Blog Archives

Today’s Takeaway

BC Premier leads trade mission to India to counter US tariffs

Tree Frog Forestry News
January 7, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

BC Premier Eby will lead a trade mission to India, seeking diversification to counter US tariffs. In related news: Maine’s Woodland Pulp mill reopens to New Brunswick wood; the future of Domtar’s shuttered Crofton mill is in play—as job fair takes place for impacted workers; lumber futures drop, US consumer confidence declines; China faces economic headwinds; and ResourseWise releases it’s 2026 forecast.

In Wood Product news: Santa Monica is starting a Mass Timber Accelerator pilot program; BC Wood launches its 2026 Export Readiness Training program; and a new study says bamboo tissue has a larger carbon footprint than wood-based tissue. In Forestry news: Concordia University says Indigenous-led conservation efforts are working; progress and pitfalls in the race to end deforestation; the fungi helping kill the invasive emerald ash borer; and the role of pyrolysis as a forest management tool.

Finally, don’t miss out on the 81st Annual Truck Loggers Association Convention & Trade Show.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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12-storey mass-timber tower compares well with steel and concrete

The Tree Frog Forestry News
January 6, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

Costs and sustainability of 12-storey mass-timber tower compares well with steel and concrete: Canadian Consulting Engineer. In related news: a sneak peek at Kelowna’s airport expansion thanks to Kalesnikoff; Quebec’s St-Elzéar sawmill modernizes with AI investment; North Cowichan, BC advocates for laid-off Crofton mill workers; and Vanderhoof, BC is feeling the impact of Canfor’s closure. Meanwhile: Trump’s tariffs may survive a US Supreme Court setback; the US Lumber Coalition says Canada should right-size its lumber industry; and a US plywood importer questions US refusal to reconsider its evasion ruling.

In Forestry/Climate news: Christine Gelowitz on how BC’s unsettled times provide opportunity for forest professionals to step up; RCMP investigate a logging equipment fire near BC old-growth protest site; climate change is contributing to Australia’s tree death rate; and why the crisis in nature requires business to lead the way in 2026. 

Finally, Russ Taylor’s unexpected (and scary) health and safety journey.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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The first half of 2026 will look a lot like 2025 for most forest products

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

The first half of 2026 will look a lot like 2025 for most forest products—says Kevin Mason of ERA Forest Products Research. In related news: BC Premier Eby reflects on a tumultuous 2025; Michael McCullough says 2026 looks to offer BC more trade uncertainty; New Brunswick premier Holt wants a softwood lumber deal; and Canada’s kitchen cabinet makers say US tariffs are still crippling despite Trump’s recent postponement of his planned rate increases

In other news: a BC First Nation looks to carve a niche with mass timber; PowerWood Canada has pellet mill plans in Alberta; West Fraser amalgamates its five Alberta subsidiaries; and Wisconsin hopes to secure a wood-based aviation fuel plant. Meanwhile: two perspectives on BC’s legal reality on Land Title and DRIPA; old growth push-back in Quebec and BC; and the USDA plans to update its reporting rules for foreign-based forest land owners.

Finally, why old books smell so good, according to science.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Merry Christmas, Hoppy Holidays and all the best for 2026!

The Tree Frog Forestry News
December 22, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Merry Christmas, Hoppy Holidays and all the best for 2026! Barring breaking news, your favourite frogs will be back on January 5, 2026, with a full wrap-up of forestry news. Until then, have a wonderful holiday and enjoy Sandy’s Yule Tide Fly Stew poem! 

In Today’s news: BC’s Forest Minister remains optimistic despite mill closures; GreenFirst extends its holiday curtailment; and China’s Huatai Group expands its pulp and paper footprint. Meanwhile: BC Wood’s CEO Brian Hawrysh is stepping down after two decades; and the USDA announced 2026 appointments to the Softwood Lumber Board.

In Forestry/Wildfire news: has Canada’s Mark Carney reneged on promised new parks; Ontario old growth said to be at risk in Algonquin Park; a US lawsuit seeks protection for California’s spotted owls; Utah has a new high-risk wildfire map; and Florida’s dry winter means higher wildfire risks.

