Blog Archives

Today’s Takeaway

Task force report adds detail to Canada’s forest sector transformation agenda

The Tree Frog Forestry News
June 5, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

The Forestry Transformation Task Force report adds details to Canada’s transformation agenda. In related news: Canada’s Private Forest Owners welcomed recognition of their contribution; while AFPA, Steelworkers and SFI expressed support. In other Business news: Interfor added a second shift at their Grand Forks mill; Western Forest Products’ workers in Chemainus join the Steelworkers; and International Paper completes acquisition of NORPAC. Meanwhile: Ottawa extended consultations on environmental assessment reforms; the US proposed a 25% tariff on Brazil linked to deforestation; lumber prices hit 8-week high; and US mortgage rates rose again.

In Forestry/Wildfire news: BC supports wood-waste innovation in the Kootenays; the US Endowment partners on forest residues study; Nova Scotia takes action on spruce budworm outbreak; California expanded it firefighting fleet; new research on how wildfire spreads in urban areas, New Zealand new forestry rules explained; and the UN says progress on forestry goals is too slow.

Finally, new kudos for mass timber, and reasons to exhibit at Global Buyers Mission 2026.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Canada unveils forest sector transformation plan, new funding to strengthen competitiveness

The Tree Frog Forestry News
June 4, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

Canada unveiled a forest sector transformation plan, and new funding to strengthen competitiveness. In related news: Minister Hodgson said the forest sector is the trade ‘canary in the coal mine‘; while FPAC, COFI, and Unifor urge quick implementation. Meanwhile: the BC Lumber Trade Council says CUSMA could solve the softwood lumber dispute; Saothair completes acquisition of EAM Corp. from Domar; and West Fraser released its 2025 Sustainability Report.

In Forestry/Wildfire news: Kelowna tops Canadian cities most at risk from wildfires; updates on Ontario’s Gogama fire and BC’s Swede Creek fire; US Forest Service offers incentives to employees ahead of relocations; scientists inject elm trees with a killer fungus to save them; and a Michigan seedling census predicts future forests. In Safety news: Canada marked Clean Air Day with a focus on wildfire smoke; and a worker was killed at an Alabama lumber mill

Finally, Western Red Cedar Lumber Association awards Jeff Derby Cedar Champion Award to Gorman Group’s Nick Arkle.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Canada tables new trade proposals as US threatens fresh tariffs

The Tree Frog Forestry News
June 3, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

Canada tabled new trade proposals as the US threatened a new tariff over forced labour trade practices. In related news: the European Parliament advanced legislation tied to last year’s US-EU trade deal; and ERA’s Kevin Mason says global supply chain pressures have surged to a four-year high. In other Business news: questions continue on deadly Nippon Dynawave mill implosion; Smurfit Westrock announced a €600 million investment in France; a new report on solutions for Canada’s housing shortage; and US single-family construction declined in Q1, 2026.

In Forestry/Wildfire news: Canada and BC will invest $355 million to plant 125 million trees; a new study says Canadian forests are losing their climate-cooling effect; Thompson Rivers University tests an alternative to slash burning; Ontario faces questions over wildfire funding; and a Georgia senator backs legislation to speed wildfire response times. Meanwhile:  Louisiana approved a pro-wood pellet bill; and California made changes to is cap-and-invest program.

Finally, birch bark as a bio-based moisture barrier for paper and paperboard packaging.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

Canada launches Forest Sector Action Plan

By Natural Resources Canada
PR Newswire
June 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

VICTORIA, BC – Canada’s forest sector is at a pivotal moment. Ongoing pressures — including tariffs, fibre supply challenges, changing market demands and climate change — are significantly impacting the industry and the communities that depend on it. In response, the Government of Canada is focusing on what we can control — and moving forward with provinces, territories and Indigenous partners on a co-ordinated approach to transform the sector into one that can thrive in the long term. Today, the Honourable Tim Hodgson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, announced a Forest Sector Action Plan, with key commitments to drive the transformation of the forest sector in collaboration with provinces, territories, Indigenous Peoples and other key partners. The Action Plan is informed by the Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force’s recommendations and builds on the extensive work it completed during its 90–day mandate. The plan focuses on four priority areas to position Canada’s forest sector as a leading global supplier of both traditional and advanced forest products…

In related news:

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Forestry Transformation Task Force Recognizes Critical Role of Private Forest Owners in Canada’s Forest Future

