Blog Archives

Today’s Takeaway

West Fraser, Brink Forest Products closures mark another hit to Canada’s forest industry

The Tree Frog Forestry News
December 5, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

In another hit to Canada’s forest industry, West Fraser Timber is indefinitely curtailing its High Level, Alberta, OSB mill; and Brink Forest Products is temporarily closing its value-added mills in northern BC. In related news: BC leaders are hopeful new buyers will continue operating the Crofton pulp mill; and Tolko’s Williams Lake mill remains down after fire. Meanwhile, Boise Cascade’s Jeff Strom succeeds Nate Jorgensen as CEO; and West Fraser’s Sean McLaren is elected American Wood Council Board Chair.

In Forestry news: Health Canada is unmoved by retraction of glyphosate study; Ben Parfitt opines on what’s behind the Crofton mill closure; Alice Palmer is unsettled by the lack of empathy in BC’s forestry debate; and Arizona research on the cost and value of Wildland-Urban Interface building requirements. Meanwhile: a UK firm secures financing for fungi-based tree health pellets; and New Zealanders have fire safety worries about IKEA’s pine plantations.

Finally, US tariffs on Chinese fake Christmas trees could drive business to live tree lots.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

Read More

Domtar to reduce its lumber production in Quebec, Ontario and US

The Tree Frog Forestry News
December 4, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Domtar Wood Products announced it is curtailing lumber production by 100 million bf in 2025. In related news: Domtar’s Crofton pulp mill closure underscores the urgency of BC’s forest crisis; Darron Kloster (Times Colonist) says industry blames province for mill closure; Penny Daflow (CTV) says Crofton had been importing US pulp to reduce costs; Rob Shaw (CHEK) says Eby rules out old growth logging to extend life of mill; and Kruger says pulp business in still good in Kamloops.

In other news: despite warnings, Trump dangles CUSMA trade deal withdrawal; US hardwood mills warn of closures; Roseburg closes Weed, California veneer plant; and RoyOMartin announces CEO change. Meanwhile: Canfor is acquiring 100% of Canfor Pulp’s shares; Vancouver Island forestry strike enters 6th month; and Ontario launches advance wood construction working group.

Finally, wooden skyscrapers and research advancements in wood fibre fabrics.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

Read More

Domtar to permanently close pulp mill in Crofton, British Columbia

The Tree Frog Forestry News
December 3, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Domtar announced the permanent closure of its pulp mill in Crofton, BC, impacting 350 workers. Comments on the announcement include:

In other Business news: Ottawa declines industry request for lumber duty payouts; US WoodWorks opens call for nominations for Wood in Architecture Awards; and WoodWorks BC appoints Annabelle Hamilton as new executive director.

In Forestry/Climate news: David Elstone and Jim Girvan push back on Business in Vancouver article on BC’s allowable cut determinations; a BC resource sector coalition urges governments to pause DRIPA; and the UK’s reliance on biomass energy generation reaches new heights.

Finally, Walbran logging protesters employ unsafe behaviours with substantial safety risks.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

Read More

Business & Politics

Canada Revenue Agency strengthens compliance in trucking sector by lifting the moratorium on T4A penalties

By Canada Revenue Agency
Cision Newswire
December 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – Tax non-compliance in the trucking sector has allowed some companies to avoid tax obligations, undercutting compliant competitors and denying workers the benefits and pensions they have earned. To restore fairness, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) is making changes to improve compliance in the trucking industry. The CRA has lifted the moratorium on penalties for failing to report fees for services for the 2025 tax year and subsequent tax years. Businesses in this sector will now be assessed penalties if they fail to report payments for services exceeding $500 in a calendar year that are made to a Canadian-controlled private corporation in the trucking industry. These payments must be reported to the CRA by February 28, 2026. A business is considered to be operating in the trucking industry if more than 50% of its primary source of income is from trucking activities.

