Category Archives: Business & Politics

Business & Politics

Unifor forestry delegates select Domtar as pattern bargaining target

Unifor Canada
February 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

MONTREAL — Unifor delegates from across Eastern Canada kicked off bargaining preparations for the forestry industry by selecting Domtar as the target company for the upcoming round of pattern bargaining. “This is a critical moment for our forestry sector and for the members we represent across Eastern Canada,” said Unifor National President Lana Payne. “The industry is facing a number of serious challenges, but we have been through difficult times before and I have complete confidence in our local leaders to achieve fair collective agreements that make progress for workers.” …Key bargaining priorities were discussed at the conference including wage improvements, pension security, benefit coverage, Employment Insurance protections, and measures to support workforce stability and long-term sustainability of operations. …The pattern agreement reached with Domtar will serve as the template for negotiations with all other employers in the eastern forestry sector, including paper mills, sawmills, and forestry operations. 

Read More

Remsoft Acquires INFLOR, Expanding Global Forest Intelligence Platform

By Remsoft Inc.
Cision Newswire
February 6, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

FREDERICTON, NB – Remsoft, a global leader in Forest Intelligence solutions, has acquired INFLOR, specialists in forest management systems (FMS) with over 20 years of experience and trusted by forestry organizations, landowners, and investors in South America, North America, and Europe. The acquisition advances Remsoft’s vision of a connected, cloud-based Forestry Intelligence Platform that brings together data, planning, optimization, and operational execution to power smarter decisions across the global forestry value chain. By bringing INFLOR into its portfolio, Remsoft adds a proven, enterprise-grade FMS and provides INFLOR with access to Remsoft’s global brand, scale, and customer base, accelerating its expansion across North America, Europe, and Australasia. INFLOR helps forestry organizations manage their forestry supply chain including forest assets, inventories, silviculture, certifications, and compliance with clarity and confidence. Together with Remsoft’s planning, optimization, and analytics, customers will get a more complete view of their forest operations, from inventories and management plans to forecasting and strategy.

Read More

Cascades Announces Exit from Honeycomb Packaging and Partition Business Segments

By Cascades Inc.
Cision Newswire
February 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

KINGSEY FALLS, QC – Cascades Inc. announces the discontinuation of its activities in the honeycomb paperboard and partition packaging product sectors. As a result, its three plants located in York, PA, and Saint-Césaire and Berthierville, QC, will be closed. Cascades is committed to optimizing its operating platform and business activities by focusing on its strategic markets as a partner of choice for its customers. The plants being closed specialize in niche markets that are no longer aligned with the company’s long-term growth plans. The closure of the Berthierville honeycomb packaging plant is effective immediately, impacting 52 employees. The company Emballages LM, located in Saint‑François‑de‑la‑Rivière‑du‑Sud, QC, will acquire certain assets later today for approximately $9 million. Emballages LM is a major North American producer of honeycomb paperboard that aims to ensure a smooth transition with customers and maintain service quality. The York, Pennsylvania facility will be closed permanently by no later than February 19, 2026. 

Read More

Lumber prices have been trending higher, due largely to constrained supply

By Kevin Mason, Managing Director
ERA Forest Products Research
February 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Kevin Mason

North American lumber markets have enjoyed a bright start to the year, with meaningful price appreciation recorded across virtually all regions and species this month. SYP 2x4s have been the standout performer, with prices increasing by $63 (to $425) since the beginning of January, while S-P-F 2x4s are up by $38 (at $460) over the same period. Lagged housing start data have clouded insights regarding current lumber demand, but we have seen (or heard) little to suggest that underlying demand has improved dramatically over the past couple of months. Instead, we believe that prior supply curtailments coupled with a seasonal inventory build/rebuild has been the catalyst for the recent run in lumber prices. 

Given that recent price increases do not appear to be driven by an uptick in lumber consumption, we suspect that momentum will soon fizzle out, and the deep freeze currently gripping large swathes of North America will likely see trading slow dramatically. These weather events typically stymie lumber consumption on job sites but this is often partially offset by a similar hit to supply, particularly in the U.S. South where the majority of mills are exposed to the elements (in previous winter storms workers have been unable to get to mills, logging trucks are unable to deliver, etc.). …As for panels, pulp and paper prices…

Read More

Carney, premiers say they’re ‘united’ ahead of upcoming CUSMA review

The Canadian Press in The Chronicle Journal
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

OTTAWA – Prime Minister Mark Carney and the premiers said Thursday they’re maintaining a united front under the long shadow of the upcoming negotiations for the review of North America’s key free trade agreement. …Carney updated the premiers on Ottawa’s plans for the coming review and committed to monthly meetings to update the premiers once CUSMA review talks officially begin. But Carney was tight-lipped on trade strategy. …In the meantime, Trump’s sector-specific tariffs continue to damage key Canadian industries such as steel, aluminum and softwood lumber. New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt said she wasn’t seeing a lot of US “movement or interest” in resolving the softwood lumber dispute, meaning a deal on duties outside of the CUSMA review process is unlikely. “We are constantly looking at ways to make it clear to the U.S. administration how the U.S. lumber producers are suffering under a low price,” Holt said.

