Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

FSC Canada releases 2025 Annual Report – A year of growth

By Étienne Vézina, Board Chair
FSC Canada
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

2025 was a landmark year for FSC Canada, one defined by transition, renewed clarity, and a deepening of the values that anchor our mission. I am proud to reflect on a year in which FSC Canada strengthened its role as a trusted leader in responsible forest stewardship. This year marked an important moment in our organization’s history with the retirement of François Dufresne, who served as President and CEO for more than a decade. François guided FSC Canada through periods of significant change in the forest sector, always with integrity, steadiness, and a commitment to collaboration. …We also welcomed Monika Patel as FSC Canada’s new President and CEO. Monika brings a clear strategic vision, a deep understanding of the FSC system, and a values driven approach that aligns strongly with our mission. Her leadership has already brought renewed focus to our priorities and strengthened our engagement with partners across the country.  

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Fire-loving fungi are nature’s first responders after wildfire, readying the soil for rebirth

By Laura Fraser
CBC News
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

©Monika Fisher

Within weeks of a wildfire, an orange crust coats deadwood and the charred forest floor, creating an otherworldly landscape that still seems to be smoking. But instead of continued destruction, it’s a signal of rebirth: tiny fungi are colonizing the wreckage. “They shoot out spores, so many that it actually looks like smoke,” said Joey Tanney, a Canadian Forest Service mycologist and research scientist. These peachy-orange fungi are pyronema, a type of pyrophilous — Greek for fire-loving — fungi that act as nature’s first responders to a wildfire. And the study of how these organisms help with fire recovery has grown as climate change boosts the size, intensity and frequency of wildfires. Believed to be in a dormant state, fire-loving fungal spores remain latent until a wildfire, says Monika Fischer, a mycologist at the University of British Columbia studying the role of fungi in a post-fire environment. 

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Forest Stewardship Council News for June 2026

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

In the June newsletter you’ll find links to these headlines:

  • Upcoming webinar: Navigating IFL revisions and Motion 45 requirements: How it all fits together
  • FSC Canada 2025 Annual Report – A year of growth
  • FSC Canada at Toronto Climate Week 2026
  • Engaging Québec’s private forest landowners
  • BC Community Forest Association AGM
  • The Canadian Forest Sector Transformation Task Force Report
  • Call for members: FSC Canada Standards Development Group (SDG)
  • FSC opens consultations on standards, strategy, and regulatory updates 
  • FSC and Verra announce partnership to label carbon credits from responsible forests
  • Public consultation on certification statements and minimum audit duration

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Forest management must shift from profit to prevention

Nature
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Canada’s forest disturbance costs have been rising quickly. We propose that silviculture must be reframed as a risk mitigation tool under an ‘avoided costs’ framework as proactive investments become essential to prevent far greater damage to society and ecosystems. Increasing forest disturbances…are profoundly disrupting forest ecosystems and the viability of the forest sector across the globe. Unprecedented disturbance levels in the past decades have caused immense losses … causing a surge in economic costs for disturbance control and significant infrastructure damage. Critically, some disturbances like wildfires incur devastating, irreparable consequences, from irreversible biodiversity loss to severe impacts on human health and life. …We argue that existing adaptive silviculture knowledge and technologies can stabilize forest resources and reduce the risk of catastrophic losses. Leveraging Canadian silvicultural investment data, we illustrate the need to move beyond the traditional cost-benefit paradigm—generally analyzed from the perspective of the forest products industry—to one that explicitly incorporates avoided costs for society.

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Millions in Forest ‘Enhancement’ Funds May Be Spurring More Logging

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbians are subsidizing the province’s forest companies to the tune of tens of millions of dollars each year under a government program that defrays the cost of shipping logs from remote forests to distant mills. In 2023, logging companies received nearly $33 million in public funds to underwrite the costs of hauling “low-value” logs to wood pulp and pellet mills. …The subsidies are posted online by the Forest Enhancement Society of BC, or FESBC, an organization created and funded by the provincial government and that reports to Forests Minister Ravi Parmar. The society’s mandate includes “preventing and mitigating the impact of wildfires” and “improving habitat for wildlife.” But many FESBC funds simply underwrite the increasing costs of hauling logs. Those expenses have been marching upward as logging activities push farther into the hinterland. That has some questioning whether the funding is accelerating the logging of forests, rather than enhancing them.