Read More

Domtar Wood Products announces temporary curtailment of lumber production

Domtar Corporation
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Montréal, Quebec  Domtar Wood Products announced today a curtailment in its lumber production. Due to challenging market conditions and ongoing economic uncertainty, Domtar will temporarily reduce its lumber production by 100 million board feet for the fourth quarter of 2025, including additional curtailments for the holiday season, at its facilities in Quebec, Ontario, and the United States. “Demand for lumber continues to stagnate in North America, exacerbating an already difficult market,” said Luc Thériault, President of Domtar Wood Products. Domtar will continue to monitor market conditions and adjust its production plans accordingly. [END]

Read More

Mayor encouraged by meeting with premier over Crofton mill closure

By Robert Barron
Victoria News
December 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Rob Douglas

Providing supports for workers at the Crofton pulp mill, which is permanently closing, was the major topic at a meeting of government officials and union leaders in Victoria on Dec. 3. North Cowichan Mayor Rob Douglas said he … was encouraged when Premier David Eby said providing supports for approximately 350 mill workers … will be a top priority for his government. Douglas said the Public and Private Workers of Canada … asked for flexibility on extensions to the workers’ Employment Insurance benefits. …Douglas said the fact that the Crofton mill is the single biggest taxpayer in North Cowichan, contributing approximately $5 million a year to the municipality to help pay for services and programs, was also raised. …Douglas said he’s also pleased that the government said it is actively looking for buyers to take over the mill and continue its operations. “The Harmac model … was also discussed at the meeting.”

Read More

Williams Lake sawmill down after fire, rest of operations continue

By Ruth Lloyd
The Williams Lake Tribune
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Tolko’s Lakeview mill in Williams Lake remains down as the company works to find the cause of a fire overnight on Sunday. Chris Dancocks, senior communications advisor for Tolko Industries Ltd. confirmed crews discovered the fire the night of Nov. 29 and early morning Dec. 1, contacting emergency crews immediately. Dancocks said no injuries were reported in relation to the fire and the sawmill remains down until repairs are completed. He said the company is currently planning repairs and the planer mill, log yard, chip plant, and shipping areas remain in full operation. [END]

Read More

West Fraser Reduces OSB Capacity

West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd.
December 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC – West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd. announced that it will indefinitely curtail its oriented strand board (OSB) mill in High Level, Alberta in the spring of 2026 following an orderly wind-down and consumption of the mill’s existing log supply. The decision is the result of a significant weakening of OSB demand and is expected to reduce West Fraser’s capacity by 860 million square feet (3/8-inch). West Fraser expects to mitigate the impact on the approximate 190 affected employees at the site by providing work opportunities at other company operations, where available. West Fraser also confirmed that the idling of one of its production lines at its Cordele, Georgia OSB facility since late 2023 will continue indefinitely. The idled production line at Cordele has a capacity of 440 million square feet (3/8-inch). …West Fraser expects to record an approximately $200 million asset impairment loss in the fourth quarter of 2025 in connection with the indefinite curtailment of the High Level OSB mill.

Read More

Kruger says business in Kamloops is good as fibre shortage forces mill closure on Vancouver Island

By Michael Potestio
Castanet
December 4, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Things are “running smoothly” at the Kamloops pulp mill on Mission Flats, even amid dire news in the industry with the looming closure of a long-running mill on Vancouver Island. Domtar announced Tuesday that it’s closing the Crofton pulp mill on Vancouver Island, leaving about 350 employees out of work. Poor pricing for pulp and a lack of access to affordable fibre in B.C. were blamed. Kruger, which purchased the Kamloops pulp mill from Domtar in 2022, told Castanet business is good in the Tournament Capital. “The Kruger Kamloops Pulp Mill is running smoothly and continues to deliver quality products to its global customers,” Kruger spokeswoman Marie-Claude Tremblay told Castanet Kamloops on Wednesday. …B.C. Conservative forestry critic Ward Stamer blasted the NDP government in the wake of the Crofton closure. Stamer said there are clear solutions to aid the forestry sector — like streamlining wood fibre access, faster permits and approvals and reducing operating and administration costs…

Read More

North Island forestry strike enters 6th month keeping needed fibre behind pickets

By Kendall Hanson
Chek News
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

More than 100 unionized North Island forestry workers on strike rallied in Campbell River on Wednesday. They’ve been without a contract for more than six months. They warned their employer that they are united and will succeed in their demands… The United Steelworkers marched to the Campbell River offices of Western Forest Products… The company owns a controlling 55 per cent share of La-kwa sa muqw Forestry (LKSM). On Oct. 20, the union filed a common-employer application with the Labour Relations Board. “…we’re challenging the fact that LKSM is actually a separate company. …We believe our members deserve the same collective agreement that all WFP members have,” said Brian Butler, president of United Steelworkers Local 1-1937 …“What this issue is really about is the union’s demand that it wants all contractors, new contractors, working for us, including First Nation contractors, to be mandatorily certified with the union,” said Greg DeMille, Operations Manager of La-kwa sa muqw Forestry.