Finally, Ireland’s Noah’s Ark for plants – a vault for renewal after ecological disasters.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Special Feature

Unsettled Times Provide Opportunity for Forest Professionals to Step Up

By Christine Gelowitz, CEO
Forest Professionals British Columbia Magazine
January 6, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

Christine Gelowitz

BC’s forest sector is undergoing a momentous change, buffeted by a combination of policy reform, economic uncertainty, new models of shared governance, shifting markets, climate impacts, workforce demographics, and evolving public expectations. This moment feels different than previous market downturns and it’s increasingly obvious there will be no return to “business as usual.” Clearly, a transformation in forestry is underway, some of it overdue, some daunting, and some full of possibility. In moments like this, certainty is elusive. Information floods in while the signals that matter are often buried beneath speculation, opinion, and outright misinformation. It is easy to get stuck in the ‘muddiness’ of it all and hope someone else will bring clarity and provide a clear and obvious path forward.

The policy choices, management decisions, planning assumptions, and stewardship priorities made today will shape BC forests and forest sector for decades. Who will lead in making those decisions? How will we prevent the strong desire to place all the focus on urgent short-term fixes from overshadowing the important and the need for improving our long-term potential? This is a moment fit for forest professionals. [Extracted from the BC Forest Professionals Winter 2026 Magazine]

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Merry Christmas, Hoppy Holidays and all the best for the coming year!

Tree Frog Forestry News
December 22, 2025
Category: Special Feature

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Froggy Foibles

This Adorable New Species of Pumpkin Toadlet Can Fit on the Tip of a Pencil

By Rosie McCall
Discover Magazine
December 15, 2025
Category: Froggy Foibles
Region: International

©Luiz Fernando Ribeiro, CC-BY 4.0

Biologists have discovered a new species of pumpkin toadlet, an adorable, carrot-hued amphibian that fits on the tip of a pencil and inhabits the cloud forests of the Serra do Quiriri mountain range in southern Brazil. Researchers identified the toadlet after observing the unique advertising calls produced by males to attract members of the opposite sex. The species — named Brachycephalus lulai after the Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva — has now been described for the first time in the journal Plos One. …And yet, despite having a skin color that resembles a high-vis jacket, these toadlets are surprisingly hard to spot. It was their impressive vocal performance, not their looks, that led to their discovery.

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Business & Politics

Look West: Premier’s mission to India supporting good jobs for British Columbians

By the Office of the Premier
Government of British Columbia
January 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Premier David Eby will lead a trade mission to India promoting British Columbia’s businesses, critical minerals and sustainable wood products, supporting work to build a more independent economy and creating more good jobs for people in British Columbia. … “India is a key market for B.C. with enormous opportunities for trade. This trade mission is about deepening our relationships, supporting good jobs in B.C. and strengthening our position as the economic engine of the new Canadian economy,” Premier Eby said. As India moves toward becoming the world’s third-largest economy, the Premier will highlight opportunities for sustainable forestry, clean energy and responsible mining through new partnerships that are available only in B.C. …During the mission, from Jan. 12-17, 2026, Premier Eby, along with Ravi Kahlon, Minister of Jobs and Economic Growth, will meet with government and business leaders in major centres of commerce and technology, such as New Delhi, Mumbai, Chandigarh and Bangalore.

Additional coverage in the Nanaimo News Bulletin, by Mark Page: Premier David Eby embarking on trade mission to India

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Don’t miss out on the 81st Annual Truck Loggers Association Convention & Trade Show

BC Truck Loggers Association
January 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The convention is right around the corner and we’d love to see you! Tickets are selling quickly so be sure to get yours before they’re gone! This year’s event offers TLA members and non-members an all-inclusive registration pass, granting access to all sessions and events throughout the convention. Tickets to Suppliers Night, Lunch on the Trade Show Floor and the Loggers’ Dinner and Comedy Theatre can be purchased on an individual basis. Accommodation can be booked at the Westin Bayshore Hotel through the Read More link below. We will again be hosting a Live and Silent Auction at Suppliers’ Night on Friday, January 16, 2026. Donated items raise significant revenue for our TLA Forestry Education Fund which largely supports forestry student scholarships.

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North Cowichan advocates for age limit for retirement program to aid Crofton mill workers

By Justin Baumgardner
My Cowichan Valley Now
January 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Municipality of North Cowichan said it is hoping to reopen the Bridging to Retirement Program and lower the eligible age to increase support for workers affected by the Crofton mill closure. Mayor Rob Douglas said he has asked the premier and the minister of forests to work with the federal government to reinstate the program, which was launched in 2021. He said the program is aimed at workers over 55 who do not “relish the idea” of retraining for new careers. “We recognize workers who are in their 50s and 60s are in a tough spot and are able to access pensions,” Douglas said. “For obvious reasons some aren’t too excited about going back and getting retrained to work in a whole different field.” …Douglas said the decision rests with the province and there is no definitive timeline for when workers or the municipality could see results.