Read More

U.S. Lumber Coalition Calls on Trump Administration to Jettison USMCA Binational Panel Review System

By the US Lumber Coalition
PR Newswire
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The US Lumber Coalition urged the US Trade Representative to communicate to Canada and Mexico that the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement binational panel review system needs to be scrapped during the USMCA review process. The review system… can challenge actions taken to stop the unfair trade using this special dispute settlement panel process. The panel review gives powers to international tribunals that the Constitution reserves for US courts. …Canada, in a recent submission, argued that USMCA binational panel review replaces not only review by the US Court of International Trade (CIT), but also appellate review by the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC), effectively arguing that a USMCA panel does not need to concern itself with any US Appeals Court decisions or precedents. “The idea that a USMCA binational panel is not bound by a US Court of Appeals precedent is, quite frankly, outrageous,” stated Zoltan van Heyningen.

Read More

Canada built its forest industry for one customer. Here’s how to change that

By Jordan Solomon and Fed Ghatala
iPolitics
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Canada’s forest industry is being dismantled in plain sight. …For decades, Canada built its forest economy around a single export market and a narrow set of commodity products. That strategy has now been exposed as dangerously fragile. Our closest trading partner has proven unreliable, and the cost of over-dependence is being paid by rural workers and regions across the country. Canada does not have a forestry problem. We have a market diversification problem. Ironically, today’s global uncertainty has created a once-in-a-generation opportunity. …Capital is mobile, and companies are actively looking for stable jurisdictions in which to build new production facilities. Canada can and should be at the top of that list—but we need to build the foundational infrastructure to make this happen. …The federal government’s new Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force opens a critical window to address structural weaknesses in Canada’s forest economy. 

Read More

Potential reopening of B.C.’s Eskay Creek mine could become ‘powerhouse’ for northern economy

By Derrick Penner
The Vancouver Sun
February 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics, Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Michael Goehring

News of another major mine inching closer to opening in BC’s northwest touched off a buzz in a region that has become more accustomed to absorbing job losses during a major downturn in the forestry sector. The mine proposal, Skeena Resources’s project to reopen the mothballed Eskay Creek gold mine, would mean more than 1,000 construction jobs to convert the underground mine to open-pit operations, then some 770 permanent jobs to run the facility. Eskay Creek environmental permit advances one of 24 major mine proposals across BC’s North. …BC’s main forest industry group, the Council of Forest Industries, has counted 21 permanent or indefinite sawmill closures since 2023 and 15,000 direct job losses in the sector since 2022. And while development of mining projects on the list is likely to unfold over decades, Association CEO Michael Goehring is confident “mining projects have the potential to offset or partially offset those job losses.”

Read More

Why India may not be an instant fix for B.C. forestry

By Daisy Xiong
Business in Vancouver
February 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Bruce St. John

With Premier David Eby visiting India last month on a trade mission, the South Asian country has been in the spotlight as a potential new market for B.C.’s forestry sector—among the Canadian sectors hit hardest by U.S. tariffs. …India offers long-term potential for B.C. forestry. But turning that potential into major demand will take time, according to industry experts. “[India has] got a history of using wood, and what’s happened is their domestic species have been reduced. They are looking for new products,” said Bruce St. John, president of Vancouver-based Canada Wood Group, a Vancouver-based government-funded organization to promote Canadian wood products. “It’s the logistics that’s an issue. It’s more expensive to transport to India than our other traditional markets. It takes longer and it’s more expensive.” Shipping to India from B.C. could take a month or more, while transit to Japan takes about 10 days.