Read More

Crofton mill closure shows B.C.’s forestry problems start with Victoria, not Trump

By Rob Shaw
Business in Vancouver
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government’s attempts to blame U.S. President Donald Trump for everything wrong with the province’s forestry sector ran headlong into a reality check with the closure of Domtar’s long-running Crofton pulp mill on Vancouver Island. … Crofton doesn’t sell its goods … to the Americans, and so its decline isn’t being driven by the ongoing softwood lumber tariffs. The culprit, according to the company, is provincial forestry policies. …“We’re the most expensive jurisdiction in North America to do forestry,” echoed Council of Forest Industries CEO Kim Haakstad. …Forest Minister Parmar insists there’s wood permitted and available. The sector argues the cost is so high, it’s not worth harvesting. Politics is another layer in the Crofton closure. …The premier keeps demanding urgency from Ottawa on forestry. Too bad his government can’t muster any of it to fix its own policy failures here at home. Maybe then, mills like Crofton wouldn’t be closing.

Read More

Truck Loggers Association’s Statement on Domtar’s Closure of Crofton Pulp Mill

BC Truck Loggers Association
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Domtar’s announcement of its Crofton pulp and paper mill closure was a major and far-reaching loss for its workers, the North Cowichan community, and the broader forest-industry supply chain across the BC Coast. It is especially difficult knowing that this closure was preventable. Industry, labour and municipal governments have been warning the BC government about the risk of mill closures for many months. The government was given numerous recommendations, solutions, and opportunities that could have helped avoid this outcome, but has largely failed to act with the urgency that was required. …This closure underscores the many challenges facing BC’s coastal forest sector: ongoing constraints on access to economically viable fibre, an uncompetitive business cost structure, and regulatory uncertainty. For TLA members, these pressures threaten the stability of their operations and the forestry-dependent communities they support. The TLA remains committed to working with government and industry partners to stabilize the sector…

Read More

Crofton Closure Underscores Urgency of Coastal Forest Crisis

Coast Forest Policy Coalition
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Coast Forest Policy Coalition expresses deep concern over Domtar’s announcement of the permanent closure of its Crofton pulp and paper mill and calls for immediate collaborative action to address BC’s coastal fibre supply challenges. The Crofton closure affects hundreds of families and businesses in the Cowichan Valley and represents the tenth coastal mill to permanently close since 2018. The coast has lost 5,400 jobs since 2022 alone, with over 700 companies across the supply chain facing uncertainty. “Pulp mills are critical infrastructure on the coast—they’re essential to our integrated forest economy, utilizing sawmill and harvest residuals that are a necessary part of coastal forestry operations,” says Peter Lister, Chair of the Coast Forest Policy Coalition and Executive Director of the Truck Loggers Association. …The Coalition has outlined solutions that emphasize collaborative action: streamlining permit preparation processes to reduce current timelines, providing regulatory certainty by pausing new policy initiatives until existing processes work efficiently, and developing coast-specific solutions that recognize coastal operations’ unique requirements.

Read More

WoodWorks BC announces Annabelle Hamilton as new executive director

By Canadian Wood Council
LinkedIn
November 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

We are delighted to announce that Annabelle Hamilton has been appointed Executive Director of WoodWorks BC. Since joining WoodWorks in 2023, Annabelle has brought exceptional vision, technical depth, and industry experience to our team. Her leadership has helped advance the adoption of wood construction in British Columbia, strengthen performance on key market-growth indicators, and build critical partnerships across the development and municipal sectors. With a background in real estate development and project delivery across international markets, Annabelle combines hands-on project experience with strong strategic insight. Her work supporting developers with real-project financial data has strengthened the economic case for mass timber and contributed to continued market confidence in wood solutions.