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Vanderhoof, B.C., facing long-term financial impacts of Canfor mill closure

By Hanna Petersen
CBC News
January 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The District of Vanderhoof, says it is now feeling the full financial impacts of Canfor’s 2024 Plateau sawmill closure and is facing a substantial loss of tax revenue for 2026. Canfor closed its sawmills in both Vanderhoof and Fort St. John, B.C., in December of 2024 citing “increasing regulatory complexity, high operating costs and the inability to reliably access economically viable timber.” Kevin Moutray is the mayor of The District of Vanderhoof, says the closure will create a loss of $580,000 in tax revenue equivalent to 11 per cent of its tax base. …Recent closures include the West Fraser’s sawmill in 100 Mile House and Domtar’s permanent closing of its plump mill in Crofton on Vancouver Island. “It’s difficult and sometimes action only happens in a crisis even though you sort of, can see some of it coming,” said Kurt Niquidet, B.C. Lumber Trade Council president and B.C. Council of Forest Industries chief economist.

Additional coverage by Kevin Moutray Mayor, District of Vanderhoof in the Terrace Standard: Vanderhoof mayor responds to impacts of the Canfor Plateau Mill closure

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Manitobans likely to see higher premiums, limited insurance options after devastating wildfire season: expert

By Rosanna Hempel
CBC News
January 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Manitobans should expect higher cabin and home insurance premiums in 2026, one expert says, after a 2025 fire season that destroyed at least 130 properties in the province and forced more than 32,000 people to leave their communities. Owners may also encounter new caps on payouts or exclusions in their policies that won’t cover certain hazards or parts of a property, or may find insurers will not provide coverage at all, said Jason Thistlethwaite, an assistant professor at the University of Waterloo’s school of environment, enterprise and development. “Insurance is a business, and they’re going to be looking to recoup those losses,” said Thistlethwaite, who studies the economic impacts of climate risk and natural disasters.

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BC Wood Announces Leadership Transition as CEO Brian Hawrysh Steps Down

The BC Wood Specialties Group
December 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Brian Hawrysh

Langley, BC – BC Wood today announced a planned leadership change as Chief Executive Officer Brian Hawrysh steps down after more than two decades at the helm. The association will begin the search for a new CEO in the coming weeks. As he transitions towards retirement, Brian will continue in an advisory role through 2026, mentoring staff and supporting key initiatives to ensure a smooth handover. His tenure has been marked by significant growth in membership, expanded international presence, and the launch of key programs including Wood First, First Nations engagement, and workforce development. “It has been the honour of my career to lead BC Wood for more than 20 years. Together with an incredible team, we introduced new programs, expanded our reach, and secured our place as one of the most dynamic industry associations in the world,” said Hawrysh. …BC Wood will continue to champion BC’s value-added wood products sector building on the strong foundation established under Hawrysh’s leadership.

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Trump tariffs tank Pennsylvania’s lumber industry. Now, it’s seeking a bailout

By Ivey DeJesus
Patriot-News
December 19, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

Jeremy Roupp is a third-generation lumber man. Growing up in northwestern Lycoming County, his family owned a sawmill and logging business. …Over the decades, Roupp has seen the precipitous decline of the industry — from the impact of the housing and economic crisis of 2008, tough trade agreements, fickle consumer demand and, more recently, the inundation of cheap alternatives into the U.S. market. Now, however, retaliatory tariffs and the loss of export markets to global competitors are threatening the survival of the industry. If the Trump administration does nothing to alleviate the pressure on the industry, Roupp said, its future vitality is in question. Roupp is amplifying the concerns of an industry that overwhelmingly voted for the man who imposed the retaliatory tariffs: President Donald Trump. Recently, some 48 hardwood companies and industry organizations from Pennsylvania sent a letter to the Trump administration urging it to include the U.S. hardwood sector in tariff relief programs.