By Sandra Bishop
Canadian Forest Owners
June 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON—Canadian Forest Owners (CFO) congratulates the Honourable Tim Hodgson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, and members of the Forestry Transformation Task Force on the release of their report, which recognizes the important contribution of Canada’s private forests in building a competitive, sustainable, and resilient forest sector. Representing approximately 480,000 private forest owners across the country, CFO’s members manage 25 million hectares of privately owned forest land from coast to coast. Together, they account for approximately 10 per cent of Canada’s forest land base and 20 per cent of national forest production. As the report notes, “Canada has a proud tradition of private forest ownership.” Private forests contribute an estimated $14.5 billion annually to Canada’s economy and support nearly 40,000 direct jobs in silviculture, harvesting, transportation, and forest products manufacturing. …For CFO, the report’s recognition of private forests is an important step forward. However, the organization believes that recognition must now be accompanied by policy action.

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West Fraser Releases 2025 Sustainability Report

West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd.
June 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC – Today, West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd. released its 2025 Sustainability Report. The report highlights the Company’s sustainability performance across a variety of environmental, social and governance goals and disclosed targets. “Our 2025 Sustainability Report, Building Foundations for the Future, reflects our commitment to transparency and responsible operations, highlighting the progress we are making while identifying priority areas for further action to enhance our ability to succeed in a rapidly changing world,” said Sean McLaren, President and CEO. “As we look ahead, we will continue embedding sustainability into every part of our company — improving performance, reducing risk and creating value for everyone who depends on West Fraser.” 2025 key achievements highlighted in the report include:

  • Telling the Complete Carbon Story
  • Delivering on Our Climate Targets and Decarbonizing Operations
  • Highlighting Biodiversity
  • Partnering with Indigenous Nations
  • Supporting Our People and Earning Recognition as a Top Employer

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Nipissing University announces Marianne Berube – 2026 honorary degree recipient

Nipissing University
June 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

North Bay, ON – Nipissing University will present five distinguished leaders with honorary degrees, the University’s highest distinction, during its upcoming Convocation ceremonies, June 8-10, 2026. Recipients are selected for their noteworthy contributions to Nipissing University, their respective fields, and broader impact on society. …Marianne Berube has over 40 years of diverse business and transformative leadership experience in the finance, construction and wood industries. She graduated from Nipissing University with degrees in Environmental Science and Business, and later received the Fellow, Canadian Institute of Bankers (FICB) and Certified Investment Management designations. Berube began her career in banking and became the first female bank manager in Northern Ontario. Berube was the Executive Director of the Canadian Wood Council’s “Ontario Wood WORKS!” program for 22 years, building the program from its pilot launch in North Bay to the Provincial initiative it is today. 

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Round table discusses support for Interfor employees and communities

By Rosalind Russell
My Espanola Now
June 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Nairn & Hyman Township Mayor Amy Mazey says it is a tough time for the community, but they are resilient and confident that with time and effort, the community will move forward. Mazey and township CAO Belinda Ketchabaw attended a closed-door roundtable meeting last Friday to discuss how the community can move forward with the impending closure of the Interfor Nairn sawmill and planer, followed by a town hall meeting later in the day. She says MP Jim Belanger, MPPs France Gelinas and Bill Rosenberg, and surrounding municipal leaders were joined by employees, where she reported on efforts made to support those workers. Mazey adds that this includes raising awareness with ministers at the FONOM meeting, a recent job fair, and local resources available to assist them. Interfor is in the process of selling off the last of its stock before it closes the mill operations indefinitely. Up to 250 workers are affected.

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Forest Service offers separation incentives to employees ahead of relocations

By Jory Heckman
The Federal News Network
June 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The Forest Service is offering separation incentives to employees ahead of an agency reorganization that will move hundreds of positions across the country. The Forest Service told employees in a recent email that it will offer Voluntary Early Retirement Authority (VERA) and Voluntary Separation Incentive Payments (VSIP) to employees impacted by the agency’s upcoming reorganization. The Agriculture Department announced in March that the Forest Service would move its headquarters to Salt Lake City, Utah. The agency plans to shutter its nine regional offices, and so far plans to keep 20 of its 77 research facilities. “There is a position for each of you in the new structure, and your skills and experience are essential to the work ahead,” Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz told staff in the email. “At the same time, we know that not all positions will look the same or be located in the same places they are today.”

