Category Archives: Business & Politics

Business & Politics

Forest Sector ready to seize the opportunity provided by new Biomass Investment Tax Credits

By Rebecca Rogers
Forest Products Association of Canada
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Finding uses for every part of a harvested tree can create renewable heat and electricity that will help power cleaner communities. Seeing Investment Tax Credits (ITCs) for biomass projects come into effect is a welcome, long-overdue step for Canada’s forest sector. After years of uncertainty, the measure offers a starting point to restore investor confidence. Biomass projects give new life to forest residuals — materials like bark, sawdust, and wood chips — by turning them into reliable, locally sourced heat and electricity. These biomass projects can modernize mill operations, sustain and grow jobs in rural and northern communities, and strengthen Canada’s position as a secure producer of renewable resources. Canada’s forestry industry directly employs almost 200,000 Canadians and supports an additional 200,000 jobs in transportation, maintenance, and manufacturing across the country. Hundreds of rural and northern communities depend on a strong forest sector.

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Alcohol, ‘Buy Canadian’ policy flagged by U.S. as trade irritants: report

By Catherine Morrison
The Canadian Press in CTV News
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

OTTAWA — Provincial rules around alcohol and the federal government’s “Buy Canadian” policy have been flagged in a new report citing several trade irritants between Canada and the US. The annual document prepared by the Office of the US Trade Representative said market access barriers imposed by provincial liquor control boards “greatly hamper” exports of US wine, beer and spirits to Canada. …The report says U.S. companies have reported concerns about barriers in competing for contracts, including proving their Canadian subsidiary’s independence from a US parent company. Other issues listed in the report include delays with aircraft validation in Canada and high tariffs on U.S. dairy products. …Canada is still being slammed by Trump’s separate tariffs on industries like steel, aluminum, autos, lumber and cabinets. The Trump administration has launched investigations of a long list of countries, including Canada, citing forced labour in supply chains. 

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U.S. says Ottawa failing to block imports made with forced labour as Washington weighs more tariffs

By Steven Chase
The Globe and Mail
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The US says in a new report that Canada is failing to stop foreign goods made with forced labour from entering its market, a finding that coincides with Washington’s probe into the matter, which could lead to more tariffs. The 2026 National Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade Barriers from the US government says it appears Canada is importing goods that cost less than they should because they were made with forced labour. It’s an early indication of how the US will rule on Canada. …US customs policy treats all goods from China’s Xinjiang region as though they were made with forced labour unless importers can provide “clear and convincing evidence” to the contrary. …Canada passed a law, the Fighting Against Forced Labour and Child Labour in Supply Chains Act in 2024 and requires government and businesses to annually report on steps they have taken. However, the US report said that Canada’s measures are not working. [to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

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Unifor Forestry Council Executive meet to discuss stepping up campaign efforts

Unifor Canada
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Members of the Forestry Sector Council Executive Committee and Unifor leadership met March 27–29 to share bargaining updates and discuss the state of the industry. National President Lana Payne joined in a frank discussion about Unifor’s fight to put forestry on the national agenda and the efforts to implement a national industrial strategy for all key economic sectors: “It was very important that Unifor be a part of the Canada Forest Transformation Task Force. We have a dedicated focus on forestry right now and we need see real action to protect the forest industry today and for the next generations.” …Forestry council members also and discussed their own efforts to communicate Unifor’s forestry sector goals to local and provincial government representatives.

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U.S.-Canada Trade Relations: Current Tensions And Future Outlook

By Kyla Kitamura
US Congressional Research Service
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The United States and Canada have one of the largest bilateral trade relationships in the world, including highly integrated energy and automotive markets. Since 1989, U.S.-Canada trade has been governed by the U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement, then by the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and now by the 2020 United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA). Since 2025, U.S.-Canada trade tensions have increased following the imposition of U.S. tariffs on key Canadian exports. The two countries, along with Mexico, also are scheduled to engage in a review of USMCA in July 2026. …The United States and Canada have had a decades-long dispute over trade in softwood lumber. The last agreement… expired in October 2015. Since the agreement’s expiration, the United States has imposed antidumping (AD) and countervailing duties (CVD) on imports of Canadian softwood lumber. Canada has challenged the duties through NAFTA, USMCA, the WTO, and the U.S. Court of International Trade..