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Premier Forest Acquires National Timber Systems enhancing capability across the UK

Premier Forest Products
December 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Newport, United Kingdom — National Timber Systems was previously part of National Timber Group UK, which entered administration in late November. We have acquired the business from the administrators, securing continuity for NTS’s operations, customers and manufacturing footprint. This acquisition safeguards 160 jobs at NTS, with plans to grow this number to 250. National Timber Systems supplies national and regional housebuilders, as well as the construction and modular sectors, with a range of engineered timber products and services. These include the BBA-accredited NTSROOF® panelised roof system, roof trusses, engineered joists and specialist roof and floor cassette solutions. …The transaction sees Premier Forest acquiring NTS operations in Bristol, Catterick and Newcastle, plus the assets of the Sheffield site, with the aim to return to full production capacity to meet customer demand.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Study shows costs and sustainability similar across steel, concrete and timber

By Peter Saunders
Canadian Consulting Engineer
December 18, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada

WSP, mcCallumSather and ArcelorMittal unveiled the results of a theoretical case study at The Buildings Show earlier this month, which showed the costs and sustainability of using steel, concrete or timber are similar for a typical 12-storey, 287,000-sf, L-shaped residential condominium tower in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). A conference session titled ‘The Triple Bottom Line of Structural Materials: Cost, Speed and Life Cycle Assessment’ featured Brant Oldershaw, P.Eng., WSP’s director of structural, mechanical and electrical engineering for Southwestern Ontario; Willems Ransom, principal and architect for mcCallumSather; Matthew Winters, P.Eng., Steligence project manager for ArcelorMittal; and Mike Cortese, principal sustainability projects manager for ArcelorMittal. As they explained, WSP and mcCallumSather joined steel producer ArcelorMittal’s Steligence program to model and compare the performance of different building materials for the same theoretical project. Consulting engineering firms RJC and MTE also contributed to the project’s structural details.

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Join the BC Wood Export Readiness Training Program Starting Jan 27!

The BC Wood Specialties Group
January 7, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

Ready to take your wood products business global? The BC Wood Export Readiness Training Program is a 9-module virtual course designed to equip value-added wood product companies with the tools for international success. Join our 6-week course for wood manufacturers and unlock strategies to thrive! The cost is $189 per person OR $299 for 2 people from the same company. You DO NOT need to be a BC Wood member to participate in this course. A Zoom link will be sent to you closer to the date. Jan. 27 – Mar. 12, 2025 | 8:30am – 10:00am PST | Tuesdays & Thursdays | Zoom

Topics include:

  • Preparing for Successful Export
  • Updating Products & Localization: requirements for wood products in global markets
  • International Marketing: marketing in international markets, culture & formats
  • Selling Direct vs. Through Partners
  • Top Global Markets for Expansion
  • International Pricing and Contracts: pricing, margins, and contract practices
  • International Finance
  • Operations, HR & International Logistics
  • Funding Available for International Expansion

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PHOTOS: A sneak peek at Kelowna’s soon-to-open airport expansion

Kelowna Now
January 5, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

@Kalesnikoff

 …A few weeks back, YLW CEO Sam Samaddar told KelownaNow the exciting expanded airport terminal building project is ahead of schedule and the new space is expected to open up in the first quarter of 2026. Travellers will be seeing it in person soon enough, but Kalesnikoff recently shared a few photos of the new terminal building for those who don’t want to wait. The mass timber used for the project, the biggest airport expansion in Kelowna’s history thus far, was manufactured and supplied from Kalesnikoff’s facility in Castlegar. According to the City of Kelowna, nearly 800 square metres of wood from the Slocan Valley was incorporated in the project, which received a $500,000 grant from BC’s Mass Timber Demonstration Program. …Check out photos of the new terminal building below and look forward to a smoother travel experience at YLW in the near future!

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Wood Connections December Newsletter

BC Wood Specialties Group
December 22, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

The December 19 edition of Wood Connections highlights a range of upcoming opportunities and initiatives for BC’s value-added wood products sector. This issue includes news that BC Wood’s popular Export Readiness Training Program is returning this winter, offering companies practical tools and guidance to strengthen their approach to international markets. Readers are also encouraged to mark their calendars for the 23rd Annual Global Buyers Mission, scheduled for September 10–12, 2026 in Whistler. As one of the industry’s premier networking events, the GBM continues to connect Canadian manufacturers with qualified buyers from around the world. In addition, the newsletter outlines a busy slate of upcoming trade missions and trade show participation opportunities in key domestic and international markets, including Japan, Mexico, Korea, and across Canada. Rounding out the issue are timely industry updates, including federal initiatives affecting the lumber sector and insights into trends shaping wood construction and finishes.

