Blog Archives

Today’s Takeaway

Canada announces a $1.5 billion support program for tariff-impacted industries

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

Canada announced $1.5B support for tariff-impacted steel, aluminum and copper related industries. In related news: BC Premier Eby pushes back, questions why softwood lumber was left out. Meanwhile: Carney adopts Eby’s position on Cowichan Nation title case; New Brunswick Wolastoqey Nation claim awaits Supreme Court direction; ERA’s Kevin Mason’s latest on forest product markets; Boise Cascade reports Q1, 2026 net income; and there’s still hope for the shuttered pulp mills in Terrace Bay, Ontario, and Crofton, BC.

On Day 2 of Wildfire Resilience and Awareness Week: improving wildfire behaviour predictions (with Forsite’s Fuel ID tool); changing how we think about wildfire science (a FPAC policy webinar) and improving planning through collaboration (via the Wildfire Resilience Consortium of Canada). In related news: Alberta released its new wildfire firefighting strategy; Oregon readies for another tough year; and fuel prices raise aerial firefighting costs. Meanwhile: the US Endowment partners on innovation, calls for balanced forest markets; and the long awaited simplification of the EU Deforestation Regulation is called a bust.

Finally, the 2026 SFI Annual Conference kicks-off today in Montreal.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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BC Forest Minister kicks-off Wildfire Resilience and Awareness Week

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

Our 4th annual Wildfire Resilience and Awareness Week—delivered in partnership with the Western Canada SFI Implementation Committee—kicks off with BC Forest Minister Ravi Parmar’s opening op-ed, followed by Mosaic’s expanded detection and mitigation efforts on Vancouver Island. In related news: BC Wildfire Service is on the verge of being fully staffed; Fort McMurray’s 2016 wildfire prompts new strategies; US falls behind on wildfire prevention with risky fire season ahead; Western US states are using AI for early detection; rising jet fuel costs won’t impact California’s aerial fleet; Trump’s DEI policies may threaten wildfire funding; and US Wildland Fire Service’s first chief shares his priorities.

In Business news: Conifex to curtail Mackenzie sawmill for 7-weeks; BC Forest Minister unveils new federal grant monies; Northern Ontario examines the future of forestry; the US Dept. of Commerce starts softwood lumber duty review; Seattle opens first warehouse for salvaged lumber; and US Forest Service Chief fields questions on office closure, deep budget cuts.

Finally, Stuart McNish examines DRIPA and the legal ramifications of amending the legislation.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Special Feature

Five Things We Learned About Wildfire — and What Federal Leaders Must Do Next

By Kate Lindsay, Senior Vice President and Chief Sustainability Officer
Forest Products Association of Canada
May 1, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

Canada’s wildfire seasons are no longer episodic shocks. They are systemic and growing more costly with every passing year. Leading wildfire experts who are changing how we think about wildfire science, Indigenous fire stewardship, forest management, and emergency preparedness clearly underscored that new reality during a recent FPAC policy webinar.

What stood out from this event was the degree of alignment around one central truth: Canada already has strong provincial wildfire systems. The federal role is not to replicate them, but to enable them to work better, faster, and at scale. Five key lessons from the event point to a clear conclusion: policy must evolve from reacting to wildfire disasters to building long-term wildfire resilience.

  1. Wildfire is a national resilience issue
  2. Suppression-first approaches have created today’s wildfire risk
  3. Prevention and mitigation deliver strong economic returns—but only if scaled
  4. Indigenous fire stewardship is essential to effective wildfire management
  5. Canada has the tools to act—the cap is the implementation

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Accelerating Wildfire Resilience in Canada Through Collaboration

Wildfire Resilience Consortium of Canada
May 5, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

Introducing the Wildfire Resilience Consortium of Canada (WRCC): Throughout Canada, people are doing inspiring work to improve our wildfire resilience – from FireSmart™ in communities, to efforts on the fire line, to stewardship of lands, to research across sectors, diverse groups of people are pitching in. You might be one of them! Though this inspiring work happens from coast-to-coast-to-coast, it can be challenging to know who is doing what, where it is happening, and how others can learn from it. The Wildfire Resilience Consortium of Canada (WRCC) is a national non-profit that was established in 2025 to help empower people to work together to transform wildfire resilience in Canada. Based on strong foundational work by wildfire leaders in Canada, the WRCC is specifically designed to support Indigenous fire stewardship, enhance knowledge exchange opportunities, and accelerate wildfire technology and innovation.