Read More

Union head against a North Cowichan special task force on forestry

By Robert Barron
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
February 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The national head of the union representing workers at the Crofton pulp mill is not in favour of efforts to have a special task force formed locally to investigate the reasons for the troubles in the forest industry. Geoff Dawe is the president of the Public and Private Workers of Canada which represents more than 400 workers at the Crofton pulp mill, which will soon close permanently. He spoke to North Cowichan’s council at its meeting on Jan. 21 about a proposed motion by Coun. Tek Manhas for the municipality to set up the special task force that, if approved, would undertake an investigation into the reasons for the closure of the Crofton mill and the ongoing curtailment of the Chemainus sawmill, impacting another approximately 150 workers. …Dawe said his concern is that a task force that is not working collaboratively with his union and its workers may get into some finger pointing at government…

Read More

Russ Taylor joins the board of Forestry Innovation Investment

By Forestry Innovation Investment
LinkedIn
February 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Russ Taylor

Forestry Innovation Investment is pleased to welcome Russ Taylor to our Board. Russ brings decades of experience across forestry, manufacturing, and global wood markets consulting. A recognized authority on international supply, demand, and pricing trends, he has advised hundreds of clients worldwide and founded International Wood Markets Group Inc. He currently leads Russ Taylor Global, providing strategic wood business and market analysis. FII is B.C.’s market development agency for forest products.  BC Minister of Forests, Ravi Parmar, said in a LinkedIn post, “there are few people in Canada who understand global forest product markets as deeply as Russ Taylor. I’ve had the opportunity to spend time with Russ and learn from his work, and I continue to be impressed by his ability to unpack the complexity of the forest economy — from global demand and trade dynamics to the real impacts on workers, mills, and communities here at home.”

Read More

Council of Forest Industries 2026 CEO Panel to Tackle the Forest Sector’s Future

BC Council of Forest Industries
February 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

COFI 2026 CEO Panel to Tackle the Forest Sector’s Future: The Council of Forest Industries has announced the lineup for its popular CEO Panel at the upcoming 2026 COFI Convention, taking place this April at the JW Marriott Parq Vancouver. The session will feature senior industry leaders Susan Yurkovich (Canfor), Steven Hofer (Western Forest Products), Sean McLaren (West Fraser), and John Mohammed (A&A Trading). Moderated by Bridgitte Anderson, President and CEO of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade, the panel will offer a candid discussion on competitiveness, growth pathways, and forestry’s enduring role as a cornerstone of British Columbia’s economy at a pivotal moment for the sector.

Read More

Lakes District and Bulkley Valley First Nations acquire more timber rights

Terrace Standard
January 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

More of the B.C. Central Interior’s timber rights are back in First Nations hands. The Ministry of Forests sat down at the BC Natural Resources Forum in Prince George to transfer about one million cubic metres of the Morice Timber Supply Area (TSA) to a coalition including the Witset, Wet’suwet’en, and Lake Babine Nations. …During the signing ceremony, where nine of the region’s chiefs put their names on the dotted line, Lake Babine Nation leader Wilf Adam pointed out that the coalition had gone first to Canfor with a “fair market value” offer to buy it, but the company refused and closed communications. Adam added that the spinoff effect was a stalled and unstable local economy in the Burns Lake-Granisle-Houston-Smithers-Witset region.

Read More

B.C. First Nation sues to reclaim lands at the head of Kingcome Inlet

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A First Nation on B.C.’s central coast has filed a lawsuit looking to recover lands it claims were “alienated” more than a century ago. …Filed in a BC Supreme Court Jan. 26, the suit from the Dzawada’enuxw First Nation targets about five square kilometres of land at the head of the Kingcome Inlet. The lands are currently owned in fee simple by the Interfor, the Nature Trust of BC, and the province of British Columbia. The case also names the Government of Canada. …A spokesperson for Interfor said the company has “longstanding and ongoing discussions” with the Dzawada’enuxw, and that it is not engaged in any active forestry operations on its fee-simple parcels in the valley. …The lawsuit… builds off a landmark 2025 decision that found the Cowichan Nation had its Richmond, BC, village sites and fishing rights taken from it under colonial rule. …None of the claims have been tested in court.

Read More

Cascades announces the sale of its Richmond, British Columbia, packaging plant to Crown Paper Group

Cascades Inc.
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades announced that it has entered into an agreement with Crown Paper Group for the sale of its corrugated packaging plant located in Richmond, BC, for a total value of $65.5 million, including the real estate assets and subject to working capital adjustments and the assumption of certain liabilities. The transaction is expected to be completed in the coming days, subject to customary closing conditions and adjustments. …Given its geographic position, the Richmond plant offered limited integration and synergy potential within Cascades’ operational network, but aligns with Crown’s current footprint, expanding its operations in the region. …With a long-established presence in BC and nearly a century of operating an integrated containerboard mill in Port Townsend, Washington, Crown is a natural long-term fit for the Richmond plant.