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B.C. environmental group’s ad campaign during World Cup puts spotlight on old-growth logging

By Tiffany Crawford
Vancouver Sun
June 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

If you were downtown in Vancouver on Thursday celebrating Canada’s big win at the World Cup you may have noticed several large billboards alerting visitors to one of B.C.’s controversial forest practices. Environmental group Sierra Club B.C. launched ads this month to coincide with the Cup in Vancouver to put the spotlight on logging of B.C.’s old-growth forest. The ads, which are online, on buildings, streaming in bars and restaurants, on TV and on billboards downtown and at SkyTrain stations, say an average of 100 soccer fields of old-growth forest in B.C. are still being clear-cut every day. This figure is from a 2025 report by the same group on the state of B.C.’s forests called Closer to the Brink. …B.C.’s Forest Ministry said in an emailed statement that there are 111,000 square kilometres of old forests and, of that, 89,000 are either protected, deferred or uneconomic to harvest, or 80 per cent of old-growth forest.

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New Forest Act introduced at Powell River City Hall

By Paul Galinski
The Powell River Peak
June 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jennifer Houghton

City of Powell River councillors were introduced to a proposed New Forest Act, which would change the way that forests in BC are managed. On June 18, Jennifer Houghton, campaign director from Boundary Forest Watershed Stewardship Society, introduced the act and its implications for public and private forested lands and community watersheds. “The New Forest Act is a citizen-developed legislative proposal that has been under development for several years, with input from foresters, scientists, rural residents and people from communities across BC,” said Houghton. “I’m here to discuss the larger forestry system that governs BC, how it affects communities, and a proposal for a replacement.” Houghton said she wanted to focus on three questions. The first was: what problem is the proposal trying to solve? The second was: what is the New Forest Act? The third was: why would it matter to communities like Powell River?

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Witnessing Wildfire Forest Recovery: My Visit to the Cariboo Chilcotin Region

By Gordon Murray
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

I recently had the opportunity to see firsthand how Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. (CCR), a joint venture of three First Nations, is transforming stands of burned trees just outside Williams Lake, BC, into a fibre source for wood pellet and pulp & paper production. We recorded the visit so that others could experience what we saw. …The recovered deadwood is chipped, ground, and used in pulp, paper and wood pellet production. WPAC members will take the lower-end fibre and pelletize it for use in a renewable, low-carbon energy source that can help displace fossil fuels in heat and power generation. It’s such a good new story. CCR is turning what might otherwise be seen as waste into jobs, economic development, community pride, and contributions to the biomass industry. At the same time, they are strengthening partnerships across industry and government—collaboration that is essential to scaling these solutions.

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Bees and Bark

By Melissa Steidle
Woodlots BC
June 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Did you know that BC has nearly 600 native bee species? This is among the highest diversity in Canada. The Southern Interior alone has around 400 species. The forest provides both forage opportunities and nesting habitat for bees. Many bee species live in trees, specifically cracks, bark sloughs and small crevices. So snags! We knew they were good for something. Over the decomposition of a standing tree it provides different types of standing habitat. As the tree rots, the bark begins to slough. Sloughing Bark on a snag is an important old forest attribute. While we can’t maintain everything in a block, keeping snags provides habitat for a variety of bees and other insects.

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New floodplain maps support flood preparedness

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

People and communities in B.C. will be safer and better informed about flood hazards as the first phase of new floodplain maps is completed. The Province, in partnership with Natural Resources Canada and the Fraser Basin Council, has released new floodplain maps, covering five waterways and 58 communities, under the Government of Canada’s Flood Hazard Identification Mapping Program. …“Floodplain maps do more than chart where water may go, they reveal where risk lives, reflect how our world is changing and shape how we prepare for the future,” said Randene Neill, B.C.’s Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship. “Updating these maps through the mapping program is one more step in implementing the B.C. Flood Strategy. They help turn insight into action and can go a long way in helping communities make informed choices, plan ahead and act quickly if the time comes.”