To make our work place-based, the WRCC is establishing seven regional networks in Canada, each convened by a Regional Coordinator. In 2026, the Regional Coordinators will launch webpages to highlight regional success stories and share upcoming events. Visit our website to learn who your Regional Coordinator is, find updates on these offerings, and reach out to help direct our work.

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Knowing the Fuel: How Modern Mapping Technology is Reshaping Community Wildfire Resilience in Canada

Forsite
May 5, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

In much of Canada, provincial and territorial fuel classification layers are built on vegetation inventory information that can be many years out of date. The inputs behind those layers are often unvalidated and the conditions they describe may not reflect current reality. …Forests change considerably over time. As an example, past harvest activity has restructured stands, and bark beetle infestations have converted millions of hectares of mature lodgepole pine into standing dead fuel. …Provincial layers typically describe fuel type classifications but say little about the structural attributes of those fuels, and nothing about their current seasonal condition. …In the WUI, the difference between a fuel-free buffer and a continuous shrub corridor can be measured in meters. Legacy maps cannot resolve these issues. The consequences of missing them are not abstract.

Forsite’s Fuel ID tool was built to address these gaps. Fuel ID encompasses a series of machine-learning approaches that use satellite imagery and, where available, LiDAR data to generate current, validated fuel information across the full canopy-to-surface profile. It is not a single product — it is a flexible system that generates resolution-appropriate outputs depending on available data inputs and the operational question being asked. 

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Getting Ahead of Fire: A Path to a More Resilient B.C.

By Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests
Government of British Columbia
May 4, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

Each year, Wildfire Resilience and Awareness Week is a reminder of a reality we are all facing. Wildfires are no longer a distant or a seasonal threat. They are at our doorstep and part of our new normal, impacting communities throughout British Columbia. Since 2017, we have experienced some of the most destructive wildfire seasons in our province’s history. Entire communities have been changed. Through it all, we have seen the extraordinary courage of firefighters and first responders who step forward when others are told to leave. When others must evacuate, they risk their lives so communities can be saved. But we have also learned something very important. Preparation makes a huge difference. If we’re going to meet this moment, we cannot simply react to wildfire, we must get ahead of it. …

Over the past year, I’ve had the privilege of meeting with wildland and structural firefighters, community leaders, and people throughout this province who are already doing this important work. What I’ve seen gives me great confidence. When communities take action, when preparation is prioritized and when we all work together, we can reduce the risks and protect what matters most.

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Wildfire Resilience Week: More Important Than Ever

By Sandy McKellar, Editor
The Tree Frog Forestry News
May 4, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada

Tree Frog Forestry News is proud to once again partner with the Western Canada SFI Implementation Committee (WCSIC) to bring you Wildfire Resilience and Awareness Week—now in its fourth year. When we launched this initiative in 2023, wildfire was already a growing concern. Today, it’s a defining reality. Seasons are longer, fires are more intense, and the impacts reach well beyond the burn zone—affecting communities, economies, and public health across the region. That’s why this week continues to matter.

All week long, Tree Frog Forestry News—together with our sponsors and contributors—will feature stories that explore wildfire mitigation, resilience, and adaptation. From on-the-ground practices to broader policy and research, these perspectives highlight what it means to live with fire in a changing landscape.

We encourage you to follow along, dig into the resources, and share these stories with your networks. Because when it comes to wildfire, awareness isn’t optional—it’s essential.

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Vancouver Island Enters 2026 Wildfire Season at Elevated Risk as Mosaic Forest Management Expands Detection and Mitigation Efforts

Mosaic Forest Management
April 27, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Vancouver Island is heading into the 2026 wildfire season under precarious conditions. Island snowpack is below normal, Environment Canada forecasts warmer and drier conditions through June, and there’s a 62 per cent chance of a strong El Niño by late summer — the weather pattern behind the prolonged heat and drought that intensifies wildfire risk. For Mosaic, which manages over 550,000 hectares of private forest land across Vancouver Island and the Sunshine Coast on behalf of two of Canada’s largest pension plans, wildfire preparedness is fundamental to responsible land management. This year, the company is further preparing by expanding its wildfire detection and mitigation capabilities. …This season, Mosaic is set to pilot an integrated detection system in the Nanaimo Lakes drainage, combining cameras, ground-level sensors and low-orbit satellite monitoring to identify ignitions faster and across a wider area. …“Our forests support local economies, local pensions and are cherished recreational spaces,” said Steve Mjaaland, Senior Manager of Forest Protection at Mosaic.