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

2026 North American Fenestration Standard Published

Fenestration & Glazing Industry Alliance
June 1, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, United States

The 2026 edition of AAMA/WDMA/CSA 101/I.S.2/A440, North American Fenestration Standard/Specification for windows, doors, and skylights (NAFS) has been published. This standard is the result of a multi-year effort by CSA Group, Fenestration and Glazing Industry Alliance (FGIA) and Window & Door Manufacturers Association (WDMA). An agreement among the three organizations requires NAFS to be reviewed every five years… The updated 2026 standard supersedes the 2022 edition, representing a continued evolution of the standard while improving harmonization across North America. The Joint Document Management Group (JDMG), comprised of representatives from all three associations, stresses the importance of NAFS-26. “Unlike with the previous version of NAFS, there were no major revisions for NAFS-26, with the exception of the secondary designator clarification,” said Lisa Bergeron, Director of Business Development and Government Affairs for JELD-WEN, who served as FGIA’s JDMG co-chair. “NAFS remains an excellent industry tool as an internationally accepted performance standard for the included fenestration product types.”

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Ready to diversify your export markets? Exhibit at the Global Buyers Mission in September!

BC Wood Specialties Group
June 4, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Here’s why you can’t miss the 23rd annual GBM as an exhibitor:

  • Showcase to a Global Audience: Present your products to a targeted group of pre-qualified international buyers who are actively seeking Canadian wood products. The GBM’s reputation consistently draws decision-makers from key markets, ensuring your booth gets high-value exposure and real business opportunities.

  • Capitalize on Market Diversification: With ongoing trade uncertainty, buyers and specifiers from Mexico, Japan, China, Europe and other growth markets are actively looking for new suppliers and long-term partnerships. 

  • Build Strategic Partnerships with stunning backdrops: The GBM is designed to create meaningful connections. Framed by Whistler’s forests, beautiful wood architecture, and mountain air, every conversation feels grounded in the very landscape our industry is built on. From B2B meetings to unforgettable moments at our signature mountaintop evening at the Roundhouse, every touchpoint is built to help you move from introduction to opportunity.

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Western Red Cedar Lumber Association’s 2026 Cedar Summit and Cedar School Bring Industry Together

By Western Red Cedar Lumber Association
LinkedIn
June 3, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Ben Meachen and Nick Arkle

The Western Red Cedar Lumber Association (Real Cedar)’s 2026 Cedar Summit and Cedar School wrapped up another successful week of business sessions, networking opportunities and hands-on training seminars on May 15th, with nearly 160 industry professionals in attendance, including 33 Cedar School students from across North America and abroad. The annual event began with the week-long Cedar School program, hosted throughout Vancouver, Nanaimo and Victoria. It featured manufacturing and grading, finishing and installation, marketing and social media, forestry education and extensive mill and woodland tours. …the 72nd Annual WRCLA AGM and Cedar Summit officially kicked off on May 13th in Victoria, BC. A major highlight of the summit was the presentation of the Jeff Derby Cedar Champion Award to Nick Arkle of Selkirk in recognition of his outstanding contributions and dedication to the Western Red Cedar industry. Aidan Coyles of Gilbert Smith Forest Products was named Chair and Anna McNally of Western Forest Products became Vice Chair. 

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Canada Wood Market Insights – June 2026

Canada Wood Group
June 2, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

In this edition of Market Insights, you’ll find:

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Forestry

Canadian Forest Fires Are Losing Their Climate Cooling Power

Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

The natural cooling effect of snow in northern forests following forest fires is rapidly diminishing. As a result, a fragile climate equilibrium threatens to disappear, potentially leading to additional warming in one of the most climate-sensitive regions on Earth. This is the conclusion of new research by Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. …After a forest fire, the landscape in northern regions often remains open and covered with snow for a long time. This snow reflects a great deal of sunlight and makes the Earth’s surface brighter—an effect known as snow albedo. For years, this compensated for part of the warming caused by CO2 emissions from forest fires. [The study found] that the cooling effect of snow has decreased by nearly 30 percent since the 1960s. Whereas in the past almost half of Canadian forest fires eventually reached natural climate equilibrium …this now applies to only about one in four or five fires.

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Hélène Marcoux inspires community forests conference with keynote address

By BC Community Forest Association
Facebook
June 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West
On Day 2 of the 2026 BCCFA Conference and AGM we heard from Hélène Marcoux from the UBC Malcolm Knapp Research Forest as our keynote speaker. Hélène’s engaging and energizing talk focused on strengthening public understanding of forestry. With inspiring ideas for engagement, her key theme was “lean into stories, be real, be vulnerable, and don’t use so many acronyms.” At the research forest, near Maple Ridge, they have many different programs and initiatives that education the public and bring people to the forest for tours, talks, and events. They have fostered incredible partnerships and opportunities for diversification. Thank you to Hélène for sharing your ideas and inspiring us to continue our work with impactful community engagement.