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Looking forward to what reforms the New Forest Act tour could bring

Letter by Megan Ardyche, founding member, Save Our Forests Comox Valley
Comox Valley Record
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

I was very happy to read the article about the New Forest Act tour that is coming to Courtenay’s Stan Hagen Theatre on June 15. According to the article, “the New Forest Act is a proposed legislative framework that aims to address long-term instability in BC’s forest sector.” …The risk of catastrophic flooding is one example of instability caused by current forestry practices, and local taxpayers are on the hook for emergency services and repair efforts. Another example is the millions of dollars local taxpayers had to pay for a deep water intake pipe on Comox Lake, to address the sedimentation…. That sedimentation was caused by forestry practices in the watershed. …I also appreciated reading that “the New Forest Act is not about eliminating the forestry industry…[but rather to] manage forests instead to protect essential services like water regulation, biodiversity and flood prevention.” …Both communities and forestry companies themselves are saying that there is a need for reform.

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‘Extremely concerning’: B.C. environmentalists outraged by minister’s caribou commentsrning

By Evert Lindquist
Victoria News
June 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Ravi Parmar

B.C. environmental organizations have expressed outrage over comments made by the minister of forests about caribou and old-growth during an interview in Revelstoke last Tuesday. …His comments included calling caribou “not the smartest animal” for fleeing long distances when disturbed, as well as pointing to wildfires as a main cause of destruction for caribou habitat, and claiming that logging in B.C. today relies on far fewer “1950s-style” cutblocks.  Black Press Media fact-checked these claims from the minister and found they all have inaccuracies. …Provincial data indicates that while fire is the leading disturbance for caribou in northern B.C., forest extraction remains the biggest threat for southern B.C. herds’ habitat, as well as for central B.C. herds’ wider matrix habitat. …Anneke Rosch said that “blaming caribou is a new low” for the minister and B.C. government, along with that “sustainable forestry isn’t just for caribou — it’s needed for the future of forestry jobs too.”

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Osoyoos Indian Band launches large-scale tree nursery focused on reforestation

By Sarah Crookall
Castanet
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Osoyoos Forestry Nursery, a one-of-a-kind tree-growing initiative, held its grand opening Tuesday. “This is our first green project, so we can stand up as Osoyoos Indian Band and be proud that we’re not just cutting down trees, we’re one of the few First Nations — in fact, the only one that will be growing millions of trees each year,” Chief Clarence Louie of the Osoyoos Indian Band, said. The new 10.5 hectare project is in partnership with K&C Silviculture, operating on solar energy and recycled canal water at 7637 Tucelnuit Dr. The aim is to give back to the environment through wildfire reforestation with funding from Government of Canada’s 2 Billion Trees program. … Peter Fleet, Head of Forestry Operations for Nk’Mip Forestry said that many First Nations groups have been involved in forests, but not growing trees. He said giving back to the land is a foundational principle to the OIB and community.

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Quebec town recognizes trees as living beings with rights

By Morgan Lowrie
Canadian Press in CBC News
June 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A small town west of Montreal has decided to officially recognize trees as living beings with rights of their own, in what an environmental organization describes as a first in Quebec and Canada. A resolution adopted by Terrasse-Vaudreuil city council on June 9 declares that trees are worthy of protection, “including the right to life, to natural growth, to integrity and to regeneration.” Mayor Michel Bourdeau says Quebec filmmaker André Desrochers inspired the community to take action. He said Desrochers’ film, called Des arbes et des arts convinced citizens that trees are living entities that breathe and communicate with each other through their root systems. …Bourdeau says the new resolution means the town will review its existing rules and bylaws to ensure that trees are protected or replaced if they must be cut down.

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House Agriculture sets hearings on conservation, forests

By Marc Heller
E&E News by Politico
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Glenn Thompson

The House Agriculture Committee will hold a pair of hearings this week to delve into conservation, forestry and the safety net that cushions farms from economic and weather-related disasters. In a full committee hearing, lawmakers are expected to dig into how parts of the last farm bill — enacted in 2018 — are playing out more than two years after it was set to expire, as well as aspects of the Big, Beautiful Bill Act that addressed some farm programs last year. Farm groups and others warn that headwinds facing farmers are outpacing the 2018 law’s ability to help them. Bankruptcies are at a decadeslong high, according to the Department of Agriculture. Congress has extended the 2018 farm bill. The House passed a new farm bill at the end of April, and Senate Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Chair John Boozman (R-Ark.) plans to release a draft this week. [to access the full story an E&ENews subscription is required]