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Business & Politics

B.C. forests minister unveils new federal grant, says aid needs could reach $6B

By Mark Page
The Vernon Morning Star
May 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Ravi Parmar

B.C. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar announced on Thursday that the federal government is pitching in $21 million to support retraining and retooling forestry workers and operations in the province. The money comes as part of Ottawa’s more than $2 billion commitment to support the sector as it faces tariff tradewinds, stiff foreign competition and a lack of easy access to economically viable timber. It is funded through a $70.4 million workforce support fund announced in March. Parmar says that if a combined rate of tariffs and duties stays as high as it has been, roughly 45 per cent, the industry in B.C. will need billions of dollars more in aid.

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B.C., Treaty 8 First Nations build new partnerships to advance restoration

By Ministry of Energy and Climate Solutions
Government of British Columbia
May 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Province and seven Treaty 8 First Nations have taken a next step toward creating a thriving and community-centered local economy in northeastern British Columbia. Restoration agreements will restore and protect the environment, provide predictability and stability to existing industries, as well as establish new business opportunities in the region, while ensuring historic Treaty Rights are upheld. “The restoration agreements will build on the strong partnership that we have with the Treaty 8 First Nations, which is a First Nations led approach,” said Adrian Dix, Minister of Energy and Climate Solutions. “This work is guided by the belief that healing the land and healing the people are inseparable. …This partnership approach to land and resource management will help to uphold constitutionally protected Treaty Rights, while supporting a vibrant economy.”

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There’s still hope for Terrace Bay mill, Holland says

By Mike Stimpson
Northern Ontario Business
May 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

THUNDER BAY — Two years after shutdown, the AV Terrace Bay pulp mill is still looking for a buyer. Kevin Holland, MPP for Thunder Bay–Atikokan and associate minister of forestry, says he’d like to see that change. …“We want to see the Terrace Bay mill start up again, but any conversations with regard to restarting that mill or a purchase of it are between the existing owner and the prospective buyer. There is a point where (when) there’s an agreement in place, if there’s any involvement for our government, we require the submission of a long-term viable plan for the mill,” he said. But he added that “to date, we haven’t received any viable plan for the mill looking forward.” …Lise Vaugeois, the NDP MPP for Thunder Bay–Superior North, said “an established, respected industrial developer” presented a business plan to purchase the mill but the Progressive Conservative government has taken no action.

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U.S. Endowment Partners with Forest Products Lab to Spotlight Innovation Through Video Series

The US Endowment for Forestry and Communities
May 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities (the Endowment) has partnered with the USDA Forest Service’s Forest Products Laboratory to highlight innovation, stewardship and economic opportunity in America’s forest products sector through a video series. The series, co-funded by the Endowment and Forest Products Laboratory, gives viewers a behind-the-scenes look at groundbreaking research and unique facilities, while demonstrating how forest product innovations are delivering real-world benefits to communities, industries and ecosystems across the country. The Forest Products Laboratory is the nation’s only federally funded national wood utilization research laboratory. Located in Madison, Wis., the Forest Products Laboratory is responsible for scientific research on wood and developing innovative wood products with the objective of promoting the nation’s economy, healthy forests and quality of life for American citizens through wood and fiber utilization research.

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In Memoriam

Hardwood Sector Loses Influential Educator and Wood Products Specialist Dr. Daniel Cassens

Hippensteel Funeral Service
May 4, 2026
Category: In Memoriam
Region: US East

Daniel Cassens

Dr. Daniel L. Cassens, Professor Emeritus of Purdue University, passed away at IU Health Arnett Hospital in Lafayette on May 3, 2026. …He obtained degrees related to wood and wood manufacturing, including a B.S. degree from the University of Illinois, an M.S. from the University of California, Berkeley, and a Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Dr. Cassens was a professor and wood products specialist in the Department of Forestry and Natural Resources at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, arriving in 1977. His prior employment included positions at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana; the U.S. Forest Products Laboratory in Madison, Wisconsin; and the California Forest Products Laboratory in Berkeley, California. During college, he worked summers at a hardwood sawmill. …He collaborated with numerous trade associations, including the National Hardwood Lumber Association, the American Hardwood Export Council, the Indiana Hardwood Lumbermens Association, and the Forest Products Society, among others. …Dr. Cassens authored extensively on the topics of wood decay, wood finishing, and wood preservation. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Quebec set to get its tallest wooden building

Construction Canada
May 4, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

©jcbConstructionCanada

A 12-storey multi-residential mass timber rental project has broken ground, developed by JCB Construction Canada. It is led by the investment fund firm Fonds de solidarité FTQ and its real estate subsidiary, Fonds immobilier de solidarité FTQ. Located on Boulevard Lucille-Teasdale in Terrebonne, Que., the project involves the construction of 164 rental units. Ultimately, the development could expand to more than 400 residential units, delivered across two high-rise mass timber buildings of 12 and 18 storeys on the same site, potentially becoming the tallest wooden building in the province. In addition to its potential height, the project stands out for integrating Quebec’s Upbrella technology, a sheltered construction system who allows an entire high-rise project to be conducted in optimal conditions without the need for a crane, marking a North American first for a high-rise residential mass timber building.