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Clarity in Canadian law of Aboriginal title is not optional

By Joesph Roberson, retired judge of the New Brunswick Court of Appeal
The Globe and Mail
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

The BC Supreme Court’s decision in Cowichan v. Canada has drawn national attention. For the first time, a Canadian court has granted a declaration of Aboriginal title over privately owned lands. …But at the same time, the New Brunswick Court of Appeal in J.D. Irving v. Wolastoqey Nation ruled that the private lands held by timber companies were not subject to declarations of Aboriginal title. …We need to understand each ruling to understand the trajectory of Canadian law’s engagement with reconciliation. It’s clear that the rulings in fact point in just one direction, because Cowichan can be sustained only by rewriting the Supreme Court’s settled doctrine of Aboriginal title, while Wolastoqey, with one severable modification, remains faithful to it. Of the two decisions, only Wolastoqey offers an approach that is legally sound and clear in its application. …Wolastoqey demonstrates that proven wrongs can be addressed through compensation and negotiation without unsettling land titles or distorting the doctrine of Aboriginal title; Cowichan does the opposite. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Fire crews extinguish structure fire at abandoned Somass mill building

By Susie Quinn
Alberni Valley News
March 31, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Another suspicious fire has hit the Somass Lands on Port Alberni’s uptown waterfront, this time the remaining mill building. The call came in just before 9 a.m. on Tuesday, March 31. … Locked fire hydrants adjacent to the building presented another challenge, Port Alberni Fire Dept. Chief Mike Owens said. “It’s an old, historic industrial property; there are a number of places where the water main has been compromised,” he added. The city’s water works department arrived promptly and activated the hydrants. …Owens said crews immediately deemed the fire as suspicious because the sawmill is abandoned and there is no electricity run to the building. …The two mill buildings and a pair of silos were left standing after the city purchased the mill from Western Forest Products in 2021… When the city partnered with Matthews West developers, the thought was to possibly incorporate parts of the three buildings into a new master plan for the area.

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Premier Eby says changing DRIPA is ‘non-negotiable’ and will be pushed into law

By Wolfgang Depner
Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

David Eby

VICTORIA — Changing British Columbia’s Declaration on the Rights of Aboriginal Peoples Act is “non-negotiable” and it will be pushed into law, Premier David Eby said on Wednesday. “We are working with chiefs to try to find a path forward,” Eby said at an unrelated news conference in Victoria. “We have to do it, and we will do it.” Eby’s statement comes ahead of his meeting with First Nations leaders on Thursday to discuss the amendments to the so-called DRIPA legislation, which was cited by First Nations in two landmark cases last year. The Cowichan Tribes Aboriginal title decision last August sparked concerns about implications for private land ownership, while the B.C. Court of Appeal added to the uncertainty in December when it found the province’s mineral claims regime was “inconsistent” with the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, a framework for the provincial legislation.

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Incentives needed to ease industrial tax loss, says Nechako Lakes MLA John Rustad

By Rod Link
Houston Today
March 31, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

John Rustad

Creative thinking from the provincial government would go a long way to avoiding the kind of revenue hit being experienced by the District of Houston because of the closure of Canfor’s sawmill, says B.C. Conservative Nechako Lakes MLA John Rustad. He’s suggesting everything from easing up on requirements to return a former industrial property to a “green” status to a tax holiday for a new owner of a property. Current BC Assessment Authority provisions allow a company to have its buildings and improvements assessment for taxation purposes drop to 10 per cent of what it was, if it declares a permanent closure to its activity. …Houston is not the only community [with] a severe property tax loss, he said. “The same is happening in Fraser Lake with West Fraser closing its mill, and that will be happening in Vanderhoof with Plateau,” Rustad continued. Rustad said [the] provincial government is driving away industry and people.

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B.C. forests critic questions need for legislative and not policy changes around forestry

By Michael Reeve
CFJC Today Kamloops
March 31, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Ward Stamer

Brian Menzies

KAMLOOPS — The BC NDP announced legislative changes [to] expand timber sales and increase harvest volumes. …if approved, is anticipated to increase B.C.’s fibre supply by as much as 800,000 cubic metres. …Forests Critic Ward Stamer noted 800,000 cubic metres doesn’t equate to much overall, and questioned why the changes aren’t being done through regulation and policy. “…that means there is something else in here that they are either not telling us about or there is a dramatic shift in what the organization is actually supposed to accomplish…” said the Kamloops-North Thompson MLA Stamer. …“Our members … purchase fibre from the open market,” said Brian Menzies, executive director of the Independent Wood Processors Association. “These changes will enhance access to market-priced wood fibre, foster innovation and support well-paying jobs – and represent an important first step in implementing BCTS review recommendations to boost value-added manufacturing in British Columbia.”