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The latest ‘sustained yield’ scam will devastate Montana’s national forests

By George Ochenski
The Daily Montanan
June 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Way back in 1995 Bob Brown, the Republican president of the Montana Senate, called me into his office. He had co-sponsored a bill with a pro-logging Missoula Democrat to establish a “sustained yield” level of logging on Montana’s state trust lands – and he was worried it wasn’t working out the way he hoped. Bob was right to be worried then and Montanans are right to be worried now because Trump’s Forest Service Chief and former timber industry lobbyist Tom Schultz, has just unleashed the “sustained yield” scam on Montana’s National Forests. …My advice to Bob was to let the bill die because he didn’t have the votes to remove the amendments the timber industry lobbyists stuck on the bill. But he didn’t take that advice. …Two years later, Tom Schultz went to work for Montana’s Department of Natural Resources and Conservation, earning the sobriquet “Chainsaw Tom” for his pro-logging zeal.

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Federal judge sends Bayer’s $7.25 billion Roundup settlement back to Missouri state court

By Dietrich Knauth
Reuters
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

A federal judge sent Bayer’s proposed $7.25 billion Roundup settlement back to ‌state court, overruling objections from plaintiffs who had argued the state court had no power to implement a nationwide resolution of lawsuits that claim the company’s Roundup weedkiller causes cancer. US District Judge Henry Edward Autrey sided with Bayer, concluding that the objecting plaintiffs did not have the power to transfer the ​case to federal court because only the defendant has that right. The ruling is likely to bolster Bayer’s efforts ​to win approval of the sweeping settlement by restoring the case to the state court where the deal is ⁠being fast‑tracked and avoiding the risk that the settlement would be reviewed by a different federal judge who has already criticized the deal. …In a separate case, the US Supreme ⁠Court is weighing ​Bayer’s argument that federal law governing pesticides should prevent plaintiffs from suing under state laws.

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US Forest Service Chief Warns Markets, Not Trees, Drive Wood Imports

By Jason Ross
Wood Central
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Tom Schultz

WASHINGTON, D.C. — A new plan to rebuild markets for American wood is due within months, after the country’s top forester blamed weak demand, and not a shortage of trees, as the real brake on a federal estate. That is according to US Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz, whose evidence to a House Natural Resources subcommittee set the case out in full, even as his agency pursues a 25% increase in federal logging. …Bruce Westerman, who chairs the full House Natural Resources Committee, questioned how a country managing 193 million acres and spending billions of dollars a year fighting wildfires had become the world’s largest importer of wood and paper. Citing a steep fall in federal timber sales since the late 1980s, Schultz countered that the resource on the ground is more than ample. …On the import mix, Schultz noted Canadian lumber now supplies around 25% of US consumption, down from roughly 33 per cent.

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National Fish and Wildlife Foundation Awards $20 Million in Grants to Restore Longleaf Pine Habitat across the Southeast

National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) today announced $20 million in conservation grants to restore, enhance and protect longleaf pine forests across nine southern states. The grants will leverage more than $18.6 million in matching contributions to generate a total conservation impact of $38.6 million. The grants were awarded through the Longleaf Landscape Stewardship Fund (LLSF), a public-private partnership and competitive grant program supported by the collective investment of 12 funding partners. This includes a fifth consecutive year of major funding from the Bezos Earth Fund, which has over five years of partnership with NFWF and has invested more than $67 million in longleaf restoration grants through the LLSF.

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As western fires erupt, Trump’s Forest Service says it’s now fully staffed

By Kirk Siegler
NPR in University of Georgia
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

©US Forest Service

The U.S. Forest Service says it has now exceeded its wildland firefighter hiring targets for this summer’s fire season. Newly released numbers provided by the agency to NPR show that 11,550 seasonal staff are now either being trained or ready to deploy, which is about 200 more than their initial goals and about 6% ahead of schedule compared to this time in recent years. U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz credits the solid numbers to recent pay raises for wildland firefighters. The hiring comes as Western states are historically dry and on edge, with fast moving wildfires igniting in the last day in and around populated areas such as Spokane, Washington. “I think the conditions we have are alarming,” Schultz told NPR. “But the Forest Service will be prepared for this season.” But in the West, many state officials and former agency employees aren’t so sure given the continued downsizing of the agency.