Read More

Domtar to permanently close Crofton Mill

Domtar Corporation
December 2, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

CROFTON, BC — Domtar announced it will permanently close operations at its Crofton, British Columbia, facility. The decision will reduce Domtar’s annual pulp production by approximately 380,000 air-dried metric tons of northern bleached softwood kraft (NBSK) pulp. The announcement will affect approximately 350 employees. “The Crofton mill has been challenged for some time now,” said Steve Henry, Domtar paper and packaging president. “Over the last 18 months, Crofton employees worked hard to reduce operational costs and they made some extraordinary gains. Unfortunately, continued poor pricing for pulp and lack of access to affordable fiber in BC necessitates the closure. These decisions are made with careful consideration and we recognize the hardship this decision will have on both our employees and the Cowichan Valley community as well as our business partners and the coastal forest sector,” said Henry. …Domtar is committed to its remaining mills in BC and to working with the government and industry partners to improve access to affordable fiber.

Read More

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

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

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

Read More

Local MP advocates for softwood lumber industry

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

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

Read More

Roseburg Consolidates Veneer Production to Strengthen Long-Term Competitiveness

Roseburg Forest Products
December 3, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

SPRINGFIELD, Ore. — Roseburg Forest Products announced today that it has ceased operations at its Weed, Calif., veneer plant as of Dec. 3, 2025. The company is consolidating veneer production at its Oregon mills, where it has installed new, highly efficient veneer equipment. The move strengthens Roseburg’s long-term competitiveness in engineered wood and softwood plywood markets. This closure, along with the company’s decision in September 2025 to exit the hardwood plywood market, enables Roseburg to concentrate resources on a more focused product portfolio and optimize its position in increasingly competitive wood products markets. “With the investments we have made in our Riddle and Coquille, Ore., veneer and softwood plywood mills, we have repositioned these operations as well as our Riddle Engineered Wood mill to be among the most cost-competitive mills in the industry,” said Stuart Gray, Roseburg’s president and CEO.

Read More

Finance & Economics

Canfor Corporation to acquire Canfor Pulp

Canfor Corporation
December 3, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver, BC – Canfor Corporation and Canfor Pulp Products Inc. announced today that they have entered into an arrangement agreement pursuant to which Canfor Corp will acquire all of Canfor Pulp’s issued and outstanding common shares not already owned by Canfor Corp and its affiliates pursuant to a court-approved plan of arrangement under the Business Corporations Act. Under the terms of the Arrangement Agreement, the shareholders of Canfor Pulp, other than Canfor Corp and its affiliates, will have the option to receive, for each Canfor Pulp Share held: 0.0425 of a common share of Canfor Corp, or $0.50 in cash. ….Canfor Corp currently owns approximately 54.8% of the issued and outstanding Canfor Pulp Shares. The $0.50 per Canfor Pulp Share represents a premium of 25% to Canfor Pulp’s closing share price on December 2, 2025, on the Toronto Stock Exchange and a premium of 38% based on the 10-day volume-weighted average share price of Canfor Pulp as of December 2, 2025, on the TSX.

Read More

Tariffs have created a challenging operating environment for home builders and their suppliers

By Daniel Kline
The Street
December 5, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: US East

“President Donald Trump’s tariffs could increase builder costs anywhere from $7,500 to $10,000 per home,” said Rob Dietz, chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders… Last year, the NAHB estimated that every $1,000 increase in the median price of a new home prices out roughly 106,000 potential buyers. The biggest impact has been felt in lumber prices, which are expected to total about $4,900 per home on average. …about a third of the wood purchased for homebuilding comes from Canada. Domestic lumber producers generally raise their prices to match import prices. …major players like Home Depot are better able to mitigate and predict rising and volatile prices than smaller retailers. North American Builder’s Supply, based in Illinois, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. …“Over 50% of our inventory is not part of tariffs and is obviously sourced domestically,” Home Depot Executive Vice President William Bastek shared.