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Seattle opens its first warehouse for salvaged lumber

By Ayeda Masood
KUOW News and Information
May 1, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

The city of Seattle opened its first warehouse for salvaged lumber Friday in SoDo. Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson cut a red wood “ribbon” with a chainsaw to mark the occasion. The warehouse, operated by Earthwise Architectural Salvage, will serve as a place where lumber from the demolition or renovation of buildings is collected and sold for new construction, or to make furniture and other DIY projects. “Reuse is better than recycling,” said Katie Kennedy, the Seattle Public utilities manager who helped obtain the grant for the city. “You are displacing the need for new materials.” In addition to saving trees from being cut down for new lumber, the project is aimed at reducing waste and emissions.

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The often-overlooked construction benefits of mass timber: Schedule, sequencing and safety

By Juan Rodriguez – Senior Vice President, McCownGordon
Dallas Business Journal
May 1, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US East

Mass timber is frequently praised for its aesthetic appeal and sustainability benefits. However, what often goes unrecognized are the construction phase advantages it brings to a project—advantages that directly impact schedule certainty, jobsite safety and overall delivery predictability. Beyond appearance and environmental performance, mass timber fundamentally changes how buildings are built. For owners and developers focused on speed to market and reduced risk, these operational benefits deserve just as much attention as design and carbon metrics. Mass timber construction shifts critical decision-making earlier in the project lifecycle. Structural elements such as cross-laminated timber (CLT) panels and glulam beams are fabricated off-site and arrive ready to install. There is no waiting on cure times, no extended periods of formwork or shoring, and fewer weather-related delays during structural erection.

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Forestry

More than 5,800 people raised $1.46 million at WWF-Canada’s CN Tower Climb for Nature

By World Wildlife Fund Canada
PR Newswire
May 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

TORONTO – This weekend, 5,805 people took on the CN Tower’s 1,776 stairs for World Wildlife Fund Canada’s Climb for Nature fundraiser. Supported by nearly 23,033 donors and volunteers, they raised $1.46 million (and climbing) for conservation efforts across Canada. “It’s been an awesome weekend for wildlife in Canada.” says Megan Leslie, president and CEO of WWF-Canada. “From protecting areas of the Arctic for walrus, beluga, polar bears and caribou to doing salmon habitat restoration in B.C., arm in arm with First Nations, every step taken and every dollar raised was in support of nature and wildlife across Canada.” …The 2026WWF Climb for Nature is not over. Canadians can step up for wildlife from anywhere (and anytime) or conquer the stadium steps of BC Place in Vancouver this fall.

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BC Community Forest Association hosts 2026 Conference & AGM in partnership with Monashee Community Forest

The BC Community Forest Association
May 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jennifer Gunter

Vernon, BC – The BC Community Forest Association (BCCFA) will hold its 2026 Conference and Annual General Meeting (AGM) in Vernon, BC, from June 3-5, 2026. The event brings community forest leaders, partners, and supporters from across the province to connect, collaborate, and explore the challenges and opportunities for community forests in the years ahead. This year, attendees will also tour the Monashee Community Forest, a partnership of the Splatsin First Nation and the Village of Lumby. “We are looking forward to welcoming all delegates to this event, held for the first time in Vernon,” said Jennifer Gunter, Executive Director, BCCFA. …Key themes for the 2026 Conference and AGM will include wildfire risk reduction, stewardship, community forestry, and the future of forestry, including a keynote session with Helene Marcoux, Director of the Malcolm Knapp Research Forest, focused on strengthening public understanding of forestry.

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Province’s new wildfire co-operation plan already put to test in Sandy Beach

By Steven Sandor
The Edmonton Journal
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Todd Loewen

On Friday, Alberta issued an advisory that it would on Monday be releasing details of its new wildfire firefighting strategy. The event was slated for Villeneuve Airport, where some of the aerial firefighting equipment would be shown off. …But, over the weekend, a wildfire struck the summer village of Sandy Beach, located 64 kilometres northwest of Edmonton, and just 30 kilometres from Villeneuve airport. Three homes were destroyed and another was damaged. So, the news conference ended up happening just a short drive from where the first regional wildfire event of the season flared up. And, that new firefighting plan was already in effect over the weekend, as Sturgeon County and the village could access $125,000 in provincial funds to fight the fire. …The province will expand the role of wildland urban interface teams, and special wildfire training. And, the province has struck a $400 million deal for five new water bombers, manufactured in Alberta…