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Nonprofit takes aim at Colorado’s growing mountain pine beetle problem one tree at a time

By Spencer Wilson
CBS News
June 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Colorado nonprofit, the Mountain Pine Beetle Foundation, is working to help landowners fight back against growing infestations of mountain pine beetles and protect their properties from wildfires. Founder Wesley Manney said the organization’s goal is simple: stop beetle infestations before they grow and reduce wildfire risk at the same time. What started as a handful of infested trees in Evergreen, Colorado, has turned into hundreds for landowner Jon Hager. …Now, crews are cutting down and chipping dozens of beetle-killed and infested trees on his property as part of an effort to slow the spread of mountain pine beetles, which experts warn could become a bigger problem during Colorado’s dry summer conditions. “It’s our responsibility as landowners,” Hager said. “We should take care of the beetle problem so it doesn’t spread to our neighbours.”

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Idaho National Forests Receive Collaborative Restoration Funding

By Mike Williamson
The US Department of Agriculture
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The US Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service is funding two landscapes within the Boise and Payette national forests for inclusion in the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program (CFLRP). The congressionally funded program provides long-term support for partnership-driven projects that improve watershed health, reduce wildfire risk and strengthen local economies. The West Central Idaho Initiative covers 2.3 million acres of public and private lands stretching from Boise to New Meadows, Idaho. The initiative focuses on reducing wildfire risk to communities through logging, thinning and prescribed fire. The area was chosen for a 10-year funding commitment based on its strong history of collaboration. …The Weiser-Little Salmon Headwaters landscape continues CFLRP involvement dating back to 2012. In the first 10 years of funding, projects there treated nearly 170,000 acres of hazardous vegetation, resulting in the equivalent of about 36,000 logging trucks of timber sold. 

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Heat waves increase wildfire risk – a new study explains how much, and it’s not a small number

By Dmitri Kalashnikov, Cong Yin, Madhulika Gurazada and Mukesh Kumar
University of California
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©Mukesh_Kumar

When heat waves hit the Western United States, the risk of wildfires quickly rises. The prolonged heat dries out vegetation, but that’s only part of the cause – heat waves also play other roles in spreading wildfires. In a new study, our team of fire and climate scientists looked at two decades of wildfire activity in the West, from 2001 to 2024, and for the first time quantified the effect of heat waves on those fires. We expected a big impact, but the numbers still surprised us: While heat waves, which we defined as three or more consecutive days with temperatures in the top tenth of hottest days, accounted for only 12% to 15% of warm-season days, we found that 42% of all the area burned by fires had occurred during or right after a heat wave. Moreover, the amount of the area that burned each day was more than 50% larger during heat waves than during the cooler days right before the heat wave began in many parts of the West. In some regions, the difference was much larger – up to 300%.

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Before the Flame: How Washington state is reshaping its forests to survive the next wildfire

By Bridget Chavez
King 5 News
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

RONALD, Wash. — The sound of wildfire prevention isn’t a fire engine siren. It’s chainsaws, wood chippers and heavy machinery chewing through brush. Across Kittitas County, crews are removing smaller trees, trimming limbs and clearing brush in an effort to reshape forests before the next wildfire season arrives. But the work underway here is also challenging one of the most deeply held ideas many people have about forests: That more trees always means a healthier forest. “Green is good,” said Katie Zander, the North Service Forestry coordinator for the Washington Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Southeast Region. “But out here historically we did not have this dense of forest stands.” According to Zander, eastern Washington forests evolved with regular low-intensity fires that naturally cleared out brush and smaller trees. But decades of aggressive wildfire suppression changed that pattern.

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Weyerhaeuser Launches Fighting Fires Together Campaign to Support Oregon Wildland Firefighting

By Weyerhaeuser Company
PR Newswire
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SEATTLE — Weyerhaeuser Company announced the fifth year of its Fighting Fires Together campaign, combining the company’s wildfire management and community support efforts across Oregon. The campaign unifies support for rural fire districts, wildfire response partnerships, and resources that strengthen firefighter and community resilience in fire-prone areas of the state. The campaign addresses the realities of wildfire response in rural Oregon, where communities and agencies often face limited resources to protect both residents and wildland firefighters. …Across Oregon, grants from the company’s Giving Fund help rural fire protection districts secure critical rescue, medical and wildland firefighting tools, along with expanded training to support faster, safer responses when wildfires occur. …Additionally, Weyerhaeuser is supporting the next generation of wildland firefighters and forestry professionals. A recent $10,000 grant to Lane Community College’s Wildland Fire Management Program will support funding for tools and safety equipment… 