Read More

Nathanson, Schachter & Thompson LLP announce King’s Counsel recipient

By Nathanson, Schachter & Thompson LLP
LinkedIn
January 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Nathanson, Schachter & Thompson LLP is proud to announce that Karen Carteri, K.C. has been appointed King’s Counsel by the Lieutenant-Governor in Council, on the recommendation of the Attorney General of British Columbia. The official announcement from the Attorney General states: Karen Carteri (2002) is a partner at Nathanson Schachter and Thompson LLP, one of Canada’s leading litigation firms. A graduate of the University of Saskatchewan, bachelor of laws with distinction, Carteri specializes in complex commercial litigation and arbitration, including property development, mining, partnership disputes, title insurance, director liability, shareholder remedies, civil forfeiture, contract interpretation, financial institution disputes, fraud and cross-border matters. She is ranked among Canada’s top litigators and serves as an arbitrator with the Vancouver International Arbitration Centre. She received the Vancouver Bar Association’s Hyndman Mentorship Award and contributes to continuing legal education programs, pro bono work and community boards.

Read More

New CEO for B.C. Forest Safety Council

By Darron Kloster and Michael John Lo
Victoria Times Colonist
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Cherie Whelan has been named the new chief executive officer of the B.C. Forest Safety ­Council. She takes over on April 1 from Rob Moonen, who announced his retirement in October. Whelan served as CEO of the Newfoundland & Labrador Construction Safety Association for two years and previously held the position of director of SAFE Companies at B.C. Forest Safety Council. The Nanaimo-based council delivers safety training and advisory services to British Columbia’s forest industry.

Read More

City of Nanaimo director Manly spearheads raw log exports resolution

By Karl Yu
Cowichan Valley Citizen
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Regional District of Nanaimo board will plead with fellow municipalities to pressure the B.C. and Canadian governments to prohibit raw log exports. At the Jan. 27 RDN board meeting, Paul Manly, City of Nanaimo director, proposed a resolution for the upcoming Association of Vancouver Island and Coastal Communities conference, asking B.C. local governments to call on senior government to “ban the export of raw logs and lumber cants from B.C. to ensure that forests harvested [on] Crown land and private-managed forest lands are processed in B.C.…” The resolution passed and will be brought before AVICC. Should it pass there, it would be forwarded to the Union of B.C. Municipalities. Manly …pointed to recent mill closures on the Island, with a key factor being “lack of accessible and affordable fibre”. …Leanne Salter, Coombs area director, said she thought the resolution needed to be tweaked.

Read More

Ideological attacks on David Eby for reconciliation don’t help: Ex-Liberal cabinet minister

By Vaughn Palmer
The Vancouver Sun
January 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Geoff Plant

VICTORIA — Premier David Eby should be praised, not criticized, for trying to reconcile Indigenous relations in light of court decisions, says former BC Liberal attorney general Geoff Plant. “The drumbeat of complaints… reveals a profound misunderstanding of Canadian law that supposes political ideology is the cause of the current state of legal affairs,” says Plant. “In reality, when it comes to questions of Indigenous claims and rights, it is the judges who have the last word, not politicians.” …“Courts always say negotiation is the better path to reconciliation. Regrettably, their decisions often have the opposite effect.” Plant doesn’t try to predict what the courts will do when they have the last word on the Eby government’s appeal of the Cowichan Tribes decision on private property or the attempt to rein in judicial use of the Declaration Act. But… I wouldn’t bet on the province emerging as the victor in either proceeding.

Read More

Natural resources minister says logging already-protected areas off the table

By Silas Brown
CBC News
February 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

By John Herron

New Brunswick’s Natural Resources Minister John Herron says his government’s effort to protect more of the province’s landmass will not include proposals to log in existing conservation areas on Crown land. On Thursday, Herron said the commitment to increase protected lands by 15% will be done “the right way. The target will be achieved by adding new lands, not by revisiting or weakening existing protections”. …On Monday, CBC reported that J.D. Irving asked the government to be able to log 32,000 hectares of protected areas in exchange for conserving areas with tourism or social value. A spokesperson confirmed that the land swaps in J.D. Irving’s proposal would not be allowed. “We will achieve our target by identifying and protecting new, low-conflict Crown lands,” Herron said. “This work is underway and will be informed by science, guided by Indigenous consultation, and advanced through early and respectful collaboration with communities and stakeholders.”