Additional coverage in CFWE Radio, by Jackson Fontaine: Alberta Gearing Up for 2026 Wildfire Season

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BC Community Forest Association Conference and Field Tour

The BC Community Forest Association
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Silvopasture in Action: Collaboration, Innovation, and Climate Adaptation: This is more than a tour. It’s a chance to see innovation on the ground. In partnership with Coldstream Ranch, the Monashee Community Forest is demonstrating how forestry and ranching can work together to manage multiple values on the same landscape. Experience firsthand how silvopasture, integrating trees, forage, and livestock, is being used to support water protection, soil health, biodiversity, wildfire risk reduction, and economic resilience. From silviculture approaches to grazing design, this tour brings practical, real-world learning to life. …This project is rooted in strong relationships and shared goals, offering valuable insights into how collaboration across sectors can build trust, share risk, and support better decision-making. Whether you’re looking for new ideas, practical tools, or inspiration, this tour delivers. It’s a powerful example of how community forests are adapting to changing conditions while delivering meaningful benefits to their communities.

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Digital Tools Supporting BC’s Community Forests

By Jaya Freeman, Business Development Lead
Phoenix Connect in the BC Community Forests News
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Community Forests across British Columbia play a unique and vital role in forest stewardship. They balance ecological values, wildfire resilience, and local economic development-often with small teams and limited administrative capacity. At the same time, expectations around reporting, documentation, and data management continue to grow. Requirements tied to Electronic Submission Framework (ESF) submissions (RESULTS, FTA, FOM, RRS), spatial data, and operational tracking are becoming more detailed, while boards and communities expect clearer communication and transparency. For many community forests, the challenge isn’t just doing the work-it’s keeping information organized, accessible, and usable across teams. …Platforms like Phoenix Connect are used by many forestry organizations to manage operational data, mapping, and reporting workflows. …As reporting expectations and operational complexity continue to evolve, having reliable, accessible data will become increasingly important, not just for compliance, but for decision-making and communication.

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BC Forests Minister says BC Wildfire Service on the verge of being fully staffed for fire summer

By Michael Potestio
Castanet
May 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Minister of Forests says the BC Wildfire Service is expected to be fully staffed for the season by Friday. Ravi Parmar visited Kamloops Friday, making a stop in at the provincial wildfire co-ordination centre for a visit. “By this time next week, we will be fully staffed, fully resourced as an agency, but as you’re seeing with fires popping up, our initial attack is responding quickly,” Parmar told reporters. Parmar said the BCWS has up to 700 year-round wildland firefighters. Following recently completed training camps, he said the province will be hiring an additional 250 firefighters for the 2026 season, which, when combined with all the contractors will have more than 2,000 personnel for fore season once again. As for where most firefighters will be stationed this summer, Parmar said they are deployed to areas the BCWS believe they will be busy, noting resources in the northeast have been repositioned due to recent rain.

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Cause of 2023 McDougall Creek wildfire ‘undetermined,’ despite obvious signs of human activity near start zone

By Nicholas Johansen
Castanet
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Wildfire investigators found a small cabin, a barbecue, a metal campfire ring and shooting targets near where one of the most destructive wildfires in the Okanagan originated. But while the McDougall Creek wildfire was determined to be human caused, the exact cause of the fire remains “undetermined.” The McDougall Creek was first reported to the BC Wildfire Service on Aug. 15, 2023, putting up a small puff of smoke in the hills above West Kelowna. Two days later, the fire had spread rapidly through a number of Central Okanagan neighbourhoods, destroying nearly 200 homes. This past December, the Ministry of Forests completed its Wildfire Origin and Cause Investigation Report… But despite more than two years of investigation by three wildfire investigators, the cause of the massive fire remains “undetermined.” This is largely due to the fire burning back over the area of origin, destroying any evidence of its ignition.

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Look at forestry policies needed

Letter by Peter Rusland
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Dear North Cowichan mayor and council, and Premier David Eby: It’s not surprising a four-councillor cluster voted against a cogent April 15 motion urging our province to review and strengthen our forest policies, including those governing raw-log exports. The difference this time is right-wing councillors Findlay, Manhas, Caljouw Jr., and Hogg seemingly disregarded valley forest workers, and backed corporate timber firms’ desires for less, not more, public land-harvesting rules and regulations. Coun. Chris Justice’s logical, timely motion aimed to boost wood-fibre supplies for Canadian processing and value-added manufacturing — supporting local and Island forestry jobs — partly through a long-sought raw-log export ban. …Admit the current industry’s end is near. Instead, let’s finally explore making alternative, job-rich building materials in North Cowichan and elsewhere.