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Gorman brothers celebrates 75 years in the Okanagan by expanding into a massive new sawmill

By Nelson Bennett
Resource Works
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

From wooden fruit boxes to telephone poles and finger-joint boards, the Gorman Brothers company has managed to survive and grow for 75 years in the Okanagan by developing niche and specialty wood products. The family-owned wood business, which is celebrating its 75th anniversary in business this year, recently started a new chapter in its long, steady growth story when it acquired a sawmill and forest tenure from Weyerhaeuser for $120 million. The acquisition includes the former Weyerhaeuser sawmill in Princeton, which has been rebranded as Similkameen Forest Products, and forest tenure totaling 682,000 cubic metres. …Until the recent purchase of the Princeton mill, Gorman Brothers was one of the few sawmillers in B.C. that did not produce conventional structural lumber like two-by-fours. It produces mainly “appearance grade” interior and exterior boards for home finishing and renovation – ceiling and soffit boards, wainscotting and trim, decking and siding.

 

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BC Timber Sales to increase fibre access, strengthen long-term forest outcomes, protect jobs

By the Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Ravi Parmar

The Province has introduced legislative amendments to the Forest Act and Forest and Range Practices Act, which empower BC Timber Sales (BCTS) to improve access to fibre, create more opportunities for loggers and contractors, deepen partnerships with First Nations and strengthen its stewardship role in B.C.’s forests. “Our path forward for forestry means a BC Timber Sales that moves fibre faster, creates more opportunities for workers and contractors, and ensures local logs go to local mills,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “These changes matter to the workers grinding it out in the bush, to the worker on the mill line who will see a steady stream of timber, and to local companies and communities who will be able to access the fibre they need.” These legislative amendments are expected to increase B.C.’s fibre supply by as much as 800,000 cubic metres, directly supporting faster fibre delivery, stronger local economies and more responsive forest stewardship.

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Spearhead Pushes Possibilities with $60 Million Glulam Expansion

By Spearhead
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Spearhead, a Nelson, BC-based family-owned timber fabricator, is investing $60 million in a new production facility housing a highly specialized glulam manufacturing line and advanced CNC machining technology — purpose-built to drive innovation and push possibilities in mass timber construction and advanced timber fabrication. With construction already underway, the new facility sits immediately adjacent to Spearhead’s existing operation just outside of Nelson, BC — a site the company has called home for almost 30 years. …The project team includes Leckie Studio as architect of record, Fast + Epp as engineer of record, and HR Pacific as general contractor. …Spearhead is creating over 60 new full time jobs in Nelson, taking the company’s headcount to over 120. The project has already received $7.5 million in provincial funding from the Manufacturing Jobs Fund, reflecting broader recognition of mass timber’s role in Canada’s forestry and construction future, with additional funding partnerships to be announced soon.

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B.C. introducing legislative amendments to increase wood fibre supply

Canadian Press in CityNews Everywhere
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The B.C. government says it’s making legislative changes to bolster access to wood fibre, including timber damaged by wildfires, insects and windstorms. The Forests Ministry says the changes will potentially increase the supply of fibre by as much as 17,700 truckloads and allow B.C. Timber Sales to auction off contracts for forestry thinning, wildfire risk reduction and damaged timber salvage. A statement from the ministry says these “fibre-generating activities” will be available to forestry contractors and value-added mills. …B.C.’s forestry industry has been facing a shortage of fibre as the Wood Pellet Association of Canada said in 2025 that the fibre supply has fallen more than 40 per cent since 2018… Kurt Niquidet with B.C. Council of Forest Industries said in 2024 that local and global demand for wood products to build more affordable housing is growing, but the forestry industry is also facing a “critical shortage” of timber for B.C. mills.

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COFI 2026: Last chance to register as convention approaches

Council of Forest Industries
March 31, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) Annual Convention is just days away, with registration closing April 2 for the April 8–10 event at the JW Marriott Parq Vancouver.

