Eurasia Group’s “Top Risks For 2026″ report says Canada could be hit hardest by US political revolution. In related news: Canada is diversifying some trade away from the US; single-family housing starts rebound in the US as total starts fall; Ontario’s Fort Frances biofuel plant could bring old mill site back to life; poor markets lead West Fraser to record a goodwill impairment charge in Q4. Meanwhile: the US Endowment collaborates on sustainable bio-fuel; Maine Woodland Owners honour retiring CEO Tom Doak; Jamestown’s Troy Harris points to the value of SLB investments.
In Forestry/Climate news: a BC court halts a First Nation forest licence transfer near Terrace, a BC judge rules that old-growth protestors could be prosecuted criminally; RCMP investigate an equipment fire near the Walbran Valley logging protests; Utah’s forest agreement with the USDA may expand timber production; eco-friendly toilet paper is not always green; and the US Supreme Court considers taking up the Roundup/cancer case.
Finally, bark microbes eat climate gases, and PEFC dispels timber construction misconceptions.
Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor