bemidji in April. The Logger of the Year Award recognizes outstanding independent logging contractor performance with the purpose of honoring Minnesota’s competent professional independent logging contractors. The formal nomination clearly demonstrates that Whitefish Creek Enterprises are recognized by their peers for professionalism, commitment to sustainable forestry, using best business management practices, trade organization involvement, fostering excellent landowner and forester relationships, and for their exceptional community outreach activities. 

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Maintaining, Protecting Forests and Woodlands Across NY Needs to Take Priority

By Hugh Canham, Legislative Affairs Committee Chair, New York Forest Owners Association
The Adirondack Almanack
June 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

…The recently introduced bill by Senator Rachel May and Assemblymember Dr. Anna Kelles (S.5603/A.7550) would give partial property tax relief to landowners statewide who agree to permanent easements agree to permanent easements to protect private forest land from development while increasing carbon storage, in response to the stated need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions across the State.  This is a worthy objective and using easements instead of fee purchase is a good way to proceed. However, there are several concerns when viewed from the perspective of the private landowner concerning timber harvests, biodiversity, carbon sequestration, type of easement, and property tax relief. …Carbon sequestration is an important function of New York’s forests and woodlands. …While it may seem counterintuitive to those unfamiliar with modern forestry, data show that sustainably managed forests yield substantial climate benefits. The data does not support the common misconception that older forests always provide superior carbon benefits.

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Old-growth forests and ancient trees: what you need to know

The World Economic Forum
June 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The world’s oldest forests are facing growing pressure from all sides. Their decline isn’t just an environmental concern – it carries serious consequences for people, climate stability and global biodiversity. According to a new World Resources Institute (WRI) report, the world lost more primary rainforest in 2024 than in any other year in at least the last two decades. The WRI defines primary forest as “old-growth forests that are typically high in carbon stock and rich in biodiversity”. …Human activity has dramatically reduced ancient forests worldwide. Take the UK, for example, which was at one time thought to be 75% covered by wildwood. Today, that figure is just 10%, with only a quarter of that being ancient woodland. …How can we break this cycle? It starts with tackling the problem at both ends: preventing deforestation and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

We need to talk about the fossil fuel elephant in the room

By Julia Beatty, Shuswap Climate Action Society
The Salmon Arm Observer
June 18, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada West

Currently, parts of Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia are being ravaged by early and extreme wildfires. …Copernicus reported that wildfires in Canada in 2023 emitted 1,740 megatonnes of C02e, which is nearly three times Canada’s human-contributed emissions in 2022. …Forest and wildfire researchers are telling us that climate change is creating the conditions for the unprecedented wildfire destruction we are seeing. …What can be done to prepare for increasingly intense wildfire seasons? Addressing the problem requires a multi-pronged approach encompassing prevention, preparedness and response. …However, reducing carbon emissions is crucial to avoid further warming and reduce extreme weather events. As citizens we must speak up and demand that all levels of government and industry strive to lower greenhouse gas emissions while preparing for and adapting to a future with increasing risk of fire.

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Rhetoric–not evidence–continues to dominate climate debate and policy

By Kenneth P. Green, Senior Fellow, The Fraser Institute
Cision Newswire
June 17, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC – …The study published by the Fraser Institute, Four Climate Fallacies, dispels several myths about climate change and popular—but ineffective—emission reduction policies, specifically:

  • Capitalism causes climate change: …the more economically free a country is, the more effective it is at protecting its environment and combatting climate change.
  • Even small-emitting countries can do their part to fight climate change: Even if Canada reduced its greenhouse gas emissions to zero, there would be little to no measurable impact in global emissions, …the main drivers of emissions, which are ChinaIndia and the developing world.
  • Vehicle electrification will reduce climate risk and clean the air: …they often are not, and further, have offsetting environmental harms, reducing net environmental/climate benefits.
  • Carbon capture and storage is a viable strategy to combat climate change: While effective at a small scale, the benefits of carbon capture and storage … on a massive scale are limited and questionable.

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DS Smith activates €90m biomass boiler at Rouen mill

Bioenergy Insight Magazine
June 18, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

DS Smith has brought online a €90 million biomass boiler at its Rouen paper mill in Normandy, France – one of Europe’s largest mill energy transitions to date. The new system replaces the site’s coal-fired boiler with a low-carbon, circular solution powered by locally sourced biomass waste. The project is expected to cut CO₂ emissions by 99,000 tonnes annually – equivalent to removing 40,000 cars from the road or powering 13,000 French homes each year. The boiler will process around 94,000 tonnes of biomass fuel each year, including industrial and municipal waste wood – mainly from the Paris and Normandy regions – as well as paper production by-products. Up to 70,000 tonnes of wood waste will be diverted from landfill annually, supporting DS Smith’s 2030 zero-landfill target.

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Health & Safety

Wildfire Smoke Can Hurt Your Brain

By Bhavini Gohel and Muskaan Muse Laroyia
The Tyee
June 17, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

Wildfires are already burning in parts of Canada, and as they do, many communities are already facing the familiar thick haze as smoke drifts in. Smoke from wildfires has already led Environment Canada to issue air quality warnings for much of Ontario. In Toronto, smoke led to the city briefly having the worst air quality in the world. Anyone who has experienced wildfire smoke knows how it can leave you with a scratchy throat, stinging eyes and impact your lungs. However, smoke can also affect your brain. Tiny airborne pollutants found in smoke have been linked to increased risk of stroke, dementia and flare-ups in neurological diseases like multiple sclerosis, or MS. These effects can disproportionately impact older adults, people with disabilities, Indigenous Peoples and those living in low-income communities. This isn’t just about climate. It’s about equity, and health systems need to catch up.

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National Safety Month: Safe Driving

The National Association of Home Builders
June 17, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States

NAHB is joining with official safety sponsor Builders Mutual to highlight jobsite safety resources during National Safety Month, an annual observance from the National Safety Council. Week 3 will focus on safe driving to, from, and around the jobsite. Traffic accidents are one of the leading causes of deaths in America. About 40,000 people die in motor vehicle crashes each year. With automobile fatality trends increasing, it’s important to understand the dangers of driving and how to safely commute to and from work each day. NAHB and Builders Mutual have resources available to help remind workers of safe driving habits. Any discussion of safe driving must start with a clear reminder of the three unbreakable safety rules of operating a vehicle: Always wear a seatbelt while in a vehicle; Never drive while impaired; and Never text and drive.

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Forest Fires

Rain dampens fire activity in Northwest B.C., largest fire ‘being held’

Victoria News
June 18, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

The B.C. Wildfire Service has changed the status of the province’s largest wildfire to “being held” as of Monday, June 16 after heavy weekend rains aided the firefighting effort. This Pocket Creek Fire in the province’s northeast corner is now 151,310 hectares. The fire had forced the closure of Highway 97 for a short time earlier this month. The area received more than 100 millimetres of rain over the weekend, “significantly” hampering fire growth, according to the wildfire service. A B.C. Wildfire Service spokesperson said rain is expected to continue to reduce fire behaviour in the area over the next couple days. There are currently 53 firefighters and four helicopters still working the fire. The change in weather also means campfire bans were rescinded in the Peace Forest Districts, including the Dawson Creek and Fort St. John zones as of noon on Tuesday (June 17).

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Wildfire in B.C. central Interior triggers evacuation alert, fire crews on scene

The Canadian Press in Castanet
June 17, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

Cariboo Regional District has issued an evacuation alert for properties near a wildfire that is burning out of control in British Columbia’s central Interior. The Martin Lake fire was discovered Sunday and is burning about 220 kilometres west of Williams Lake. The district says the purpose of the alert is to allow people to prepare to evacuate should it be necessary as conditions could change quickly. The BC Wildfire Service says the blaze has grown to about 290 hectares in size, and crews and aviation resources are on site, working to limit its spread. It is one of about 100 wildfires burning in B.C., many of which are situated in the province’s northeast. The service says most of those fires — including the Martin Lake blaze — are believed to have been set off by lightning, while 21 per cent are suspected to be caused by humans.

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More Manitoba fire evacuees to head home

By Steve Lambert
Canadian Press in the Brandon Sun
June 17, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

WINNIPEG — Rain and cooler temperatures brought relief to fire-ravaged Manitoba and Saskatchewan Monday, allowing fire bans to be reduced and more evacuees to go home. The weather helped fire crews get an upper hand in parts of northern Manitoba to clear the way for some of the 21,000 or more evacuees to start returning home. David Monias, chief of Pimicikamak Cree Nation, reposted video of heavy rainfall on social media along with video of small planes leaving Winnipeg with evacuees who were forced out almost three weeks earlier. “Our people are coming home,” Monias wrote on Facebook, adding the community’s infrastructure is intact and water systems have been tested by health officials. …There were 18 fires still burning across Manitoba, with seven of them listed as out of control.