Forestry is a Solution theme focuses on sector challenges and opportunities
With BC’s forest sector at a crossroads, this year’s convention brings together leaders from industry, government, First Nations and local communities to advance solutions tied to housing, wildfire resilience, reconciliation and economic stability.

Program highlights include trade, fibre supply and wildfire resilience
Attendees can expect keynote speakers and panel discussions on global markets, competitiveness, product diversification and wood supply, alongside a trade show and networking opportunities across the forest sector supply chain.

Over 600 delegates expected at Western Canada’s largest forestry gathering
The convention offers a key platform for collaboration and dialogue, positioning forestry as part of the solution to some of BC’s most pressing challenges.

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Meggin Messenger has been appointed chair of BC Forest Practices Board

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
March 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Meggin Messenger

Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests, has appointed Meggin Messenger as chair of the independent forest auditing and investigating body for a three-year term, effective Tuesday, April 7, 2026. Messenger is a registered professional forester with an undergraduate degree in forestry and a master’s degree in public administration. Before being appointed to this new role, Messenger worked as an executive director in the BC Public Service and has led work on forestry, land use, resource stewardship, community development, climate change and sustainability. …The Forest Practices Board is B.C.’s independent watchdog for sound forest and range practices, reporting its findings and recommendations directly to the public and government. The board audits forest and range practices and appropriateness of government enforcement on public lands, investigates public complaints and current forestry issues, participates in administrative appeals and makes recommendations for improvement to practices and legislation.

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Ottawa to supply $15.6M to tariff-impacted Saskatchewan workers and employers

The Canadian Press in Global News
March 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Buckley Belanger

The federal government says it’s funding a $15.6-million program that supports Saskatchewan workers and employers affected by tariffs. Ottawa says the three-year program is available to those in the steel and softwood lumber industries, along with other sectors affected by foreign duties. It says the funding would support up to 1,800 workers in Saskatchewan who may face unemployment and require new skills to keep their jobs. The government says supports will be delivered through SaskJobs. Buckley Belanger, Canada’s secretary of state for rural development, says the funding gives workers a fair shot when tariffs hit their industries hard. Canadian businesses slapped with targeted US levies have said they’re struggling. …Saskatchewan Career Training Minister Eric Schmalz said his province’s diverse economy has allowed it to lessen the brunt of tariffs.

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Ottawa is changing—what does it mean for forestry?

Council of Forest Industries
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

The Council of Forest Industries 2026 conventions welcomes veteran strategist Bruce Anderson as a luncheon keynote. Anderson brings more than three decades of insight into public opinion and Canadian politics to a timely luncheon keynote. One of Canada’s most respected market and opinion researchers, Anderson has advised major corporations and organizations—from Royal Bank of Canada and TELUS to Enbridge and Teck Resources—as well as numerous industry groups and NGOs. Formerly Chairman of Abacus Data, he is a familiar voice on Canadian media, including CBC News At Issue panel, the Good Talk podcast with Peter Mansbridge & Chantal Hebert, and is a contributor to publications such as The Globe and Mail and Maclean’s. Drawing on current research, Anderson will explore how Ottawa’s evolving agenda is reshaping trade, investment, and resource development—and what it will take to ensure forestry remains central to Canada’s economic future. A must-attend session for anyone watching the intersection of politics, public opinion, and the forest sector.

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Alberta moves to ease trade rules on consumer goods coming from other provinces

By Jack Farrell
CBC News
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Alberta’s government has tabled legislation to ease regulations and barriers to more easily enable the sale of some goods from other provinces. It’s part of a commitment Alberta made with its provincial and federal counterparts in signing an interprovincial free trade pact in November. That trade accord, which is supposed to take effect this summer, would see provinces recognize each other’s regulations for most consumer and capital products to avoid duplicative inspections and requirements. …Government officials told reporters before the bill was tabled that manufacturers in industries such as oil and gas, lumber and logging and fertilizer producers will likely see the most positive impact once the pact takes effect.