Read More

New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt says end to softwood tariffs doesn’t seem to be in sight

By Adam Huras
The Telegraph-Journal
February 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Susan Holt

Premier Susan Holt says a meeting with Prime Minister Mark Carney and the country’s premiers left her with little optimism that a deal to end punishing softwood lumber tariffs is anywhere in sight. “I wish I had left those conversations with more optimism.” The US has levelled tariffs on softwood lumber ever since the expiry of a former trade deal in 2017. …“The sense right now is that we need a window of opportunity for us to be able to leverage something in the discussion in order for softwood to get addressed,” Holt said. …As of late 2025, US Customs and Border Protection said it had collected over US$7.2 billion in cash deposits from Canadian softwood lumber producers since 2017. It means that New Brunswick producers have paid upwards of $500 million in duties to date. …Holt suggests the money could be used to entice American industry into a deal.

Read More

Hajdu meeting with mill officials to talk pivot

By Alicia Anderson
Thunder Bay News Watch
February 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

THUNDER BAY — Supporting the region’s forestry industry is a priority following multiple mill shutdowns in the region, says Thunder Bay–Superior North MP Patty Hajdu. “The mills are having a different challenge in Northern Ontario than many other industries. This is not a tariff-related problem; this is a demand problem,” Hajdu said in an interview with Newswatch on Tuesday. Many of the mills in the region produce pulp and paper products, particularly newsprint, and with the decline in physical media consumption, the mills are facing the effects, said Hajdu, minister of jobs and families. “Many of these large employers are critically important to the Northern Ontario economy,” she said. Hajdu said she has been working with provincial partners, including Thunder Bay—Atikokan MPP Kevin Holland, to arrange a meeting to discuss collaborative solutions.

Read More

More stability in lumber industry key to ‘weather this storm’: N.B. Forest Products Commission

By Laura Brown
CTV News
February 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

The head of the New Brunswick Forest Products Commission was in front of a legislative committee Thursday, answering MLA’s questions about the state of the industry. The commission is a liaison of sorts between the provincial government, saw and pulp mills and wood marketing boards. Tim Fox acknowledged the Commission has been working to try and help the industry through challenging times, but he said everyone has to work together. “There’s obviously our sawmills who are impacted by the tariff situation and that has spilled over into the private woodlot sector as well,” he said after the meeting. …Private producers have recently expressed frustration over how little support there’s been for woodlot owners to help them through the ongoing U.S. tariff situation. Countervailing and anti-dumping duties on softwood are almost a decade old, but U.S. President Donald Trump added another 10 per cent in the fall, bringing tariff totals to 45 per cent.

Read More

Uniboard’s Val-d’Or new particleboard line makes 1st panel

By Uniboard Canada Inc.
Cision Newswire
February 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

LAVAL, QC — Uniboard is pleased to announce that its Val-d’Or production team has successfully started its new particleboard production line. The project was completed in three phases encompassing a total re-build and modernization of the plant. Phase 3 focused on the installation of a new world class continuous particleboard press and finishing line. The new lines are fully automated and supported by the newest manufacturing technologies including Artificial Intelligence (AI) to boost productivity and optimization of processes. Included in Phase 3 was an expansion of warehousing capacity by adding over 300,000 square feet of warehouse space which will expand our ONE-STOP-SHOP capabilities of offering raw particleboard, raw MDF, laminated particleboard and laminated MDF by rail and truck from the Uniboard Val-d’Or facility, making Uniboard the largest producer of particleboard operating in Canada, the Northeast US and the Midwest US regions affirming Uniboard’s leadership position in the North American engineered wood products arena.

Read More

Mill closures raised in House of Commons

By Randy Thoms
yourTHUNDERBAY.ca
February 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

Eric Melillo

The federal government is being pushed to help the forest industry in northwestern Ontario. Workers at mills in Ear Falls, Ignace and Thunder Bay have been impacted by recent closure announcements. The sawmill in Ear Falls has been idle since October, while the Ignace mill will halt production in March. The closures impact a combined workforce of about 330 workers. Last week, it was announced that the newsprint line at Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper will be shut down. Kenora-Kiiwetinoong MP Eric Melillo recently raised the issue in the House of Commons. “Every day, more closures are announced,” states Melillo. “These are good-paying jobs for hard-working Canadians that are now gone. The government’s rhetoric of supporting workers is not matching the reality of the workers who are losing their jobs.” The Liberal government insists that it is helping the forest industry.

Read More

Canada announces funding to support for Kap Paper in Northeast Ontario

By Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada
Cision Newswire
January 31, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO – The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Industry and Minister responsible for Canada Economic Development for Quebec Regions, announced that the Government of Canada is investing $7.5 million through the Strategic Response Fund (SRF) to help Kap Paper complete a Front End Engineering Design (FEED) study to support a pivot in its operations toward growth markets. The study will establish the key execution criteria necessary for a final investment decision on creating a new medium-density fibreboard (MDF) facility. This facility would keep Kap Paper operational, safeguard employment in Kapuskasing, Ontario, and strengthen the regional economy. …”This investment will help the company define its plan to manufacture higher-value products to diversify revenue streams, stabilize demand for fibre and maximize the economic output of harvested timber, ” said Joly.