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PCL-Built Limberlost Place Named Global Best Project of the Year

By PCL Construction
Cision Newswire
December 18, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada East

EDMONTON, AB – Celebrated for its pioneering mass timber design and construction, commitment to safety and collaborative excellence, Limberlost Place has been named the Global Best Project of the Year by Engineering News-Record (ENR). In addition to PCL Construction and partners taking home the top honour, PCL was also awarded ENR’s Global Best Projects Award for Limberlost Place in the Education/Research category. …Ontario’s first institutional building of its kind, George Brown Polytechnic’s Limberlost Place has set a new precedent for mass timber construction as a model for sustainable, green building innovation. Located in Toronto, Ontario, the 10-story mass timber, net-zero educational facility integrates first-of-its-kind solutions including: Groundbreaking slab band structural system that advances the use of mass timber in multi-storey buildings; North America’s largest mass timber columns soaring three stories tall; and a striking mass timber feature stair, spanning levels three to five as a centerpiece of architectural design.

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How to harness the power of our interior spaces to soothe and uplift

By E.J. Iannelli
The Inlander
January 6, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

…Biophilia — a concept that’s been introduced in the pages of Health & Home before — is a term coined by the sociologist Erich Fromm and later adopted by biologist Edward O. Wilson in a 1984 book of the same name. Bill Browning, co-founder of the New York City-based sustainability consulting firm Terrapin Bright Green and chair of the Biophilic Institute, defines it as the “innate affiliation of humans to other living organisms and lifelike processes.” …Browning’s firm published a paper in 2022 titled “The Nature of Wood,” which distilled the available research on why people tend to gravitate to wood as a natural material. …Browning’s company has summarized some of biophilia’s high-level takeaways in a paper called “14 Patterns of Biophilic Design: Improving Health & Well-Being in the Built Environment.” In it, they outline how light, water, airflow and even a very primal sense of safety can positively affect cognitive performance as well as our mind-body relationship.

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Mass timber makes healthier schools, healthier forests in Washington

By Erica Spiritos
The Seattle Times
December 19, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US West

Schools built with mass timber have recently opened to positive community response in the Seattle, Renton and Highline school districts, and another is under construction in West Seattle. … Throughout the United States and Canada, about 150 educational projects have already been built with mass timber. Mass timber products such as Glulam and Cross-Laminated Timber are made from lumber stacked in layers to create large components — columns, beams and panels that become the structures of buildings of all types. These large building components drive efficiency in construction while reducing the carbon footprint. In Washington, mass timber can now be used in buildings up to 18 stories, a renewable, resilient alternative to steel and concrete. The Pacific Northwest is well-positioned to be a leader in this industry. …structures made from mass timber, where the wood remains exposed, have positive effects on a physiological level, reducing blood pressure and heart rate and resulting in a feeling of calm.

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The Surprising Truth About Bamboo Tissue’s Carbon Footprint

By North Carolina State University
SciTechDaily
January 6, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: US East

Bamboo tissue’s green image fades once you factor in coal-powered manufacturing. Bamboo tissue paper produced in China has become a popular option for shoppers looking to reduce their environmental impact. Despite its green reputation, new research suggests these products may not deliver the climate advantages many consumers expect. In some cases, bamboo tissue may even have a greater environmental footprint than tissue made in the United States. A recent study from researchers at North Carolina State University examined the carbon footprint of bamboo tissue manufactured in China and compared it with conventional wood-based tissue produced in the U.S. and Canada. The analysis showed that bamboo as a raw material does not generate more greenhouse gas emissions than wood. The larger issue comes from energy use. China’s electricity system relies heavily on fossil fuels, which significantly increases emissions during manufacturing compared with the cleaner energy mix used in North America.

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Deforestation: Council signs off targeted revision to simplify and postpone the regulation

Council of the European Union
December 18, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The Council formally adopted a targeted revision of the EU regulation on deforestation-free products (EUDR), aimed at simplifying its implementation and ensuring that operators, traders and authorities are adequately prepared for its application. The revision streamlines the due diligence requirements and postpones the application of the regulation for all operators until 30 December 2026, with an extra six-month cushion for micro and small operators. This responds to concerns raised by member states and stakeholders regarding administrative burden and the readiness of the IT system necessary for the effective functioning of the EUDR, while fully preserving the regulation’s objectives of preventing deforestation and forest degradation linked to products placed on the EU market. To further reduce administrative burden, certain printed products (such as books, newspapers, printed pictures) were removed from the scope of the regulation, reflecting the limited deforestation risk associated with these items.

Additional coverage by Gordon Murray, Wood Pellet Association of Canada: WPAC discusses EUDR amendment

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Why old books smell so good, according to science

The Times of India
January 5, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

The smell of an old book … escapes as a cover is eased open or a stiff page lifted, settling briefly in the air between hand and paper. In libraries and second-hand shops, it is a faint but persistent smell… It is often associated with comfort and habit, yet it has a material basis. Conservators and chemists treat it as evidence of physical change. Paper, ink, glue, and binding age continuously, releasing compounds that remain present long after printing. What is sensed is the slow chemistry of use and storage. …Paper accounts for much of the smell associated with old books. From the nineteenth century onwards, most paper was produced from wood pulp containing cellulose fires and lignin. Over time, these components undergo chemical change. Cellulose chains fracture and shorten. Lignin oxidises and breaks into smaller fragments. These processes release volatile organic compounds that drift from the page surface.

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Forestry

Canada promised new parks and nature protection. Has that shifted with Carney in power?

By Inayat Singh
CBC News
December 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

In 2022, Canada hosted a pivotal UN nature summit in Montreal, where the Liberal government led a diplomatic push for a global deal on protecting ecosystems. Countries agreed to conserve 30 per cent of the world’s lands and oceans. Canada pledged to reach that target by 2030 with a plan to more than double the current amount of protected spaces. Three years later, the landscape is very different. Steven Guilbeault, the former environmental minister … has quit cabinet over new moves to expand oil and gas resource development. Prime Minister Mark Carney’s first budget barely mentions nature and his government is focused instead on major resource projects. Now, environmental groups and others are concerned that the apparent pivot from the Carney government will reverse years of progress made on nature conservation. Among the initiatives now facing uncertainty: new national parks and protected areas, as well as federal support for the “win-win” Indigenous guardians program…

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Check Out the Winter 2026 BC Forest Professional Magazine!

Forest Professionals British Columbia
January 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The latest Winter 2026 issue of BC Forest Professional is now online! Highlights include an in-depth look at outbreaks and changing forest conditions with Western Spruce Budworm, feature articles on wildlife-habitat balance and operational retention of subalpine fir, and a timely piece on U.S. softwood duties impacting BC lumber markets. You’ll also find engaging profiles (including a spotlight on forest professional twins), thoughtful opinion on mentorship, and insights from the Board Chair and FPBC CEO. Don’t miss these perspectives from across BC’s forest sector.

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RCMP investigating logging equipment fire on Vancouver Island

By Kylie Stanton and Amy Judd
Global News
January 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mark Bryson received a call early on Friday morning stating that a massive equipment fire was burning along the Caycuse Main logging road, approximately an hour and 15 minutes outside of Lake Cowichan. Three machines were destroyed, with Bryson saying that there are millions of dollars in damages. …Lake Cowichan RCMP and the Lake Cowichan Fire Department were called to the scene and RCMP confirmed they are investigating the incident. However, Bryson said he doesn’t think investigators have to look too far. He said the logging equipment was stationed 30 minutes down the road from where heavy protests are taking place at Tree Farm License 44, where Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership (C̕awak ʔqin Forestry) operates a timberlands business. …Global News went to the protester camp, but no one there was authorized to comment on the matter and we did not receive a response to email requests.

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Destruction of B.C.’s old-growth forests puts our future in peril

Letter by Mackenzie Robin Gibson
The Vancouver Island Free Daily
January 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

My grandfather, Gordon Gibson Jr., taught me to speak up when I see injustice in the world, and I am seeing it now. I am absolutely furious regarding Premier Eby’s plans to destroy old-growth and primary forests. They are the lungs of our atmosphere, and cutting them down is not only an attack on our future, it’s anti-Canadian. The only possible benefit to the logging would be to make a few people richer, most of whom are not Canadian, and those people do not care about the longevity of our species. We are facing a major extinction event, at the end of which the planet will not be able to support human life. I ask the province to listen to the science, and to care about the people who you are tasked with caring for. Care about our futures, and our dreams. …Stop the deforestation of old growth, and save the lungs of our planet.