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Canada built its forest industry for one customer. B.C. is now paying the price

By Jordan Solomon, president and CEO, Ecostrat
Vancouver Sun
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

B.C.’s latest budget confirmed: One of the province’s foundational industries has lost more than half its public revenue base in a single economic cycle. Forestry revenues are projected at $521 million, down from $1.3 billion just a few years ago. …It is a structural failure. 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. …The issue is not a lack of fibre, skills, infrastructure or industrial heritage. …The issue is the absence of investment-grade data and intelligence that allow global firms to move quickly from site selection to financing and construction. …Canada already has a strong global investment attraction network through Invest in Canada and the trade commissioner service… What is missing is nationally consistent, standardized data sets on forest biomass availability, infrastructure capacity, workforce readiness, and permitting pathways that allow those teams to respond immediately when firms begin evaluating locations.

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Cascades sells Quebec forest lands, secures long-term fibre supply for Cabano mill

Cascades Inc.
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

KINGSEY FALLS, Quebec — Cascades and Société de gestion d’actifs forestiers Solifor announced a structuring partnership for the forestry sector in the Bas-Saint-Laurent region. Solifor has acquired Cascades’ private forest lands in Kamouraska and Témiscouata, representing 10,500 hectares of forests Cascades had managed for over 25 years. The agreement will allow development of these lands to continue and help secure the long-term supply of Cascades’ Cabano plant. The parties completed the $20 million transaction on March 31, 2026. …Hugues Simon, President and CEO of Cascades said, “We are pleased that Quebec interests will maintain the sustainable management of assets we had tapped little into, while opening up access to a greater supply through Solifor, which owns large parcels of forest land near our facility.”

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Inside New Brunswick’s Forest Economy: A Conversation with JD Irving’s Jason Limongelli

By David Campbell and Don Mills
Yopur Greater Moncton
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jason Limongelli

Our guest on this episode of the Insights Podcast is Jason Limongelli, Vice President, Woodlands Division with JD Irving, Limited. The forest products industry is the most important driver of economic activity in New Brunswick, generating nearly a billion dollars in tax and royalty revenue in 2024 and supporting one out of every 17 jobs in the province. Despite its importance, most people don’t really understand how it works. How many trees get cut down every year? How long does it take for a tree to reach full maturity? How many trees are planted each year? What does it mean to manage a Crown Land license? Jason answers all these questions and more. He also tells us about JDI. [podcast is 1h 7min long

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Ontario’s 2026 budget sees deficit hit $13.8B amid looming global instability

By Adam Carter
CBC News
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Peter Bethlenfalvy

The spectre of worldwide instability looms large in Ontario’s 2026 budget, which includes a small business income tax cut alongside a temporary reprieve on HST for buyers of new homes — but also pushes back a balanced budget for yet another year with a higher-than projected deficit. The $244-billion spending plan is replete with phrases like “uncertainty” and “heightened trade tensions,” and includes an increase in reserve spending from $1.5 billion in 2026-27 to $2.5 billion in 2028-29. …Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy said “Geopolitical forces that may have once felt distant have now reached our shores,” he said. “Global economic and trade tensions, supply chain disruptions, shifting markets — simply put, the world has changed, and we must change with it.” …The province’s recently announced plan to temporarily remove HST for buyers of new homes remains, with plans in place for the full 13% tax to be removed for new homes valued up to $1 million.

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Canada’s New Softwood Lumber Subsidies Exceed C$2 Billion – Solely to Prop Up Canada’s Massive and Harmful Excess Lumber Exports

By Zoltan van Heyningen, Executive Director, U.S. Lumber Coalition
The US Lumber Coalition
April 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Washington, D.C. – Canadian federal and provincial governments have announced over C$2.1 billion worth of new taxpayer-funded subsidies for the Canadian forestry sector in the last seven months in response to the enforcement of U.S. antidumping and countervailing laws and imposition of President Trump’s Section 232 tariff measures. “Responding to U.S. trade law enforcement by doubling down on Canada’s unfair trade practices is both reprehensible and counterproductive,” stated Zoltan van Heyningen, Executive Director of the U.S. Lumber Coalition.  “The continuation of dumping practices supported and sustained by growing Canadian taxpayer-funded subsidies for the softwood lumber industry will only result in higher antidumping and countervailing duties in the future, as the ongoing trade case captures today’s unfair trade behavior.“As services are being cut by Prime Minister Carney and Canada’s provincial governments because of budget constraints, Canadian taxpayers would do well to understand that subsidies provided to Canadian softwood lumber companies, many of whom are investing their resources in the United States, will be collected by the U.S. government in the form of antidumping and countervailing duties that end up in the U.S. Treasury,” added van Heyningen.