Read More

Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canada needs 22 million homes fast. University of BC and partners are delivering solutions

By Lou Bosshart
The University of British Columbia
December 4, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Dr. Tony Yang

Canada needs 22 million new homes by 2030. The University of British Columbia is working with governments, industry and communities to make that goal more achievable—by mapping buildable land, testing faster and greener construction, and designing homes built for climate extremes. Together, these projects could help unlock land for up to 50,000 new housing units, cut construction costs by as much as 60 per cent, and create jobs while reducing emissions. It starts with knowing where to build. UBC’s Housing Assessment Resource Tools (HART) team is creating the BC Public Lands Map, the first province-wide inventory of public land. …Dr. Tony Yang and industry partners are leading an $8.3 million national project to make modular construction faster, cheaper and cleaner. The team is developing factory-built modules made from engineered wood and carbon-neutral materials that can be assembled in days —cutting build times by half and costs by about 30 per cent. 

Read More

Ontario Launches Advanced Wood Construction Working Group

By Ministry of Natural Resources
The Government of Ontario
December 3, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

TORONTO — The Ontario government has launched a new working group to guide the implementation of the Advanced Wood Construction Action Plan: Ontario’s blueprint for education, research and investment in the fast-growing sector of prefabricated and modular wood-based building materials, known as advanced wood construction. The action plan was launched earlier this year to support the government’s plan to protect Ontario by promoting the use of more wood-based building materials that can help build more homes and buildings faster and create a more resilient forestry sector in response to U.S. tariffs. …”The Province’s Advanced Wood Construction Action Plan shows real leadership at a pivotal time for Ontario’s construction sector. By aligning policy, investment, and industry capacity, the Ministry is helping modernize how we build and supporting the continued growth of advanced wood construction across the province,” said Robert Jonkman, P.Eng., Vice-President, Codes and Engineering, Canadian Wood Council.

Related coverage:

Read More

Call for Nominations: WoodWorks’ 2026 Wood in Architecture Awards

By Roxane Ward, WoodWorks – Wood Products Council
The Rock Hill Herald
December 3, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

WASHINGTON, D.C. — WoodWorks invites architects and engineers to nominate their projects for the 2026 Wood in Architecture Awards. The annual awards program recognizes achievements in mass timber, light-frame wood, and hybrid buildings in the U.S. The deadline for nominations is January 26, 2026. Winners will be announced alongside the AIA Conference on Architecture and Design in San Diego, CA, in June 2026. “The Wood in Architecture Awards celebrate the design teams shaping the future of commercial and multi-family wood construction. Every day, our team is inspired by the design and construction professionals we support who are working to incorporate wood in ways that better communities, local economies, and the tenant experience,” said Jennifer Cover, PE, WoodWorks President and CEO.

Read More

Research concludes Wildland-Urban Interface building codes save lives – and money

By Peter Aleshire
The Payson Roundup
December 4, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

Payson sits in one of the most fire-prone regions in the country, yet the town council has repeatedly declined to adopt fire-hardening requirements for new homes. The town several years ago approved a Firewise landscaping code aimed at thinning overgrown properties and removing vegetation touching buildings. However, the council has twice rejected a Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) building code, most recently after firefighters urged the council to adopt standards for new construction. Builders raised concerns about cost, and the council again declined to move forward. A collection of studies suggests those concerns may not align with the data. Research from federal agencies, economists and wildfire specialists shows WUI codes add little to the cost of new construction, save money over time and significantly reduce the likelihood of homes burning in a wildfire. The research also points to major long-term savings for taxpayers, who shoulder growing federal firefighting costs in high-risk areas.

Read More

Georgia Mass Timber Accelerator Funds Projects and Drives Sustainable Growth

By Georgia Forestry Foundation
PR Newswire
December 5, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US East

FORSYTH, Ga.,  — The Georgia Forestry Foundation, in partnership with the USDA Forest Service and the Softwood Lumber Board (SLB) recently awarded the first cohort of the Georgia Mass Timber Accelerator projects $75,000 in funding. The selected projects include a diverse range of residential, educational and community-focused buildings, showcasing the versatility and low carbon footprint of mass timber construction. As an additional benefit of the Accelerator program, the three selected projects also received technical assistance from Woodworks – Wood Products Council that supported the integration of mass timber in their designs. At the finale event, held at SouthFace Institute in Atlanta, each team presented on the status of their project and their next phase of development, including the selection of a regional mass timber provider, the final permitting process, and breaking ground.

Read More

Tree branches to fleece jackets: Chemicals plant in Germany bets on biomass

Associated Free Press in France 24
December 4, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Leuna, Germany — Staring at a pile of freshly cut beechwood, forestry manager Johannes Brodowski wonders if he is looking at the future of Germany’s chemicals industry. A local factory will use Brodowski’s trees and other organic material — instead of climate-harming fossil fuels — to make chemical products used to manufacture items ranging from packaging to car tyres and fleece jackets. “The innovative part of the whole thing is that a new product is getting made,” he told AFP: “Namely, chemical materials that were originally made from fossil fuels and now can be made from renewable sources.” Finnish group UPM Biochemicals unveiled its 1.3-billion-euro ($1.5-billion) biorefinery in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt this year, taking a big risk at a difficult time for the sector.

Read More

Wooden skyscrapers point the way to more sustainable cities

By Sedeer el-Showk
Nature
December 3, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

Michael Green

When the first skyscraper was built in Chicago in 1885 … people were afraid … it would collapse. Today, as towers made of wood go up around the world, the response is a similar mixture of wonder and fear. …but the truth is that wooden construction is healthier, both for people and for the planet. Buildings and construction are the largest source of anthropogenic greenhouse gases… A building’s structural elements, typically steel and concrete, are “a huge component of that carbon footprint”, says architect Michael Green. …Green was an early advocate of wooden construction and continues to think about improving the construction industry’s climate impact. His question now is what new structural material could replace the big four widely used in construction: wood, steel, concrete and masonry. One possibility, which he favours, would be creating a material from plant fibres that can be formed into organic, efficient shapes, minimizing waste and capturing carbon at the same time.

Read More

Forestry

Climate Smart Forestry Initiative Advisory Committees Announced

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
December 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Washington, D.C.— The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) announces the establishment of two SFI Climate Smart Forestry Initiative Advisory Committees, one in the United States and one in Canada, to shape the activities and outputs of the SFI Climate Smart Forestry (SFI CSF) Initiative on climate-informed forest management practices, science syntheses, and knowledge sharing across North America. In 2024, SFI launched the Climate Smart Forestry Initiative to advance Objective 9 (Climate Smart Forestry) of the SFI 2022 Forest Management Standard. Objective 9 requires organizations certified to the SFI Forest Management Standard to consider and implement actions to reduce the negative effects of climate change and adapt to changing conditions. The SFI CSF Initiative is a collaborative effort to identify and implement climate-informed, data-driven forestry practices that address climate change through adaptive management, enhanced carbon storage, and increased forest resilience.

Read More

National Peatland Strategy proposed to protect climate-critical ecosystems amid extraction and industrial development rush

By Wildlife Conservation Society Canada
Cision Newswire
December 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

TORONTO – Wildlife Conservation Society Canada Canada has today unveiled a proposed National Peatland Strategy, calling on federal, provincial, and territorial governments to adopt urgent measures to safeguard Canada’s most carbon-rich ecosystems. Peatlands – critical natural stores of carbon that also support biodiversity, water quality and Indigenous ways of life – are increasingly threatened by industrial development, resource extraction, and policy gaps that leave them unprotected. Canada is home to roughly 25% of the world’s peatlands, storing 150 billion tonnes of carbon – more than five times the carbon in all the country’s forests combined. Yet these ecosystems face mounting pressures from industrial development, especially mining, oil and gas, agriculture and forestry. Experts warn that without immediate, coordinated action, degradation of Canada’s peatlands could release massive amounts of irrecoverable greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere, undermining national and global climate targets.

Read More

Why was ‘incredible’ giant cedar cut down, despite B.C.’s big-tree protection law?

By Brenna Owen
The Canadian Press in Global News
December 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Joshua Wright says a yellow cedar tree he photographed last year was the largest he’d ever seen in a decade of hiking around Vancouver Island. …Wright measured the cedar’s diameter at 2.79 metres, a size that should have ensured protection for the tree, along with a one-hectare buffer under provincial law. But when he returned to the area south of Gold River in June, Wright says the tree had been felled as part of a logging operation approved by the province. …the area where Wright documented the yellow cedar overlaps significantly with a category of old-growth representing the largest trees left standing. …Yet the deferrals required support from First Nations to go ahead, and at the time, there was no significant funding to help communities offset foregone revenues. …the yellow cedar was felled in an area where Matchlee Ltd. Partnership, majority owned by Mowachaht/Muchalaht First Nation, holds a non-renewable forest licence.