Read More

Unifor Submission to the 2026-2030 Sustainable Jobs Action Plan Consultations

Unifor Canada
February 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The unravelling of our trade relationship with the US compels us to act decisively. The chaotic diplomacy of the Trump Administration should encourage Canada to build up economic capacity where Canadians possess both agency and an existing industrial base to rely upon. This capacity‑building goal dovetails with the inherent purpose of the Sustainable Jobs Action Plan (SJAP). …Acting on these priorities, industry can direct its capital and follow its own strategic objectives, but it will do so in an environment that better reflects Canada’s long‑term economic goals. The SJAP can play a pivotal role. …One can look to the forestry sector. …Forestry faces an existential crisis from the 45% U.S. duties and tariffs imposed on Canadian lumber. …However, the sector also holds immense potential for manufacturing a variety of high value‑added products while also being a renewable resource key to decarbonizing construction.

Read More

American Forest & Paper Association Elects Domtar’s Steve Henry as Chair

American Forest & Paper Association
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Steve Henry

WASHINGTON – The American Forest & Paper Association (AF&PA) today announced Steve Henry, Domtar’s Paper & Packaging CEO & President USA, as incoming Board chair. He joined other pulp, paper, packaging and tissue product industry leaders at the association’s Winter Board of Directors’ Meeting on January 29. “Steve is a trusted leader whose deep industry knowledge and steady commitment to our shared priorities will serve the Board and the entire AF&PA membership well,” said AF&PA President and CEO Heidi Brock. “I’m grateful for his willingness to serve and confident he will help guide the association through another year of meaningful progress.” The AF&PA Board of Directors consists of top industry leaders who represent a broad spectrum of companies in the paper and wood products manufacturing sector.  These companies operate mills and converting operations in nearly every state across the country, often in rural communities.

Read More

President Trump Orders Decertification Of All Canadian Made Aircraft, Likely Affecting Numerous Wildfire Platforms

The Hotshot Wake Up Substack
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

President Trump put out a statement on social media saying he will decertify “all aircraft made in Canada.” This statement could have wide reaching consequences for the wildfire aviation world. Numerous aircraft made in Canada are widely used in wildfire operations… The President’s statement says this decertification will remain in place until U.S. made Gulfstream aircraft are certified in Canada. What does it mean if you decertify an aircraft in the United States? It basically grounds it. In the United States, decertifying an aircraft typically means deregistering it with the Federal Aviation Administration or revoking its airworthiness certificate. …In addition to decertifying all Canadian aircraft, the president says that if the situation drags on, a 50% tariff will be imposed on all aircraft purchased from Canada. …Getting a decertified plane back into the air is a complex process. …One good solution would be a statement saying, ALL WILDFIRE AIRCRAFT ARE EXEMPT FROM THIS ORDER.

Read More

2027 Forest Products EXPO Heading to Savannah

By Christian Moises, Communications Manager
Southern Forest Products Association
February 5, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US West

Forest Products Machinery & Equipment Exposition (EXPO), hosted by the Southern Forest Products Association, is headed to the Savannah Convention Center in Savannah, Georgia, from August 18-20, 2027. “EXPO flourished in Nashville at the Music City Center in 2023 and 2025, exceeding expectations and showcasing the strength of the longest-running forest products show in the industry,” said Eric Gee, SFPA’s executive director. “In mid‑2025, SFPA began working to secure dates for the 2027 EXPO. Due to the increased popularity of Nashville as an event destination, traditional summer dates with the Music City Center were not available.” …“Savannah places EXPO in the heart of the Southern Pine lumber community, while preserving our commitment to a high-quality, accessible, and cost-conscious event for exhibitors and attendees,” Gee said. Located on the Savannah River across from the city’s historic and tourist district, there is plenty to do. Booth sales are scheduled to open in May 2026.

Read More

Roseburg Forest Products to cut 146 positions at Riddle Plywood facility

By Andrew Griffin
The News-Review Today
February 4, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

RIDDLE, Oregon — Roseburg Forest Products (RFP) announced it will cut 146 positions from its Riddle Plywood facility, moving all of its specialty plywood production services to the Coquille Plywood facility. The staffing reduction went into effect Wednesday. The reduction comes as part of a “strategic realignment of production” at the two facilities. As Riddle Plywood facility has expanded its veneer production services, the Coquille Plywood plant has become RFP’s primary specialty plywood operation. Team members impacted by the reduction will receive continued health care coverage and 60 days of compensation. …Roseburg Forest Products President and CEO Stuart Gray said. “This production realignment improves how our veneer and fiber resources flow into our core product segments and is essential to Roseburg remaining a competitive.” …The decision comes after RFP discontinued operations at its Dillard hardwood plywood facility.