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Trump administration to propose tripling logging in Blue Mountains forests

By April Ehrlich
Oregon Public Broadcasting
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The Trump administration is about to propose an overhaul of how it manages nearly 5 million acres in northeastern Oregon and southeastern Washington. Logging could triple in the Umatilla, Malheur and Wallowa-Whitman national forests, which comprise the U.S. Forest Service’s Blue Mountains region. The agency’s proposal would eliminate regulations that protect large trees and sensitive habitats. It would also boost timber sale goals from 106 million board feet to 364 million over a decade. That’s raising hopes in a region where timber jobs have declined and lumber mills have closed. But others doubt the timber goals. And environmental groups have called the plan a raid on one of the wildest places in the United States. …Mark Webb, executive director of Blue Mountains Forest Partners — which coordinates between environmental and timber interests to find common ground — doubts whether the forest service can reach the ambitious logging goals it sets forth in its draft proposal.

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USDA puts Montana forests back to work, supporting jobs and rural communities

The US Department of Agriculture
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz today signed the Montana Tri-Forest Federal Sustained-Yield Unit management plan that will support economic stability, strengthen central Montana’s wood processing capacity and advance forest health though timber harvests that will be processed within the boundaries of the unit. The Tri-Forest unit includes the Beaverhead-Deerlodge, Custer Gallatin and Helena-Lewis and Clark national forests. Leadership from these forests will work together to provide forest products that support local economic stability, strengthen central Montana’s wood-processing capacity and advance forest health in alignment with existing forest plans.  

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Stanford study finds surprising upside of prescribed burns

By Anna FitzGerald Guth
SF Gate
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

…In a study published in the journal Science on June 11, Stanford University researchers found that intentionally burning 500,000 acres of conifer forests in California every year could reduce wildfire smoke pollution overall by about 10% over a decade. “This study highlights that yes, prescribed fire is good, but sometimes the benefits take a while,” Marshall Burke, a professor in the Doerr School of Sustainability at Stanford and the senior study author, told SFGATE. The study relied on two decades of satellite measurements of fire severity and smoke particulate matter across California. Reflecting similar findings in previous research, it documented that low-severity wildfires, a stand-in for prescribed burning, can cut the immediate likelihood of future severe wildfires in the same area by 92%. …California burns less than the study’s recommended 500,000 acres in prescribed burns, although the state’s goal is to incinerate about that much fuel every year.

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Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek declares emergency due to wildfire threat

Oregon Public Broadcasting
June 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek has declared an emergency due to the imminent threat of wildfires in the state. “Increasing heat, dry vegetation, and shifting winds continue to align and create dangerous conditions that demand immediate action,” Kotek said in a press release Tuesday morning. “I am declaring a State of Emergency to ensure all available resources — firefighting crews, aerial support, ground resources, and emergency personnel are prepared for deployments — to protect people, property, and our natural landscapes.” The declaration ensures that the Oregon Department of Forestry and the state fire marshal’s office have the wildfire crews and equipment they need. And it directs the Oregon Department of Emergency Management to activate the state’s Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan. From Tuesday morning through Tuesday evening, the National Weather Service in Pendleton declared a red flag warning throughout much of eastern Washington and northeast Oregon. 

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CAL FIRE Supports Innovative Science with New Forest Health Research Grant Funding

Sierra News Online
June 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©CalFireFlickr

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) is pleased to announce the availability of $4.5 million in California Climate Investments (CCI) funding and $3 million in Proposition 4 California Climate Bond (Prop 4) funding through the Forest Health Research Grants Program. CAL FIRE is seeking research proposals that advance scientific understanding and develop practical solutions to the urgent forest health and wildfire challenges facing California’s landscapes and communities. This year’s Forest Health Research grants include three concurrent solicitations for CCI-funded research, research led by graduate students, and larger Prop 4 funded collaborative research projects that support landscape-scale forest and fire management. These grants are intended to support research that delivers direct benefits to landowners, resource agencies, fire management organizations, and decision-makers across the state. CAL FIRE encourages innovative proposals that generate new knowledge and produce actionable tools that strengthen forest health, improve wildfire resilience, and support effective land management.