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Fort McMurray’s 2016 beastly wildfire prompts new firefighting strategies

By Jackie Carmichael
Edmonton Journal
May 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©AlbertaWildfire

Ten years on, the devastating Fort McMurray wildfire is still teaching Albertans and informing policy. “Even a very large developed community in northern Alberta is not immune from the impact of wildfire, and that really hit hard with a lot of people, and I think there are some lessons that we’ve taken on as an organization that and we’re sort of living those changes now,” said Christie Tucker, information unit manager with Alberta Wildfire of the May 3, 2016 fire that ravaged the northern Alberta city, causing the evacuation of roughly 90,000 residents at the time. …If Fort McMurray had its lessons, one is that wildfire risk isn’t just out where the wild things are. The wildland urban interface is where Albertans are living and working up in resource-based industries, up against what used to be wilderness. That is a space the province is paying a lot of attention to, Tucker said.

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Vancouver park board staff recommend easing tree maintenance policy

By Joanne Lee-Young
Vancouver Sun
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Vancouver park board staff want to inspect the health of city trees less often, partly because they can’t keep up with new demands related to maintaining the city’s 150,000 street trees and 38,000 park trees. But an expert in tree risk assessment warns that while a proposal to change the manner and frequency of tree inspections could be cost-efficient, it might not be cost-effective as it could result in dangerous trees being missed. “It comes down to money, but you’ll miss defects in trees that cause tree parts to fail,” said Norman Oberson, a provincially certified tree risk assessor, owner of Arbutus Tree Service, and a board member of the Trees of Vancouver Society. Instead of conducting detailed inspections and pruning every seven years, park board staff are proposing doing this every 10 years for the city’s street and park trees.

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Skies are buzzing in west-central Alberta as prep for wildfire season gets underway

By Maggie Kirk
CBC News
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Air traffic in parts of west-central Alberta has been busier than normal over the last few days as the province prepares for another wildfire season. Newly recruited wildland firefighters are participating in training sessions in Hinton, Alta., about 270 kilometres west of Edmonton. The rookies will learn how to initially attack a fire, a process that includes a helicopter ride. Meanwhile in nearby Edson, Alta., about 90 kilometres to the east, seven planes have been stationed at the Edson Air Tanker Base. The planes, which arrived on Monday, are ready to be deployed in the event a wildfire breaks out in the region, said Derrick Forsythe, an information officer with Alberta Wildfire. The area has seen less snow than other parts of the province.

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Invasive spotted lanternfly found in Ontario. U.S. officials say stomp it

By Bridget Stringer-Holden
CBC News
May 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

A recent spotted lanternfly discovery in St. Catharines, Ont., is renewing concern about the destructive insect reaching Canada from the United States. There are no established populations of spotted lanternfly in Canada — meaning no confirmed reproducing populations in the wild — but experts say the invasive insect still poses a serious threat to vineyards, fruit trees and hardwoods because it feeds on plant sap and can kill grapevines. Last month, Ontario resident Aidan Dagg found a dead spotted lanternfly and uploaded it to iNaturalist, a social network and mobile app where people post and identify plants and animals. Dagg, who works as an inspector at a nursery in St. Catharines, had been on the lookout for the insect for the past few years. This was the first time he had found one.

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Forest Fire Season Now in Effect on Island of Newfoundland

By Forestry, Agriculture and Lands
Government of Newfoundland and Labrador
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Forest fire season is in effect on the Island of Newfoundland beginning today, May 1, until September 30. Forest fire season will be in effect in Labrador from May 15 to September 30. During forest fire season, a permit is required to burn vegetation, wood or paper. Permits are available from provincial Forest Management District Offices. Permits are not required for campfires; however, when planning an outdoor fire, it is important to check the daily Forest Fire Hazard Map to determine the level of forest fire risk in your area. Following the unprecedented 2025 wildfire season, it is essential to remain vigilant and prepared for any challenges the 2026 forest fire season may bring. Homeowners play a big role in protecting their homes, neighbourhoods and communities from the threat of wildland fire. 