Read More

Forestry industry in Montana faces declines, uncertainty

By David Erikson
The Missoulian in the MSU Exponent
February 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Montana’s forestry industry is entering this year with more questions than answers, from low lumber prices to high housing costs for workers to questions about tariffs, but there is room for strategic adaptation. That’s according to an economist who gave an update on the sector in the 2026 Montana Economic Report, put out by the Bureau of Business and Economic Research at the University of Montana. …Scott said the number of people employed in the private sector in forestry in Montana statewide has dropped in 2025. …His main points are that while timber harvests are down, the federal government is making a push to increase harvests. …He said the Trump administration’s tariff policy remains another wildcard. “A combination of lumber and trade-related tariffs has been implemented to bolster domestic demand, by raising the cost of Canadian lumber… it is still too early to tell whether these measures will meaningfully shift trade flows.”

Read More

Oregon counties get pay bump from federal logging

By Justin Higginbottom
Oregon Public Broadcasting
January 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

The federal government is increasing the amount of logging revenue shared with some Oregon counties due to changes in the 2026 Department of the Interior appropriation bill. Oregon Counties will now receive 75% of the revenue from timber harvests on federally managed O&C Lands within their borders, compared with the previous 50% split. …“The passing of the bill represents one of the most, if not THE most significant achievements and highest priorities for O&C Counties in the last 44 years,” the Association of O&C Counties said in a statement. …“We are in desperate straits, and we have nowhere to cut,” Coos County Commissioner Rod Taylor said. “Last year, we had to cut a position from our clerk. We had to cut a position from our land surveyor. We had to close half of the jail.” …Logging revenue has declined amid increased conservation efforts and regulations.

Read More

Boom or dust? How tariffs are helping this Maine sawmill but creating more uncertainty for others

By Emmett Gartner
The Maine Monitor
February 8, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Duties on Canadian imports are driving up domestic sales at some Maine lumber companies. …Protection from historically lower Canadian lumber prices has given Pleasant River Lumber the confidence to add an additional manufacturing shift in Enfield, according to co-owner Jason Brochu. Photo by Katherine Emery. …Historically Canadian companies have both outbid them for timber harvested in Maine and undercut American lumber prices when they export the finished lumber product back across the border. …An industry analyst and two other mill leaders said that inflation and a sputtering housing market make it unclear whether the tariffs will have a positive or negative effect on business in the long run. The effects of the tariffs will also vary based on the different products sawmills make. …Sawmills rely on certainty, said Alden Robbins, of Robbins Lumber, and neither the markets nor foreign trade relationships have been stable recently.

Read More

Louisiana-Pacific proposes $157M plant in North Branch, Minnesota

By Brian Johnson
Finance & Commerce
February 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MINNEAPOLIS — A Nashville-based provider of wood building products is proposing a $157 million manufacturing plant in North Branch, a project that could advance with help from the state’s Minnesota Forward Fund program. Louisiana-Pacific Corp. wants to build the 250,000- to 350,000-square-foot facility on a five-parcel, 120-acre site in the northeast portion of North Branch’s Interstate Business Park. The project is a candidate for up to $10 million in funding from the Minnesota Forward Fund.” …The funding “may be forgiven if certain project goals are met. …At the new facility, Louisiana-Pacific would manufacture pre-finished siding products, including the company’s “Smartside” and “ExpertFinish” siding, Sondrol said at the North Branch EDA meeting in December.

Read More

$24.5M expansion to bring 82 jobs to Port Huron paper mill

WPHM News
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

PORT HURON, Michigan — A long-idle paper manufacturing site in Port Huron is moving closer to redevelopment with new state support. Governor Gretchen Whitmer announced Wednesday that Legacy Port Huron Paper Company plans a 24.5-million-dollar investment at the former Domtar paper mill site in Port Huron. …According to the Michigan Economic Development Corporation, the Port Huron project will be supported by a one-million-dollar performance-based grant. The full funds will only be distributed if the company meets agreed-upon investment and job-creation milestones. Legacy Port Huron Paper, a subsidiary of the Ontario-based BMI Group, plans to repurpose nearly 400,000 square feet across nine buildings at the former Domtar site, converting the space for paper manufacturing, warehousing, and other industrial uses.