Read More

‘Important investment’: B.C. forestry ministry praises $257.6 million federal boost to wildfire fighting

By Ruth Prarthana and Stephen Albert
Energetic City
December 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

FORT ST. JOHN, B.C.  — The B.C. Ministry of Forests is encouraged that the Government of Canada has taken a huge step to amp up aerial firefighting capacity. Anthony Housefather, parliamentary secretary to Eleanor Olszewski, federal minister of emergency management and community resilience and minister responsible for Prairies economic development, recently highlighted a new multi-million-dollar investment of over $257.6 million for four years to Natural Resources Canada. The funds will be used to lease firefighting aircrafts, which can include waterbombers or other aircrafts to deliver water or fire retardant drops in hard-to-reach areas. …The Ministry of Forests will be hosting a national wildfire symposium in Vancouver on December 5th. This event will bring the government, wildfire experts, key industry and Indigenous partners to discuss the 2025 wildfire season. However, this event is by invite only. 

Read More

Chilcotin, Okanagan foresters share knowledge, advance stewardship

By Laísa Condé
Penticton Western News
December 2, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Nk’Mip Forestry and Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. (CCR) are strengthening ties as they advance Indigenous-led forestry and land stewardship. According to a press release, the two organizations recently held field tours in their respective First Nations territories, deepening collaboration and sharing knowledge across Indigenous-led forestry initiatives. The CCR is a joint venture of Tŝideldel First Nation, Tl’etinqox Government, and Yunesit’in Government, which was originally formed to address 100,000 hectares of dead pine left in the Chilcotin region and to rehabilitate those stands into productive forests. …Dan Macmaster, registered professional forester and head of forestry with Nk’Mip, said the tours create a space for Indigenous-led organizations to learn from one another on the land. …Both organizations said the forestry field tours represent the beginning of continued collaboration…

Read More

Ontario Wildlife Rescue honours black bear sanctuary founder

By Gary Rinne
The Thunder Bay News Watch
December 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©BearWithUs

SPRUCEDALE, ON — A man who’s worked for over three decades on the rehabilitation of orphaned and injured black bears, including many from Northwestern Ontario, has been recognized for his contributions to animal welfare. Mike McIntosh of the Bear With Us Sanctuary and Rehabilitation Centre for Bears received the Wildlife Rehabber of the Year award from Ontario Wildlife Rescue. McIntosh and his wife, Ella, look after as many as 100 bears at a time at their facility in Sprucedale, east of Parry Sound. He works closely with the Ministry of Natural Resources Bear Wise program, and is a partner in a coyote/wolf/bear education initiative. Ontario Wildlife Rescue works with over 50 wildlife rehabilitation centres in the province.

Read More

Ikea’s Hawke’s Bay pine tree expansion sparks fears residents will be left to pay

By Alexa Cook
Radio New Zealand (RNZ)
December 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The opening of IKEA in New Zealand comes as a rural community worries about the fire risk from pine plantations. Since 2020 IKEA has converted six Central Hawke’s Bay farms into pine forestry…This move, combined with the sale of [local] farms to overseas forestry companies, is sparking concerns from locals about the loss of farmland and the risks associated with converting large areas into pines. …Porangahau farmer James Hunter wants New Zealanders to witness the extent of farmland being planted in forestry. Most of IKEA’s 4300 hectares of forestry in Central Hawke’s Bay is near the village of Porangahau, where about 200 hectares of its pine trees went up in flames in October and took days to extinguish because of the high winds grounding helicopters. It’s fires like this that have rural communities on edge, because they say even if the blaze starts on nearby farmland, the forests contain the fuel that feeds them.