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As potentially significant season kicks off, the US Wildland Fire Service’s first chief shares priorities

By Murphy Woodhouse
Oregon Public Broadcasting
May 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Brian Fennessy

Brian Fennessy grew up in the Los Angeles area, and got into wildland fire straight out of high school in the late 1970s. He mostly worked on, and eventually led, interagency hotshot crews — among the fittest and most respected firefighters in the country. Even decades ago, he said there were questions about why federal wildfire response was split between multiple agencies. “Throwing dirt is throwing dirt, right? And hiking jeep cans up the hills — doesn’t matter what patch you’re wearing, it’s the same work,” he said. “And you know, why wouldn’t there be one agency?” Nearly five decades after he first dug fireline, Fennessy was hired as the U.S. Wildland Fire Service’s very first chief. The U.S. Wildland Fire Service was formed earlier this year by consolidating the fire programs of several Department of Interior agencies, including those of the Bureau of Land Management and National Park Service.

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Fuel surge threatens cost of aerial firefighting across Oregon and Washington

By Victor Park
KATU 2 News
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Airplanes and helicopters are some of the most important modern firefighting tools. …However, they are now more expensive to operate. According to the Argus U.S. jet fuel index, the price per gallon for jet fuel was around $2.30. Today, it hovers around $4.50 a gallon, up roughly 65% since February. The U.S. Department of Forestry told several media outlets the agency budgeted $45 million for aviation fuel this year, about $7 million less than last year. The Oregon Department of Forestry said the increases in jet fuel prices don’t impact their ability to respond to wildfires if they break out. …“In the near term, we remain fully prepared to respond to wildfires across Oregon. If elevated fuel prices continue long-term, they may increase overall aviation costs and influence future contract rates,” said Derek Gasperini, external communications manager for the Oregon Department of Forestry.

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Oregon forests face another tough year as hot, dry summer looms

By Sana Aljobory
KATU 2 News
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Oregon’s trees are heading into another difficult year as the state braces for a hot, dry summer that forestry officials say is increasingly tied to climate change. Conditions this spring are already similar to those in 2015, a year marked by peak high temperatures and drought. The concerns come after a winter that tied 1934 for the warmest since accurate records were kept beginning in 1896, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. State forestry officials say Oregon’s trees have been experiencing chronic stress from hot droughts for at least a couple of decades. While there have been occasional breaks, frequent or long-duration warm and dry conditions have compounded over time, taking a toll on many trees. …Oregon Department of Forestry Forest Entomologist Christine Buhl said spring weather can be especially damaging because it coincides with trees’ most active growing period.

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New research reveals increased wildfire risk for more than 400 communities in Northwest

By Steve Lundeberg
Oregon State University
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

CORVALLIS, Ore. – A new wildfire risk assessment tool that takes social vulnerability into account indicates more than 400 communities in the Pacific Northwest are at greater risk than previously thought. However, researchers at Oregon State University and The Nature Conservancy say their assessment tool could inform fair distribution of risk reduction resources. Andy McEvoy of the OSU College of Forestry led the creation of the tool, which integrates social vulnerability with factors such as structure density and environmental hazard. …The researchers found that Northwest communities with both high wildfire hazard and high social vulnerability tended to be small – having fewer than 5,000 buildings – and were mainly in the drier portions of the region. …“This tool balances the important element of social vulnerability with wildfire exposure, highlighting communities that are experiencing a relatively high degree of both,” co-author Chris Dunn, also of the College of Forestry said. 

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Wildfires are torching state budgets

By Kylie Mohr
The Oregon Capital Chronicle
May 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

…Wildfires burned more than 1.9 million acres in Oregon in 2024. By the time they finally died down at the end of October, the state had spent more than $350 million fighting them, greatly exceeding the $10 million it had allocated. “By July 21, I had already completely blown through my cash on hand,” said Kyle Williams, Oregon Department of Forestry’s deputy director for fire operations. Contractors weren’t promptly paid for services they’d already provided, from digging fuel breaks to supplying meals, and the state had to hold an emergency legislative session to allocate the money. That summer highlighted the flaws in how the state funds both firefighting and the preventive work that reduces the chances of large, destructive blazes in the first place. This year, as drought and a devastating snowpack stack up across the West, officials are bracing for what could be a challenging fire season. The Idaho Department of Lands has roughly $38 million set aside. 

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Rising Jet Fuel Costs Won’t Impact Cal Fire’s Aerial Firefighting Fleet

By Peyton Headlee
KCRA 3 Sacramento
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SACRAMENTO, Calif. —The rising cost of jet fuel is putting pressure on airlines and organizations that rely on planes, but Cal Fire says its aerial firefighting operations will not be affected as crews prepare for peak fire season. Cal Fire operates the largest aerial firefighting fleet in the world, with aircraft stationed across California to respond to fires wherever they ignite.  Despite the high jet fuel costs, the organization says it remains committed to fighting fires without interruption and that public safety is non-negotiable. One way Cal Fire saves money is by conducting some of its training sessions in flight simulators instead of using planes and helicopters. This approach reduces fuel consumption and minimizes wear and tear on the aircraft, which lowers maintenance costs.