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Kelowna tops insurance company list of Canadian cities at risk from wildfires in 2026

By Cindy White
Castanet
June 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Kelowna has topped the list of Canadian cities most at risk from wildfires in 2026, according to a report from a Toronto-based online insurance company. Using data from Natural Resources Canada’s recently upgraded Canadian Wildland Fire Information System, MyChoice said Kelowna has a wildfire Risk Index score of 6.8/10. It was the only city to get a “very high” rating on the MyChoice Canada’s 2026 wildfire risk map. ​“While Prairie cities recorded more severe forecast fire weather conditions, Kelowna’s extremely high community exposure, driven by dense wildland-urban interface development, surrounding forest fuel, and historical wildfire activity, pushed it to the top overall,” said MyChoice in its annual wildfire study. ​To calculate the wildfire risk index, MYChoice gave equal weight to two factors: Forecast fire weather severity and community exposure.

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How Kakisa, Northwest Territories, is making a fire break part of its plan to grow more food

By Sarah St-Pierre
CBC News
June 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

@Wiki

When a wildfire reached Kakisa in 2014, burning around the community on two sides and along its access road, it decimated many berry bushes that grew in the area. Now, the N.W.T.’s smallest community is using one of the fire breaks protecting it from future wildfires to bring back those berries — and closer to home. “If it’s going be always there, why not plant berries,” said Ka’a’gee Tu First Nation Chief Lloyd Chicot. “Rather than just taking all the trees down and leaving it there.” The berry patch is a pilot project involving the First Nation and a team of researchers from Wilfrid Laurier University who have been working with the community of just under 40 people for 13 years. Planted in 2024, some of the berry plants gave their first modest yield last summer. They complement some of the community’s other efforts to grow more food in a place where the closest grocery store is nearly 70 kilometres away. 

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BC’s community forest leaders and supporters meet in Vernon

By BC Community Forest Association
Facebook
June 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Day 1 of the 2026 BCCFA Conference and AGM was a success! Hosted in Vernon, BC this year, the Monashee Community Forest were our welcoming hosts. Monashee CF is a partnership between the Village of Lumby and the Splatsin First Nation. Day 1 included a field tour on the Monashee CF above Lumby, BC, to showcase their Silvopasture work. Silvopasture is a forestry management practice that combines multiple values to achieve a few different objectives. The area that MCF showed us created grazing pasture for cattle, and integrated wildfire risk reduction for the community of Lumby. The treated area also supports good recreation opportunities. We heard from Kyle Runzer, Nick Barry, Frank Joe, Courtney Strassburger, and Nicole Williams from the Splatsin First Nation, Trish Balcaen from Coldstream Ranch, Rick Fairbairn (Area D RDNO Director), and Rob Dinwoodie, an agriculture consultant.

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Suzanne Simard Speaks for the Trees

By Katie Underwood
Maclean’s Magazine
June 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

In the late ’90s, Suzanne Simard started what can only be (indelicately) described as a firestorm in the forestry world. Her Ph.D. findings, published in the renowned journal Nature, argued that trees weren’t the valiant loners scientists once believed them to be. Rather, they survived through symbiosis, communicating and even sharing carbon through a subterranean series of mycorrhizal networks (fungal root systems). Initially, Simard’s peers weren’t nearly as generous as the tree community—one reviewer rebuked her paper as “a dog’s breakfast”—but, over time, some listened more closely. Today, Simard isn’t just the tree world’s tallest poppy; she’s a global, Goodall-esque conservation icon.

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Yukon government expanding all-season timber harvest opportunities

The Government of Yukon
June 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Government of Yukon is taking steps to expand all-season timber harvesting opportunities across the territory and improve access for Yukon harvesters. The Department of Energy, Mines and Resources has reviewed existing timber harvest plans to identify areas where additional summer and all-season harvesting may be possible. There are currently summer harvesting opportunities available in most forest management districts. …The Government of Yukon is also working with the Yukon Wood Products Association to provide and subsidize pre-harvest migratory bird survey training for harvesters to support additional summer operations. …The Government of Yukon will continue working with First Nations, industry and the Yukon Wood Products Association to develop new timber harvesting projects and support existing operations throughout the territory.