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U.S. Endowment Launches $5 Million Funding Opportunity to Accelerate Wood Fiber Markets

By The U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities
EIN Presswire
March 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

GREENVILLE, SC — The U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities today announced a $5 million funding opportunity to connect underutilized wood fiber with new buyers, strengthen regional supply chains and keep working forests economically viable. This effort will invest up to $1 million per year over five years in organizations that can develop durable market solutions, helping keep working forests productive and rural economies strong, especially in regions facing reduced processing capacity and shifting market conditions. An additional $500,000 is available for projects in Maine, New Hampshire, New York and Vermont through a partnership with the Northern Border Regional Commission’s (NBRC) Forest Economy Initiative. “Supporting a vibrant forest economy in Northern New England and New York is a central focus of the Commission,” said Chris Saunders Federal Co-Chair of NBRC. “This innovative collaboration with the Endowment will leverage our collective knowledge and resources of to the benefit of rural communities and their residents.”

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Home Depot Expands AI Efforts to Shape Future of Home Improvement

By Jacob Musselman
Hardware Retailing
March 31, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The Home Depot currently offers more than a dozen AI-powered capabilities, with numerous others in development. …The Home Depot is simplifying the DIY journey by providing personalized, real-time advice that makes even the most complex projects feel achievable, paired with more seamless AI search and product discovery capabilities thanks to new technology integrations. Magic Apron & Outdoor Assistant—This virtual expert brings employee knowledge to customers virtually. With the Outdoor Assistant, customers can take a photo of a plant for immediate guidance on care, safety and sunlight. …Customers can now discover the latest Home Depot product catalog in ChatGPT. …Pros shop at The Home Depot an average of 60 times per year. Pros can create actionable job lists in minutes using natural language, voice-to-text or spreadsheet uploads. Pros can use AI to deliver complete material lists and project quotes in days instead of weeks.

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Supreme Court’s tariff decision still leaves a ‘mess’ for companies trying to grab refunds

By Peter Crabb and Alison Larson
The Conversation US
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

US companies stung by President Trump’s emergency tariffs had hoped for relief when the US Supreme Court ruled in their favor. But settling on a remedy – namely, rebate checks from the government – may be an even bigger headache. Fresh wrinkles are prompting businesses to take different routes as they try to recoup money, with many opting to sue to improve their odds. These lawsuits are also underscoring the complex ways that tariffs worked their way through corporate accounting. In some cases, their cost was a clear line item; in others, the impact was muddier – say, through changed supply lines or selective increases in retail pricing. And some have backed off from a legal fight altogether and sold their refund rights to investment firms, often at a deep discount, figuring that getting something is better than risk getting nothing. …Consider the different approaches taken by FedEx and the retail chain Costco.

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BC reaction to US Supreme Court tariff ruling

Global News
March 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

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European Parliament gives conditional approval to EU-US trade deal

By Jessica Rawnsley
BBC News
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, International

The European Parliament has backed legislation to implement an EU-US trade deal, following months of uncertainty over President Donald Trump’s tariff threats. A majority of lawmakers voted in favour of the measures on Thursday, but added a series of safeguards to ensure the US honours its side of the deal struck last July. The legislation would set tariffs at 15% for most EU goods – down from the 30% initially threatened – in exchange for European investment in the US and the removal of EU import duties on US industrial goods. The vote comes after months of delay following Trump’s threats to annex Greenland and a US Supreme Court ruling that found some of his tariffs unlawful. The EU assembly voted by 417 to 154, and 71 abstentions, in favour of the legislation. The text will need to be signed off by all of the bloc’s 27 member states, with a concluding vote expected in April or May.

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U.S. Forest Service to close Portland headquarters, research station, open Salem office

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Capital Chronicle
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

The U.S. Forest Service plans to close a century-old Portland-based forest research station and a regional U.S. Forest Service headquarters but open a new federal office in Salem in a massive restructuring of the federal agency. The movements are part of a broad plan Forest Service officials announced Tuesday to move the agency operations westward, including shifting headquarters in Washington, D.C., to Salt Lake City. Officials will also close all nine regional Forest Service offices across the country, including the Northwest office in Portland, and consolidate seven state-based research stations, including the 100-year-old Pacific Northwest Research Station, also in Portland, into a single research station in Fort Collins, Colorado. Smaller Forest Service research and development facilities in Corvallis and La Grande that are associated with the Pacific Northwest Research Station will remain open.