Related news in Yahoo! News, by Daniel Farr: Shocking cost to fuel world’s largest flying firefighting fleet as California wildfire season looms

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Colorado wildfire leaders warn of ‘very challenging fire year’ amid widespread drought

By Ryan Spencer
Vail Daily News
May 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Colorado wildfire leaders are bracing for what could be an especially busy and dangerous summer for wildfires across the West. The Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control presented its wildfire preparedness plan to Gov. Jared Polis on Thursday, April 30, during a news conference where state and federal partners affirmed their readiness to respond and called on the public to prepare. “We are facing a very challenging fire year, where our resources will be tested across not only Colorado, but across the West,” said Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control Michael Morgan during the briefing at the division’s hangar in Broomfield. Colorado — and most of the West — is heading into summer after some of the worst winter snowpack conditions on record and persisting widespread drought. The latest U.S. Drought Monitor Report shows that 100% of Colorado and roughly 70% of the West are facing some level of drought.

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Alaskans, Are You Ready? Wildfire Prevention and Preparedness Week Kicks Off May 3

By Alaska Division of Forestry & Fire Protection
Alaska Wildland Fire Information
May 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

May is Wildfire Awareness Month! Today kicks off Nationwide Wildfire Community Preparedness Day which leads us into our very own Alaska specific Alaska Wildland Fire Prevention and Preparedness Week. Gov. Mike Dunleavy has proclaimed May 3rd–9th, as Wildland Fire Prevention and Preparedness Week in Alaska. This serves as a timely public reminder that while wildland fire is a natural part of Alaska’s landscape, it can quickly become dangerous, especially when caused by human activity. The governor stresses that Alaskans must use precaution, practice prevention, and be prepared to protect their communities that are among Alaska’s wilderness areas. 

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Strength in Numbers: The Value of Wood Pellet Association of Canada Membership

By Gordon Murray
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
May 4, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada

Canada’s wood pellet sector is recognized around the world for its quality, sustainability and reliability. This position is no accident. It is supported by coordinated industry efforts through the Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC), the sector’s national voice. We are a member‑driven organization and the unified voice of Canada’s world‑leading pellet industry. We represent more than 50 producers and industry participants from coast to coast. Our role is to support the competitiveness of Canadian pellets, advance safety leadership and build long‑term market confidence—work that no single company can do as effectively on its own. At a time of evolving global markets, tightening sustainability requirements and growing scrutiny of bioenergy, working together matters more than ever. Becoming a WPAC member is about contributing to our shared strength, credibility and long‑term resilience as a sector.

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Forest Fires

Heat records fall across Vancouver Island as wildfire risks climb

By Hannah Link
Victoria Times Colonist
May 5, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

Warm weather across British Columbia broke daily temperature records in at least nine Vancouver Island locations this past weekend. Victoria’s Gonzlaes station got to 26.9 C, breaking the record of 25 C for May 3 set in 1898, while the Victoria International Airport recorded a high of 25.1 C, breaking the previous record of 25.0 C set in 1944.  …The B.C. Wildfire service said it’s expecting above-seasonal temperatures into this week and warns that could increase the likelihood of new wildfire starts. There are about 31 active wildfires in B.C., with roughly 10 new fires recorded Sunday — including two on Vancouver Island. …The B.C. Wildfire Service said one blaze deemed under control was discovered just west of Coombs near Highway 4 early Sunday afternoon. …Another fire was discovered near Tyee Creek, east of Ladysmith.

Related BC wildfire news by Amy Judd in Global News: B.C. wildfire burning near Cultus Lake as hot weather continues

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Evacuation alert issued due to wildfire between Williams Lake and Quesnel

By Ian Holliday
CTV News
April 30, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

A large swath of sparsely populated land in B.C.’s Cariboo region has been placed on evacuation alert due to a nearby wildfire. The Cariboo Regional District issued the alert for eight parcels covering 696.57 hectares in the Webster Creek Fire Area on Thursday, citing “potential danger to life and health.” The Webster Creek wildfire was discovered Wednesday. It’s located west of Highway 97 between Williams Lake and Quesnel, two of the region’s largest population centres. According to the B.C. Wildfire Service, the blaze is currently burning on roughly 66 hectares and displaying Rank 1 and Rank 2 fire behaviour, the least intense levels on the scale. There are 19 firefighting personnel responding to the wildfire, supported by helicopters and heavy equipment.

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