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Chipping instead of burning: Sun Peaks and Thompson Rivers University test low-carbon fuel management

Thompson Rivers University
June 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Sun Peaks Mountain Resort Municipality is trying a new approach to reduce wildfire risk in the forests surrounding the community — and Thompson Rivers University (TRU) is right in the middle of it. Instead of piling leftover wood and brush from fuel-reduction treatments and burning it when conditions allow, crews are now chipping and mulching the debris and spreading it in a thin layer across the forest floor to decompose naturally. The pilot project, funded by the Forest Enhancement Society of BC since 2023, aims to … improve the long-term health of these high-elevation forests. “This project shows what can be done when municipalities, universities and the private sector get together to come up with innovative ideas to address current and future wildfire risks to communities,” says John Karakatsoulis, TRU Faculty of Science. …Forsite Consultants Ltd. (Barr GeoSpatial Solutions Company), has been working with Sun Peaks to find alternatives as the burning window shrinks every year. 

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Forest Grove hosting meeting on New Forest Act proposal

By Patrick Davies
The 100 Mile Free Press
June 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

…Searching online, South Cariboo resident and retired silviculturist Will van Osch came across the New Forest Act proposal, which has been developed by the Boundary Forest Watershed Stewardship Society. The BFWSS is a non-profit society that advocates for economically sustainable forestry practices to help prevent environmental disasters caused by deforestation and climate change. …Van Osch said the New Forest Act, which has been developed by project lead Jennifer Houghton, an independent forestry analyst, spoke to him. The proposed act calls for B.C. to adopt a truly sustainable forestry model that will benefit future generations, while protecting local decision-making power. After reading her proposal, van Osch reached out to Houghton and invited her to come to the South Cariboo and give a presentation on her ideas. She agreed and is now set to host a meeting at the Forest Grove Community Hall on Monday, June 8, at 7 p.m.

Related coverage in the Keremeos Review, by Brennan Phillips: Citizen-led forestry plan presentation coming to Penticton

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Resources to support client conversations about sourcing wood from British Columbia

naturally:wood
June 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Professionals in the built environment are increasingly being asked where their materials come from and how they’re sourced. To support these conversations, naturally:wood has two new resources focused on explaining forest management practices in British Columbia (B.C.).

From forest to form factsheet
Did you know just 0.3% of B.C.’s public forest land is harvested each year, while 63% of B.C.’s forests will never beharvested? And that 64% of B.C.’s forests are certified, accounting for 6.3% of the world’s certified forests? This overview uses data points like these to support conversations about sustainability, certifications and sourcing.

Video featuring the Chief Forester of B.C.
An authoritative perspective on how forest management decisions are made from the independent decision-maker responsible for long-term sustainable stewardship of Crown forest lands.

These resources are designed to equip architects, engineers and construction professionals with credible, evidence-based information they can confidently share with clients.

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British Coumbia’s caribou and the economics of extinction

By Peter Tsigaris, Thompson Rivers University
Armchair Mayor
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

BRITISH COLUMBIA’s caribou are disappearing, and they may be warning us about something much larger than the fate of a single species. A recent paper by former Thompson Rivers University economics student Trang Minh Phan, A Student Journal on Sustainability and Environment, examines the relationship between old-growth forest conservation and caribou recovery in British Columbia. The findings are important. Without stronger habitat protection, some caribou herds may face local extinction within decades. One herd in particular illustrates a modern ecological tragedy of the commons. The Itcha-Ilgachuz herd in the Cariboo region once numbered close to 3,000 animals in the early 2000s. By 2019, that population had collapsed to approximately 185 caribou. In one simulated scenario, strong protection of old-growth forests, allows the Itcha-Ilgachuz herd to recover above conservation targets within a decade. In another scenario involving limited regulation, recovery remains slow and uncertain. Under continued unrestricted logging, the herd eventually collapses toward extinction by 2035.

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Spruce budworm’s knocking at Nova Scotia’s door; threatening worse wildfires and rekindling debates over whether to spray

By Aaron Beswick
The Chronicle Herald
June 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©NRCan

…spruce budworm outbreaks affect most of Nova Scotia’s softwood forests. And [after a massive outbreak in 1979] it’s back. Quebec’s boreal forest is being ravaged. New Brunswick is trying to hold the line at its northern border with a spray program. Newfoundland is being hit, too. Pheromone traps around the highlands have shown a sharp increase this spring … the population is expected to explode. The return raises questions that are getting very different answers from different corners of this province: Do we interfere in a natural process by aerial spraying? Can we live with the consequences if we don’t? And even if we try, will it work? The Department of Natural Resources is starting an aerial spray program of the insecticide BTK next week. Parks Canada has refused them permission to spray within Cape Breton Highlands National Park… The federal policy will create a massive host population that may impede the province’s efforts.