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Eagle Forest Products: Precision, People and a Doubled Production at Tangent Facility

By Chaille Brindley
Pallet Enterprise
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — Inside the remanufacturing plant in Tangent, Oregon, owned by Eagle Forest Products, output has quietly doubled in two years. The change didn’t come from chasing volume for volume’s sake. It came from tightening flow, upgrading key machinery, installing the right leadership—and refusing to compete with the very pallet companies the firm supplies. From its headquarters in Eagle, Idaho, the company operates a national network. Eagle manufactures in Tangent and Roseburg, Oregon; Osceola, Iowa; and Piedmont, Alabama. It operates a distribution and trading yard in Montgomery, Texas, along with a small East Coast trading office. …Looking ahead, Eagle is exploring expansion into the South Atlantic region with a model similar to its Texas operation – combining distribution, sales and some manufacturing. The search begins with finding the right personnel. Brad admitted.

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Canfor Southern Pine to invest $10.5 million in Mobile County, Alabama

By Gracie King
WKRG News 5
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MOBILE COUNTY, Alabama — A lumber company is set to make a multi-million dollar investment into its Port City location. According to a release, a subsidiary of Canfor Southern Pine, New South Lumber Company Inc., is investing $10.5 million in the Mobile County location. The company will be adding “a new dual-path continuous dry kiln.” This move aims to increase efficiency and drying capacity, as well as provide room for growth in the future. “This investment reinforces the company’s commitment to maintaining and strengthening its existing workforce and ensuring the long-term sustainability of the operation,” said Canfor Southern Pine Inc. President Lee Goodloe. Construction is set to begin in April and be completed in June.

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Rising fuel prices squeeze Maine’s fishermen and loggers

By Drew Peters
News Center Maine
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MAINE — As gas and diesel prices climb during the war in Iran, some of Maine’s most recognizable industries are feeling the strain. From the coast to the woods, people who rely on fuel to do their jobs say the higher costs are changing how they work and raising concerns about what comes next. Lobstermen are rethinking trips on the water, while logging contractors say the math is getting harder for truckers and mills across the state. …“I mean, there is no equipment that does not use diesel as its primary fuel for both harvesting and trucking,” Dana Doran, executive director of the Professional Logging Contractors of the Northeast, said. Doran said spiking diesel prices are adding roughly 20% to the cost of each trip a driver makes to and from a mill. That increase, he said, creates uncertainty for contractors and for mills that depend on a steady supply of wood.

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Biofuel plant incentive bill clears Wisconsin Senate

By Celia Horns and Tom Stankard
The Leader Telegram
March 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Romaine Quinn

An incentive package for a proposed aviation biofuel facility in Hayward cleared the Senate 31–2 and now heads to Gov. Tony Evers’ desk for final approval. The bill passed through the Assembly 94–5 last month. …Senator Romaine Quinn praised the bill’s potential to bring economic development to the state’s northern region and its forestry industry… “This will fundamentally change the trajectory of the forestry industry in this state — raising the value of timber, improving forest health, and bolstering 2,000 jobs across Northern Wisconsin.” …The technology used to convert woody biomass into SAF is proven, but has yet to be scaled commercially. …Green said it “not only revives Wisconsin’s timber markets after years of decline, but will also bolster thousands of jobs across Northern Wisconsin.” “By utilizing 80% Wisconsin-sourced wood, the project ensures a strong, homegrown market for loggers and foresters while encouraging better forest management practices,” he said

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Hearing set for Georgia Pacific’s polluted water discharge plan

By James Call, USA Today
The Tallahassee Democrat
March 25, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

The Florida Department of Environmental Protection will hold a public hearing in April on Georgia Pacific’s request to release stormwater runoff from a closed paper mill into the Fenholloway River near Perry.  The Koch Industries subsidiary is embroiled in a dispute with neighboring landowners that has forced it to seek a permit to discharge 5 million gallons of polluted water daily from the site of the closed Foley Cellulose plant into the river. In December, GP submitted the permit application after an arbitrator sided with Four Rivers Land & Timber, who had blocked GP’s use of a 15-mile-long pipeline built to carry the discharge to the river’s mouth at the Gulf. …While there is no new effluent or wastewater, because GP has significantly dismantled the plant, there are pollutants in the ground accumulated during the 70 years the plant was in operation. 