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Former forest ministry secretary speaks about industry’s future

By Mike Morris, former MLA, Prince George-Mackenzie, 2013 – 2024
The Campbell River Mirror
January 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mike Morris

Regarding a recent Canadian Press story  about a 1,000-year-old cedar tree that was harvested on Vancouver Island. It wasn’t the headline that caught my attention — although I am concerned over the harvesting of primary forests — but it was the forest minister’s comments that jumped out at me. In response to a question about the lack of economically available fibre in BC, he said, “It has nothing to do with government policy, it has nothing to do with reconciliation.” “It has everything to do with the fact that the trees aren’t there. They will come back, they will grow back. But they are not here right now.” Finally, an admission from government that the trees aren’t there. Why then did he and his entourage take a very expensive trip around the world trying to expand a market knowing we had no timber available? Everyone, including industry itself, has been aware of this for years. 

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‘We’re looking at everything’: Alberta considers lifting 20-year hunting ban on grizzlies

By Teri Fikowski
CTV News
December 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Alberta government isn’t ruling out lifting a near 20-year ban on hunting grizzly bears, a divisive issue between conservationists, politicians, and hunters. Forestry and Parks Minister Todd Loewen says all options are on the table following several recent bear attacks and close encounters in the province. Grizzlies are being spotted in parts of the province they haven’t inhabited in more than a century. “There’s no plans at this time yet. We don’t want to take anything off the table. I think it would be irresponsible not to have all options on the table so we’re looking at everything,” Loewen said. There has been a ban on hunting grizzly bears in Alberta since 2006. …Loewen says there are several factors that would have to be considered …including the number of bears in the province and recent grizzly-human interactions, and their expansion into the foothills.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
December 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jason Fisher

Ravi Parmar

Ken Day

We know that 2025 has had its share of challenging news in the forestry sector. FESBC continues to invest in the long-term health and resilience of the forests by investing in forest enhancement projects led by local organizations throughout the province. This spring, Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar highlighted 64 projects specific to wood fibre recovery and wildfire mitigation initiatives funded by FESBC, many of which are successfully wrapping up. In this newsletter:

  • A message from the Minister of Forests, Ravi Parmar.
  • A holiday greeting from FESBC’s Board Chair, Ken Day.
  • A Holiday Safety Tip from our friends at the BC Forest Safety Council. 
  • An insight into FESBC Operations Managers’ favourite winter activites.
  • Faces of Forestry: Famiheh Yazdan Panah, Wood Pellet Assn.

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Indigenous-led conservation efforts match or surpass similar initiatives when properly funded, new research shows

By Patrick Lejtenyi
Concordia University
January 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Federally funded Indigenous-led conservation programs are delivering highly effective climate and biodiversity outcomes, aligning with national greenhouse gas mitigation and biodiversity goals, according to a new paper led by Concordia researchers. Writing in the journal Earth’s Future, the authors say these programs, as Indigenous-led Nature-based Solutions (NbS), can be just as or even more effective at carbon storage and biodiversity conservation as conventional national and provincial parks. “Most of the knowledge we have about Indigenous-led conservation efforts comes from countries in the tropics,” says lead author Camilo Alejo, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Geography, Planning and Environment. “We want to explore the effect of government support on Indigenous-led initiatives in the Canadian context.” The study examines two Indigenous-led NbS: the Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas (IPCA) and the Indigenous Guardians programs.

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Federation of Northern Ontario Municipalities calls for continued provincial partnership for forestry sector

By Richard Coffin
My NorthBay Now
December 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The Federation of Northern Ontario Municipalities (FONOM) is thinking long-term as it calls for a renewed provincial partnership to help sustain the forestry industry. “When Ontario invests in the North, the entire province benefits,” says Dave Plourde, FONOM President and Mayor of Kapuskasing. “We are asking the government to build on the progress already made by continuing to work with communities, industry, and workers to secure long-term solutions that will keep Northern Ontario strong.” FONOM says Northern Ontario municipalities are facing mounting pressures as global market shifts, aging infrastructure, and rising operating costs challenge the forestry sector.

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After devastating LA fires, California is drafting nation’s toughest rules for homes

By Lauren Sommer
National Public Radio
January 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A typical single-family house is encircled by green, its shrubs and plants sitting just under windows and hugging exterior walls. It’s an image that California is trying to get homeowners to rethink as the state’s risk of extreme wildfires grows. One year after the fast-moving Eaton and Palisades Fires destroyed more than 16,000 structures in Los Angeles, California is drafting the toughest statewide rules in the country for vegetation. In areas at risk of wildfires, homeowners would be required to clear some or all of the plants within five feet of their house, depending on what regulators decide. Well-maintained trees would still be allowed. The idea, called Zone Zero, is to prevent plants and flammable items from igniting during a wildfire, spreading flames to the house and the surrounding neighborhood. In high winds, most homes burn down due to embers, the tiny bits of burning debris carried by the wind.