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Montreal weather: SOPFEU’s puppet master videos catching on like wildfire

The Montreal Gazette
June 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Why is the human lady angry? Because she’s tired of repeating the same old fire-safety rules. Stop all that business with open fires in the forest, burning garbage and tossing lit cigarette butts, SOPFEU says — and it’s saying it with puppets. A new series of videos by Quebec’s wildfire prevention organization feature a campfire with googly eyes, a pigheaded smoker and young squirrels asking their dad why the human lady is angry: “Because she’s tired of repeating” the same old fire-safety rules. The tagline is, “Hey, if they don’t get it with puppets …” 

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‘Qualified’ candidates on hand but not taking N.L. chief pilot role that oversees water bombers, says minister

By Alex Kennedy
CBC News
June 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©Gvt NF

Transportation and Infrastructure Minister Barry Petten said Monday that if pilots responsible for water bomber and air ambulance operations in Newfoundland and Labrador want their workplace situation to improve, they should tell him how to do it. “We’ve got a major [turnover] of chief water bomber pilots, and that’s a concern to me. So obviously, there’s a root cause to that,” Petten said. …Petten’s comments follow reports of the resignation of the province’s chief pilot in the Air Services branch. A letter, attributed collectively to Newfoundland and Labrador Water Bomber and Air Ambulance Pilots, highlighted issues in the sector to government last week. If a chief pilot isn’t found … Transport Canada could issue a suspension of Air Operator Certificate … which could ground water bombers without a solution. …Petten said an interim pilot could be in place as early as Wednesday — telling the House the department was “very close” to hiring a chief pilot.

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Ontario budgets just $150M for wildfires despite burning through almost double last year

By Cloe Logan
National Observer
June 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

In 2025’s budget, Ontario allotted $135 million for its Emergency Forest Firefighting fund, which Firefighter Noah Freedman describes as money that “keeps the lights on.” The province ended up spending double that: $271 million, according to this year’s budget. But that same document penciled in just $150 million again for this year. The province did not respond to requests from Canada’s National Observer asking why the budget hasn’t been increased. Not allotting adequate funds translates to real impacts on the frontlines, said Freedman, who is also vice president of Ontario Public Service Employees Union Local 703. He said last season was “riddled with logistical problems” due to a lack of available funding: not having crews and helicopters where they were needed, and scrambling to request more… “None of that is because of our leadership in our agency. It’s a result of not getting anywhere near the funding that we need to truly be decision-makers,” Freedman said.

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From forest to front door: Understanding how wildfire spreads through communities

By Ty Burke
University of California, Berkeley
May 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

As California’s population boomed — from 10 million in 1950 to over 40 million today — the number of people living in fire-prone areas multiplied. …Despite the thousands of wildfires in California each year, we still don’t know that much about them — especially when it comes to how they spread in urban areas. The wildland-urban interface is the zone in which buildings and infrastructure border natural areas. Homes in this zone are at higher risk of burning, but quantifying that risk is challenging. Until recently, the mathematical models used to predict wildfire spread largely ignored these areas. Where a simulated wildfire reached a developed community, the models treated the land as unburnable. Which, of course, it’s not. …As wildfires push into urban areas, they behave in ways scientists are only beginning to understand. But Gollner is figuring out how to predict what urban wildfires will do next — by turning fire modeling into a complex, evolving problem.

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Logging Project Near Yellowstone Could Threaten Wildlife Habitat and Tourist-Dependent Businesses

By Mosabber Hossain
Inside Climate News
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©NationalParkService

A proposed federal logging project in the forests bordering Yellowstone National Park is drawing growing concern from local residents, business owners and conservation advocates who fear it could have lasting impacts on wildlife habitat, recreation and tourism in one of Montana’s most iconic landscapes. The U.S. Forest Service is using emergency authority to speed the approval of the project, for which public comment closed Monday. Opponents say the agency hasn’t explained what the emergency is. Yellowstone National Park is more than a world-famous tourist destination. Established in 1872 as the first national park in the United States, it serves as the core of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, one of the largest nearly intact temperate ecosystems on Earth. The park and the surrounding public lands provide critical habitat for grizzly bears, wolves, lynx, elk, bison and many other species, as well as reducing the impact of climate-damaging emissions by storing carbon. 