Read More

NRLA–MRLDA Government Affairs Program Delivers Million Dollar Savings for Massachusetts Lumber Dealers

Northeastern Retail Lumber Association
January 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

Boston, MA — The Northeastern Retail Lumber Association (NRLA), working closely with the Massachusetts Retail Lumber Dealers Association (MRLDA), continues to deliver measurable, bottom-line results for independent and family-owned lumber and building material dealers across the Commonwealth by stopping costly mandates, advancing workforce development, and addressing rising operating expenses. What You Should Know

  • Forced Transition to All-Electric Trucks Stopped: Repealing the mandate saved the average independent Massachusetts lumber dealer an estimated $1.1–$1.6 million in avoided truck replacement and on-site charging infrastructure costs, while keeping vehicle and equipment investments local.
  • Credit Card Fees Under Review: study and recommend reforms to credit card swipe fees.
  • Workforce Development Barriers Being Removed: Studying multilingual forklift certification testing, expanding opportunity for Portuguese- and Spanish-speaking workers and helping dealers upskill their workforce.
  • Housing Affordability Preserved: Additional mandates on new home construction… helping keep housing affordable for Massachusetts families.

Read More

LP Building Solutions announces board leadership succession

LP Building Solutions
January 28, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Louisiana-Pacific Corporation, a leading manufacturer of high-performance building products, today announced its Board of Directors has elected F. Nicholas Grasberger III as independent Chairperson of the Board, effective Feb. 19, 2026. Grasberger’s appointment follows current Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer W. Bradley Southern’s decision to retire from the Board, including his role as director and Chairperson, on the same date. “Nick brings significant financial expertise and long-standing familiarity with LP’s business and strategy,” said Lead Independent Director Dustan E. McCoy. “Having served on the Board for more than six years, he is well positioned to assume the role of Chairperson, and we look forward to his leadership.” Grasberger has served on LP’s Board since 2019 and currently serves on its Compensation, Finance and Audit, and Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committees.

Read More

International Paper to Split Into Two Listed Companies

By Ryan Gould and Ilena Peng
Bloomberg Markets
January 29, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East, International

International Paper plans to break up and spin off its European packaging business as the 128-year-old company seeks to strengthen its operations amid weak macroeconomic conditions. Memphis-based IP will create two independent, publicly traded companies, it said Thursday confirming an earlier report. The split is one of the most dramatic changes for the packaging giant that was founded in 1898 through the combination of 17 pulp and paper mills. It comes less than two years after IP rebuffed an offer from Brazil’s Suzano SA. It also follows the completion a year ago of IP’s acquisition of UK-based DS Smith. …IP said the new companies will comprise its current business in North America, including both legacy IP and DS Smith assets, and an EMEA packaging business, again comprising legacy DS Smith and IP assets. 

Read More

Forestry industry sounds alarm over ‘cheap’ timber imports from China landing in Australia and threatening jobs

By Sam Bradbrook
ABC News, Australia
February 3, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Australia’s forestry industry says cheap imported timber products are flooding the local market and taking up increased space in local homes and buildings. South Australian Forest Products Association (SAFPA) chief executive Nathan Paine said international trade conditions, fuelled by US tariffs, were responsible for imports reaching Australia at about half the price of local timber. This timber includes laminated veneer lumber (LVL) — a construction product that competes with locally grown radiata pine. …Analysis from Forest and Wood Products Australia showed LVL imports had increased 63% in 2025 compared to a year earlier. …Primary Industries Minister Clare Scriven said the state government could stand behind its past support for the timber industry. Housing Industry Australia chief executive of industry and policy Simon Croft said the pandemic’s trade disruptions had caused a spike in construction costs.

Read More

Forestry

Potential reopening of B.C.’s Eskay Creek mine could become ‘powerhouse’ for northern economy

By Derrick Penner
The Vancouver Sun
February 7, 2026
Category: Business & Politics, Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Michael Goehring

News of another major mine inching closer to opening in BC’s northwest touched off a buzz in a region that has become more accustomed to absorbing job losses during a major downturn in the forestry sector. The mine proposal, Skeena Resources’s project to reopen the mothballed Eskay Creek gold mine, would mean more than 1,000 construction jobs to convert the underground mine to open-pit operations, then some 770 permanent jobs to run the facility. Eskay Creek environmental permit advances one of 24 major mine proposals across BC’s North. …BC’s main forest industry group, the Council of Forest Industries, has counted 21 permanent or indefinite sawmill closures since 2023 and 15,000 direct job losses in the sector since 2022. And while development of mining projects on the list is likely to unfold over decades, Association CEO Michael Goehring is confident “mining projects have the potential to offset or partially offset those job losses.”

Read More