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All of Oregon officially enters fire season

By Zach Urness
The Salem Statesman Journal
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Fire season has begun in Oregon. Hot and dry conditions have forest managers across the state on edge as the season officially started June 15, bringing with it restrictions meant to prevent wildfires. The main restriction is a prohibition on debris and backyard burning on state, county and private lands, although official rules are set by local fire districts. Debris burning is the most frequent human cause of wildfires that spread in populated areas. “With it being this hot and dry, one little bit of wind could spread an ember and start a fire. It’s the perfect time to cover your pile and wait until fall,” Oregon Department of Forestry spokeswoman Jessica Neujahr said.

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Overhauling conservation in Minnesota should be Job 1 for next governor

By Dennis Anderson
The Minnesota Star Tribune
June 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Amy Klobuchar

At Game Fair in August, a debate is planned for gubernatorial candidates, and the hope among those concerned about Minnesota’s woods, waters, fields and wild critters. That’s been the case sometimes previously, as past candidates for the state’s highest office have either shown ignorance about the importance of conservation, or worse, they’ve promised a lot but ultimately, delivered very little. …Results of a recent statewide poll have Klobuchar as the favored gubernatorial candidate among those who seek the office. Many hunters and anglers see this as a win, citing her support in the U.S. Senate on important issues, wetland and prairie conservation among them. Environmentalists, whose Minnesota agendas at times differ from those of hunters and anglers, are even more firmly entrenched in Klobuchar’s camp. Already those factions are jockeying in an attempt to influence Klobuchar on her naming of a Department of Natural Resources commissioner.

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Georgia wildfires cost state $35 million to put out, number of fires up nearly 90% in 2026

Daily Dispatch
June 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Johnny Sabo

Amid drought conditions and larger fires, Georgia Forestry Commission Director Johnny Sabo told lawmakers the cost to put out the blazes in south Georgia cost more than half of his annual department budget. “We’re looking about $35 million between these two fires,” Sabo said about the cost of putting out the Pineland Road and Highway 82 fires in south Georgia. “To put that in perspective, my annual budget is $52 million.” Those figures don’t include the costs of helping communities recover from the damage and losses afterward. Sabo said no one in Georgia is immune to the effects of fires in the state and that in the southeast United States, firefighting continues year-round, 300 days of the year.

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Connecticut Opens $1.23 Million in Urban and Community Forestry Grants

Environment Energy Leader
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Connecticut’s Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) announced two federally funded grant programs totaling $1.23 million for urban and community forestry projects, with application deadlines in August 2026. The programs are available through DEEP’s Urban and Community Forestry Grant Opportunities webpage and target different eligible applicant pools with different project scopes. The Urban Forest Resilience Grant Program makes $230,000 available to municipalities and 501(c)(3) organizations for tree removal and replanting in response to forest pest and disease losses, particularly from the Emerald Ash Borer. …The Resilient Forestry Practices Grant Program provides $1 million to rural municipalities and federally recognized tribes with populations under 50,000. It focuses on proactive forest management practices targeting pests, invasive species, and climate-related stressors in municipally and tribally owned woodlands. 

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Victoria ended logging. Now it’s using Tasmania’s native forests

By Jessica Longbottom, Jonathan Miller and Jade Toomey
ABC News, Australia
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

It’s a freezing, foggy morning as the Searoad Mersey II docks at Melbourne Port. We’ve had a tip-off that the truck we’re looking for is on board. …Trees from Tasmania’s public forests are not meant to leave the island. But two years after Victoria banned logging in its own state forests, Four Corners has discovered there are Victorian sawmills now relying heavily on Tasmania for supply. In some cases, Victorian taxpayers are even subsidising the practice. …It’s clear this sawmill, in a state that’s banned native logging in public forests, has shifted its supply. …The state government told Four Corners no logs from public forests like these were leaving the island to be processed interstate. …The environmentalists reckon they’ve spent hundreds of hours at the Devonport ferry terminal, in the state’s north, watching logs leave the island.