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What seedling census tell us about the future of Michigan’s forests

By Robin Smith
Michigan State University
June 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

The history of a forest might be measured by the trunks and branches looming overhead. But for some MSU researchers, a forest’s future lies in what’s growing under their feet. Every summer for nearly three decades, a team led by Ecology, Evolution and Behavior core faculty member Richard Kobe has made its way to Manistee National Forest in northwestern Lower Michigan to look for new trees that have sprouted. At less than a year old, the youngest seedlings growing in the understory aren’t much taller than their toes. But now, the team’s annual counts of 10 common tree species are starting to reveal clues to what the region’s forests might look like in the 20, 40 or 100 years to come. …In a new study published in Global Change Biology Communications, McNichol and Kobe compared years of seedling data collected at 12 sites spread across a 370-square-mile area in Michigan’s Manistee National Forest.

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Scientists are injecting elm trees with a killer fungus to save them

By Abagael Giles
Vermont Public
June 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

©Wiki

“American elm is a foundation tree species in floodplain forests,” says Leila Wilson, an ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service. “They are facing severe threats from non-native pests and pathogens…” Wilson knows these trees well. Each one comes from a seed she harvested from a tree whose flowers she isolated with little plastic bags, then hand-fertilized using pollen collected in the lab. … “We’re going to be infecting them with the Dutch elm disease fungus,” she says as she drills the first hole. …She and her colleagues will look for survivor trees by rating the lushness of their canopies. …The ones that survive will have their seeds harvested to be used to grow a nursery stock that can be planted as part of floodplain restoration projects around the region.

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Exhibit Space Now On Sale for Forest Products Machinery & Equipment Exposition, Returning to Savannah in 2027

The Southern Forest Products Association
June 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Metairie, LA  – The Southern Forest Products Association (SFPA) today announced that exhibit space is now available for the Forest Products Machinery & Equipment Exposition (EXPO), set for August 18–20, 2027, at the Savannah Convention Center in Savannah, Georgia. Equipment manufacturers, technology providers, and service companies serving the forest products industry can now reserve their place on the show floor. Hosted biennially by SFPA, EXPO is the longest-running tradeshow in the forest products industry, tracing its roots to the 1950 Logging and Sawmill Machinery Exposition in New Orleans. The 2027 event marks the show’s first appearance in Savannah, placing it in the heart of the Southern Pine lumber community while keeping the event accessible and cost-conscious for exhibitors and attendees alike. …Space is assigned using a priority points system for SFPA members and returning exhibiting companies. 

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World’s forests in a race against time, warns UN global forest report

By Sandra Cordon
Forests News – Center for International Forestry Research
June 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The world is losing its forests faster than it can save them, with severe consequences for the climate, biodiversity and over one billion people who depend on forests for their livelihoods, according to the United Nations’ latest Global Forest Goals Report 2026. Although many countries have expanded forest restoration efforts, strengthened governance frameworks, and improved monitoring systems, progress remains critically insufficient to halt deforestation, lift forest-dependent communities out of poverty, and meet the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.  “We know what to do. We need to act on the information and knowledge we have. But do we have the will to act?” said Éliane Ubalijoro, chief executive officer of Landscape Alliance, the new operating name of the Center for International Forestry Research and World Agroforestry (CIFOR & ICRAF). That question runs through the report, which finds that existing tools, policies and institutions have yet to deliver change at the scale required.  

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New Zealand’s new forestry rules promise consistency. Will they also increase environmental risk?

By Steve Urlich, Lincoln University, New Zealand
The Conversation
June 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

One of the most important changes to New Zealand’s environmental regulations in recent years came into force this week. Yet outside policy circles, the forestry sector and a handful of councils, few people are likely to have noticed. The government’s freshly-amended National Environmental Standards for Commercial Forestry set bottom-line rules for activities ranging from afforestation and harvesting to slash management and erosion control. There is a clear need for such safeguards. Commercial forestry is one of New Zealand’s most valuable industries, generating billions of dollars in export earnings and supporting thousands of jobs. So, it needs a regulatory framework that provides certainty for long-term investment and operational decisions. But it can also have significant impacts on waterways, infrastructure, ecosystems and downstream communities if activities are not carefully managed, with recent years having provided some stark examples.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

U.S. Endowment, Georgia Tech’s Aerospace Systems Design Laboratory Complete Forestry Residues Study

EIN Newsdesk
June 4, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: US East

GREENVILLE, SC — The U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities and the Georgia Institute of Technology have completed a two-semester research project designed to help rural communities, investors and policymakers evaluate new markets for wood fiber after pulp and paper mills close. Developed through Georgia Tech’s Aerospace Systems Design Laboratory (ASDL), the prototype decision-support tool models how underutilized forestry and mill residues could be converted into biomass power, renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel. The tool allows users to test how choices about feedstock supply, plant location, transportation, financing assumptions, market prices and policy incentives affect project viability. The work responds to a major shift across the forest sector. Since 2015, more than 40 pulp and paper mills have closed, eliminating an estimated 60 million tons of annual demand for wood fiber from forest regions across the country. A new economic analysis commissioned by the Endowment … finds that additional pulp and paper capacity remains at risk in the years ahead.

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Louisiana lawmakers approve incentives for controversial wood pellet industry

By Tristan Baurick
Verite News | Deep South Today
May 28, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: US East

A bill aimed at making Louisiana more enticing to the wood pellet industry has sailed through the state Legislature. House Bill 670 won unanimous approval in the Louisiana House and Senate and was granted final passage on Wednesday (May 27). It would ease regulations for pellet manufacturers while directing state support toward workforce development, financial incentives and infrastructure improvements designed to meet the industry’s needs. The industry has come under fire for repeatedly breaking air pollution rules in Louisiana and Mississippi and contributing to greenhouse gas emissions in the United Kingdom, where most of the pellets are burned to produce energy marketed as “sustainable biomass.”  The bill’s supporters admitted they knew little about the industry but backed the measure in hopes of reviving the state’s struggling logging sector. …“This bill uses taxpayer money to support a foreign industry and makes it easier for them to pollute Louisianians’ air and water,” said the Dogwood Alliance. 

Additional coverage in Biomass Magazine, by Erin Krueger: Louisiana Senate approves wood pellet bill

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Forest Fires

Multiple properties under evacuation alert due to raging B.C. wildfire

By Todd Coyne
CTV News
June 3, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

Nearly two dozen properties remain under an evacuation alert Wednesday as a massive wildfire burning out of control in the British Columbia Interior continues to grow. The Cariboo Regional District issued the alert for 22 parcels of land near the Swede Creek wildfire, which the district says poses “potential danger to life and health.” The alert urges residents inside the 18,000-hectare fire warning zone to prepare to flee the area on short notice. People in the evacuation alert area are advised to keep their personal vehicles fully fueled and prepare grab-and-go bags with essential items for a rapid departure if the alert turns into an evacuation order. The wildfire near Comstock Lake, southwest of Prince George, measures approximately 1,815 hectares, or just over 18 square kilometres, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service. The agency has charted the fire’s growth from 150 hectares on Monday to 800 hectares on Tuesday morning and 1,300 by the afternoon.

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Wildfire evacuees and pets arrive in Barrie as Northern Ont. forest fire continues

By Julianna Balsamo
CTV News
June 5, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

More than 160 residents from Mattagami First Nation and their beloved pets are on their way to Barrie after a fast-growing wildfire, identified as Timmins 9, forced a mandatory evacuation of the community. CTV News has learned that some evacuees were transported to Barrie by bus, while others left the area in their own vehicles. Many families who have arrived brought their pets, including dogs, cats and birds, as they fled from the dangerous conditions. The Ontario SPCA and Humane Society said it was on hand to help evacuees arriving to the city, providing pet food, crates, bedding, collars and leashes. “We were ready with emergency supplies,” said the OSPCA over social media. “To help keep animals safe and comfortable during this difficult time.” …On Thursday morning, Ontario Forest Fires reported the blaze had grown to 2,945 hectares and remained out of control.

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Highway 144 fire doubles in size again, now nearly 3,000 hectares

Timmins Today
June 4, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada East

A massive fire near Gogama has doubled in size again overnight. This morning (June 4), the Ministry of Natural Resources mapping has the fire at 2,945 hectares. That’s more than double what it was last night, when it was reported as 1,100 hectares. Here’s what you need to know about the situation today:

  • The main fire, Timmins 9, started on Sunday, May 31. It’s located on the west side of Highway 144, northwest of Gogama, and west of Mattagami First Nation. It is not under control.
  • On Wednesday, nine FireRanger crews were assigned to the fire, along with aerial fire suppression crews.
  • Timmins 10, located northwest of Timmins 9, on the east side of Kasasway Lake is under control at 1.5 hectares.
  • Mattagami First Nation issued a mandatory evacuation order on Wednesday. 
  • As of 9 a.m. today (June 4), Highway 144 is closed between Highway 101 and Highway 560 (The Watershed).
  • The Ministry of Natural Resources has also declared an emergency area order, restricting access to some roads.

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