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Georgia-Pacific Announces President & CEO; Duncan to Lead Nearly 100-year-old Atlanta-Based Manufacturing Company

Georgia Pacific
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

David Duncan

ATLANTA – Georgia-Pacific announced that effective immediately, David Duncan, executive vice president of Georgia-Pacific’s consumer products group, has been named president and CEO. Mark Luetters, who currently serves as executive vice president of Koch had temporarily served as CEO since 2025. David Duncan, executive vice president of Georgia-Pacific’s consumer products group, has been named president and CEO. He’s been with the company since 2018 in leadership roles and has 28 years of experience at Koch companies. Prior to joining Georgia-Pacific, he served as president of performance solutions at INVISTA. …Vivek Joshi, currently president of the consumer tissue, towel and napkins (TTN) business, will become executive vice president of the consumer products business. 

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Removal of EU trade tariffs to sap Australia’s forestry industry

Australia Forest Products Association
March 24, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — AFPA has expressed disappointment and concerns about the new Australia-European Union Free Trade Agreement (A-EU FTA) signed by the Federal Government. Under the deal, Australia will eliminate tariffs on European timber imports. AFPA Chief Executive Officer Diana Hallam said: “We echo the concerns raised by many other agriculture peak bodies today about the lack of opportunities arising from the deal for Australia’s forest industries. “Furthermore, the removal of trade tariffs – including on timber products – under the new A-EU FTA will challenge Australian sawn timber and engineered wood product manufacturers. …“Fortunately, in a win for the sector, the A-EU FTA does not include deforestation regulation, and we will continue to engage with the EU on these problematic and trade-distorting measures in other international forums alongside the United States, Canada and New Zealand,” Ms Hallam said.

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Fibre Excellence takes legal action against the French government

Byu Faustine Loison
Print Industry News
March 27, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

FRANCE — Fibre Excellence has taken the next step in its battle with the French government. The pulp producer, which operates two sites in Saint-Gaudens and Tarascon, has requested a preliminary administrative appeal, a compulsory step before referring the matter to the administrative judge. For the industrialist, “the future of the company and the French forest-wood-paper industry is at stake between now and mid-April”. Committed to a conciliation procedure “unsuccessful to date in avoiding receivership” management is now looking to “to obtain a written response from the State”. …Without a commitment by April 14, the situation could tip over the edge, warns Fibre Excellence, which is talking about suspension of payments. And Fibre Excellence will be “forced” to refer the matter to the administrative judge, who may order modifications to the contract in question, but also “grant compensation commensurate with the damage suffered”.

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Pulp & Beyond 2026: Featuring pulp and paper industry trends and challenges

By: Simon Matthis
Pulp Paper News
March 30, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Highly exposed to energy costs, today’s unpredictable global trade politics and the crisis in the Middle East are impacting the pulp and paper industry in many ways. These developments will certainly be reflected at Pulp & Beyond 2026, the leading forest-based bioeconomy event in Northern Europe, taking place on 15–16 April 2026 at the Helsinki Expo and Convention Centre in Helsinki, Finland. However, the main theme of this year’s event—focusing on the role of artificial intelligence in process industries, innovation within the forest sector, and the future of the bioeconomy—was defined before the Middle East war broke out, along with the subsequent oil and gas crisis, turbulence in global stock markets, and the growing risk of an unprecedented global recession. Pulp & Beyond 2026 will be held April 14-17 in Finland at the Helsinki Expo and Convention Centre.

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World order has irrevocably changed: World Trade Organization chief

Reuters in CTV News
March 26, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

GENEVA — The head of the World Trade Organization said on Thursday the multilateral system has fundamentally changed and that countries must look to the future to consider how to reform the global trade system. …“We must look to the future,” WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told delegates at the opening of the 14th WTO ministerial conference in Yaounde, Cameroon. While 72% of global trade still takes place under WTO rules, with growth in AI-related trade providing a bright spot, Okonjo-Iweala said the world trading system faces significant uncertainty due to the Middle East conflict and impact of U.S. tariffs on countries around the world. Okonjo-Iweala set out a list of problems facing the WTO, including the paralysis of the WTO’s dispute settlement body and transparency in notifying the use of subsidies. …“Lack of transparency leads to lack of trust, and that breeds suspicions of unfairness and anti-competitive behaviors,” she said.

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