Read More

The rebirth of Thuja sutchuenensis, ancient tree species being preserved, as ecological protection gains speed

By Global Times
PR Newswire
December 2, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

©Conifers.org/Jacobson

BEIJING — Thuja sutchuenensis is an endangered gymnosperm plant unique to China. Originating from the age of dinosaurs over 100 million years ago, it flourished during the Cretaceous period. Harboring irreplaceable genetic resources, it is known as the “plant giant panda.” Thuja sutchuenensis was first discovered in 1892. Today, the peaks in Chongqing’s Kaizhou district, Chengkou county, Wuxi county and Sichuan Province’s Xuanhan county are the remaining habitats for this relic plant. …In 1998 it was declared extinct. Later, local Chongqing researchers rediscovered wild Thuja sutchuenensis trees on remote cliffs. …To date, the reserve has discovered over 7,800 wild Thuja sutchuenensis trees, establishing China’s first regional resource database that maintains a standard of “one file per tree.” Neighboring Chengkou county also recently discovered an area of over 5,000 trees.

Read More

The top five countries with the largest forests in 2025

By Amber Bryan
Geographical
December 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The total forest area in the world is 4.1 billion hectares, or 32 per cent of Earth’s total surface area. The tropics are home to the majority of the world’s forests – 45 per cent – while the rest is mainly found in boreal, temperate and subtropical zones. Since 1990, 489 million hectares of forest have been lost to deforestation… While the rate of deforestation is actually slowing, so is the rate of forest expansion, dropping from 9.88 million hectares per year from 2000-2015 to 6.78 million hectares per year in the decade to 2025. Below are the top five countries with the biggest forests as of 2025, according to forest area:

  1. Russia – 832,630 hectares
  2. Brazil – 486,087 hectares
  3. Canada – 368,819 hectares
  4. US – 308,895 hectares
  5. China – 227,153 hectares

Read More

Grazing goats could replace herbicides

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

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

Read More

Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Climate Change Accountability Report shows lower emissions, more work to do

By Ministry of Energy and Climate Solutions
Government of British Columbia
December 3, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada West

The Province has released the 2025 Climate Change Accountability Report, reaffirming its commitment to climate action and affordability while highlighting progress in cutting emissions and advancing clean energy throughout B.C. The report shows that CleanBC is working. British Columbia is making progress in many areas… In spring 2025, the 2024 Climate Change Accountability Report indicated that B.C. was not on track to meet its 2030 emissions targets. The recently released CleanBC review provides independent advice to strengthen the climate plan and keep delivering results. Government is reviewing the recommendations to guide the next phase of action, with a focus on expanding clean energy, supporting cleaner industry and making low-carbon choices more accessible for people and communities.

Read More

UK using more wood to make electricity than ever, Drax figures show

By Jillian Ambrose
The Guardian
December 3, 2025
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

Britain’s reliance on burning wood to generate electricity has reached record highs, even as the government moves to curb the controversial use of biomass power. The latest figures supplied by the owner of the giant Drax biomass plant in North Yorkshire have revealed that power generated from burning biomass wood pellets provided 9% of the UK’s electricity in July, its largest ever monthly share. Weeks later, biomass provided almost a fifth (17%) of the UK’s electricity for the first time during one morning in September when renewable energy resources were particularly low. Britain’s record reliance on biomass generation has reached new heights as the government set out its plans to dramatically reduce the controversial energy source under a new subsidy agreement with the FTSE 250 owner of the Drax power plant.

Read More

Forest Fires

Three wildfires remain active in Calgary Forest Area

By Noel Edey
Cochrane Now
December 2, 2025
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

With wildfire activity winding down for 2025, the Calgary Forest Area continues to have three active wildfires, all classified as under control, with firefighters working toward full extinguishment. These are among 26 wildfires still active in Alberta, 25 of which are under control, with one being held. Fire crews have extinguished 1,248 fires in forest protection areas this year, mirroring numbers from 2024 yet exceeding the five-year average by more than 100. One of the remaining fires in the Calgary Region is located 25 kilometres west of Water Valley in the Harold Creek area. The fire was first spotted on Nov. 10 at 8 p.m. and has been aggressively managed by wildfire crews, remaining contained to 27 hectares. Since Jan. 1, 2025, the Calgary Forest Area has experienced 73 wildfires, burning more than 67 hectares. Although Oct. 31 marked the official end of Alberta’s wildfire season, ongoing dry conditions mean the risk of wildfire remains in several areas. 

Read More