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New map shows where high-risk wildfire areas overlap with Utah communities

By Julia Sandor
Fox 13 Salt Lake City
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SALT LAKE CITY — Utah Division of Forestry, Fire & State Lands released their new High-Risk Wildland Urban Interface (WUI) Map. They created this map because of House Bill 48, which passed during the 2025 legislative session. You can find the map here. Any property owner can access the map using the Utah Wildfire Risk Tool. The map shows the structure’s exposure score, and different layers can be seen on the same page. The High-Risk WUI layer identifies areas where wildfire risk and structural development overlap, helping communities understand and address risks to protect their homes and neighborhoods. There are about 60,000 structures within the high-risk boundary and multiple factors that go into assessing those risks including vegetation and fuel characteristics, previous fires in the area, and topography. Joseph Anderson, the Wildfire Risk Reduction Program Manager with Utah DNR said the areas in the state affected by the new map is narrower than he expected.

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Rainforest Action Network Resigns from the Forest Stewardship Council, Citing Loss of Credibility

Rainforest Action Network
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

San Francisco — Rainforest Action Network (RAN) has resigned from the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), ending more than 30 years of membership in the world’s most widely recognized forestry certification system. RAN says the FSC’s certification label is failing to provide credible assurances of responsible forest management. RAN was a founding member of FSC in 1993 and remained engaged for decades because of the need for a robust third party verified forestry certification scheme. The FSC previously set the gold standard for responsible forestry in a market flooded by timber and paper products bearing logos of weaker forest certification schemes such as the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification. But the organization says recent decisions by the FSC have fatally undermined its credibility.

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Agriculture commissioner urges residents to be diligent as Florida faces increased wildfire risks amid dry conditions

By Caleb Yauger
News4JAX
December 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

FLORIDA – Florida state officials warned of heightened wildfire risks across the state as dry conditions were expected to continue into 2026. “I’ve been with the agency a long time, and this is the driest winter that I can remember in quite a while,” Florida Forest Service Director Rick Dolan said during a Friday press conference. The number of wildfires had increased significantly, with more than 3,000 reported in 2025 compared to approximately 2,000 in 2024. This surge came months before Florida’s typical peak wildfire season, which usually occurs between April and June. Florida Commissioner of Agriculture Wilton Simpson emphasized that human activity was a major concern. “The majority of those fires are started by backyard fires, arson, things of that nature,” Simpson said. “We need everyone to be diligent as we come into the new year with the drier conditions.”

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Noah’s Ark for plants: The man in charge of logging every native seed in Ireland

The Journal Ireland
December 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Darren Reidy

THE MAN IN charge of logging each native seed in Ireland has described the project as like “Noah’s Ark” for plants – a vault for renewal after ecological disasters. Conservation ecologist Darren Reidy has been researching, gathering and banking native seeds across Ireland since his appointment in 2022. ‘Banking’ the seeds of a native Irish plant is complicated – ideally you would need 10,000 seeds per species. If the plant is endangered, an assessment of all populations on the island is done to decide if it is safe to bank the species’ seeds, and if it is, they can take only 10% of the fruit. Reidy gave the example of critically endangered whitebeam trees that grow only in Ireland. “We only have five individuals of this species on the entire island, and they all occur in Killarney National Park in Kerry,” he said. “Only one of them is producing fruit. So this summer, I travelled to Killarney to collect fruit.

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Health & Safety

The Cache Will Pay for Authentic Forestry Work Photographs

The Cache via the Rumour Mill RoundUpDate
December 22, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

The Cache is building a visual archive that reflects the real working life of British Columbia’s forestry sector—on the block, in camp, and everywhere in between. We’re looking for experienced photographers and field workers who have authentic images of forestry and silviculture work in BC to submit for potential use on the Cache website and related materials.

  • Silviculture, restoration, wildfire, and forest operations
  • Camp life (meals, downtime, weather, logistics)
  • Crews at work (PPE on, real conditions)
  • Equipment, tools, terrain, and landscapes
  • Seasonal realities (mud, snow, smoke, rain)

This is not stock photography. We are specifically looking for grounded, field-authentic images that reflect day-to-day life in our industry. 

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