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Wet weather expected to help fight Badger wildfire, says N.L. fire officer

By Elizabeth Whitten
CBC News
June 19, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

Jeff Motty

A wildfire is still threatening the community of Badger but wet weather is expected to help crews fight the fire, says Newfoundland and Labrador’s fire officer. The forest fire started on Tuesday, ignited by a lightning strike near the community. On Wednesday, the province ordered residents of the town to evacuate and head to the nearby community of Grand Falls-Windsor. The provincial government also brought in a province-wide fire ban. Forestry protection supervisor Jeff Motty anticipates Thursday will be a “bust day” fighting the wildfire that’s threatening Badger. “If everything holds through, the [fire weather index] should decrease down to a level of moderate,” he told CBC News on Wednesday evening, “which will be good for our crews to be able to get in and just start working that fire and trying to put out any hotspots and anything in between that they can get out.” 

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Wildfire burning near Badger, Churchill Falls fire being held

By Elizabeth Whitten and Alex Kennedy
CBC News
June 17, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

A wildfire has started near the Newfoundland community of Badger following a lightning storm in the area Tuesday afternoon. Craig Coady, the director of Newfoundland and Labrador’s wildfire program, told CBC News Tuesday evening the fire is burning about six kilometres from the community, and is burning east from the south side of the Exploits River. Crews received word of the fire just after 4 p.m. NT, Grand Falls-Windsor Fire Chief Vince MacKenzie said Tuesday. Torrential rain and lightning was reported in the area around the time, which prompted a short power outage for more than 8,500 people in the region. …It wasn’t the only fire crews were fighting on Tuesday. A wildfire burning near Churchill Falls, Labrador is now being held. The fire broke out on Monday but is being managed on Tuesday. It was considered out of control until Tuesday morning when the status changed to being held.

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As 2 dozen wildfires burn across northwestern Ontario, 3 First Nations still under evacuation

By Sarah Law
CBC News
June 15, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

©Ontario.ca

While burn bans have been lifted across much of northwestern Ontario, provincial authorities warn people to remain cautious while crews contend with two dozen fires in the region. Meanwhile the First Nations communities of Deer Lake, Webequie and Sandy Lake remain under evacuation orders. As of Friday, all evacuation and restricted access orders had been removed from the Kenora district, with implementation orders also lifted in areas near two wildfires known as Kenora 20 and Kenora 32. “Wildland fire suppression activities are ongoing on Kenora 20 and Kenora 32 but public safety relating to these fires is no longer a concern,” Ontario Forest Fires said Saturday night. …The region’s largest wildfire — Red Lake 12 — saw more activity on Saturday due to clear skies and north/northwest winds. The fire, described as a ‘sleeping giant,’ is more 175,000 hectares, and triggered evacuations from Deer Lake First Nation and more than 2,000 people from Sandy Lake First Nation.

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A wildfire near Bryce Canyon grows, with high winds, rough terrain hindering containment efforts

By Brooke Larsen
The Salt Lake Tribune
June 17, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US West

@USDA

Hot, dry and windy conditions are putting much of Southern Utah at higher risk for wildfires. The National Weather Service issued a red flag warning for the region through Monday evening, and the France Canyon Fire — the largest wildfire in the state — has grown to 2,159 acres and is just 0% contained, according to the U.S. Forest Service. “Fire behavior is expected to increase,” the U.S. Forest Service said in a press statement Monday afternoon. …The France Canyon Fire was first discovered 6.5 miles south of Hatch in Dixie National Forest on June 11. Officials suspect the blaze was started by lightning. Five hundred acres of active fire are burning in the Black Butte area on the Paunsaugunt Plateau west of Bryce Canyon National Park. Visitors to Bryce, as well as surrounding communities such as Tropic and Escalante may experience significant smoke impacts as wind gusts increase.

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Wharton State Forest wildfire: Blaze now 80% contained after burning 5,750 acres

By Pamela Sroka-Holzmann
NJ.com True Jersey
June 15, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: US East

New Jersey — A wildfire that began Friday in the Wharton State Forest in Burlington County is now 80% contained, fire officials said Sunday. The New Jersey Forest Fire Service posted on its Facebook page a total of 5,750 acres were scorched since the blaze began Friday morning. It was first spotted near the Carranza Memorial in the state forest. By 11 p.m. Friday, flames had grown to 3,250 acres, state fire officials had said. The blaze, dubbed the Mines Spung Wildfire, is located within Wharton State Forest in Shamong Township. A wildfire is defined by state fire officials as an uncontrolled fire burning different types of vegetation covering the land, with a “major wildfire” being anything that exceeds 100 acres in size. Crews on Sunday were continuing to mop up hot spots and patrol the fire perimeter, state fire officials said.

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