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Pulp and paper giant APRIL adds major deforesters as suppliers after revising sustainability policy

By Hans Nicholas Jong
Mongabay
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

JAKARTA — Pulp and paper giant APRIL made recent changes that are concerning to environmental groups. These changes include suspending and reviewing its flagship sustainability policy, lowering its deforestation commitments, and sourcing wood from two companies responsible for some of Indonesia’s largest recent forest losses. The company, part of the Singapore-headquartered Royal Golden Eagle (RGE) group, the world’s largest manufacturer of viscose rayon, said the changes are needed to align its policies with international standards and secure fiber supplies following the loss of several long-term suppliers. Environmental groups, however, said the move weakens a key safeguard that APRIL has long cited as evidence of its no-deforestation commitments. The controversy centers on APRIL’s decision to add Indonesian concessions PT Industrial Forest Plantation (IFP) and PT Mayawana Persada (Mayawana) askey wood suppliers, integral to manufacturing viscose.

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Korea Eases Forest Owners’ Burden in Removing Fire-Damaged Trees

Seoul Economic Daily
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Forest owners in the wildfire-hit regions of North Gyeongsang (Gyeongbuk), South Gyeongsang (Gyeongnam), and Ulsan will be able to reduce the financial burden of removing fire-damaged trees. The Korea Forest Service said Tuesday it will pursue a measure to “replace logging permit documents for the removal of fire-damaged trees” in order to help forestry workers in the wildfire-hit areas of Gyeongbuk, Gyeongnam, and Ulsan return to forest management. …The Korea Forest Service found that because fire-damaged trees are sold at lower prices than normal standing trees in ordinary forests, the cost of the technical services required to prepare the logging quantity survey report was being borne by forest owners. It improved the relevant regulations through a review by the agency’s Active Administration Committee.

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Wood industry forms group to expand use of fire-damaged trees in northern Japan city

The Mainichi
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

OFUNATO, Iwate — An industry organization aimed at promoting the use of fire-damaged timber has been launched in this northeastern Japan city, in response to a forest fire that broke out here in February 2025 burning approximately 3,370 hectares. The organization, named “TEAM Shinrin Saisei Ofunato” … aims to address challenges surrounding the harvesting of damaged trees and expand distribution channels for related wood products. Trees can still be utilized for parts that were not burned or if the damage was limited to the bark, but they must be cut down promptly before moisture loss makes them difficult to use. By strengthening cooperation among the logging, lumber processing, and construction sectors, which are currently divided into separate segments of the wood industry, the organization hopes to make better use of the damaged timber and encourage forest owners to proceed with logging and reforestation.

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Reduced logging delivers limited climate benefits at high cost

Svenska Cellulosa Aktiebolaget SCA
June 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Proposals to reduce forestry activity and increase protected forest areas have become an important part of the European forestry debate. However, according to a new impact assessment, such measures risk leading to lower production, tens of thousands of lost jobs, and higher societal costs – without delivering any climate benefits. A new national forestry impact analysis shows that a more restrictive Swedish forestry policy would have far-reaching consequences for the economy, employment, and energy supply. The study was conducted by Tomas Thuresson, a forestry PhD and former Head of Silviculture at the Swedish Forest Agency, together with Runar Brännlund, Professor Emeritus of Economics at the Centre for Environmental and Resource Economics (CERE) at Umeå University. The report was commissioned by SCA. Jonas Mårtensson, Head of Business Area at SCA Forest, notes that the report highlights both the significant benefits of active forest management and the risks associated with seeking “simple solutions.”

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Tackling the South Island’s worst weed

Star News
June 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

New Zealand — Contorta pine trees were introduced from North America and planted with abandon across Aotearoa for erosion control, timber and shelterbelts, contorta have rapidly adapted to our environment and spread at an alarming rate into farmland and conservation land. They now infest nearly a million hectares of the South Island. As Frank Film discovered, they’ve become our worst weed. …They suck water out of river catchments, change soil biology and quickly swamp tussock grasslands and pastures, creating an acidic monoculture in which little else can survive. There are at least ten species of pine that have become problematic–including Douglas fir, Scots pine and larch, but contorta is the undisputed wilding king. Over a lifetime spent working with trees, retired tree scientist Nick Ledgard has seen this disaster unfold. Contorta, he says, “was thought to be a bit of a wonder tree, but it’s turned out not to be the case”.

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