Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Wildfire season so far considered manageable across Canada, officials say

By Sarah Richei
The Canadian Press in The Chronicle Journal
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA – The 2026 wildfire season has been manageable so far, largely because of significant amounts of rain across Western Canada, but federal officials cautioned Thursday the summer forecast is hotter and drier than normal in much of the country. … The southern Prairies and eastern Quebec have had more rain than usual this year, and it’s expected that above-average precipitation will continue in Alberta and the Northwest Territories. Forecasts for July and August are calling for higher than usual temperatures for Ontario, Quebec, northern parts of the Prairies and the territories. …The latest information from the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre shows there have been 3,100 fires across the country so far this season, compared to around 2,900 at this time last year. …But the total area burned this year is less than last year, at around 12,000 square kilometres, down from 46,000 square kilometres.

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Time for a Name Change: Going from Logging & Sawmilling Journal to Forestnet Magazine

By Anthony Robinson, CEO and Owner
Forestnet Media
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Anthony Robinson

After more than 50 years as a trusted voice in the forest sector, Logging & Sawmilling Journal, like the industry it represents, is evolving. Logging and Sawmilling Journal is transitioning to a new name: Forestnet Magazine. This change reflects a fundamental reality—the business is no longer only logging and sawmilling. Today, it includes biomass and energy, pellet production, mass timber and CLT, advanced robotics and automation in manufacturing, and increasingly sophisticated, technology-driven operations across the entire value chain. It also extends beyond the industry itself. Architects, engineers, developers, policymakers, and even the general public are now part of the conversation. There is growing interest in where wood products come from—from the lumber in our homes to the paper products we use every day. The name Logging & Sawmilling Journal no longer fully reflects that reality—Forestnet Magazine does.

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City of Powell River Council objects to forest ministry letter

By Paul Galinski
Coast Reporter
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

City of Powell River Council has directed staff to write correspondence to the ministry of forests, objecting to correspondence from the ministry regarding Powell River Community Forest’s new forest licence. …Acting mayor Cindy Elliot said the new BCTS plan came out with additional areas for planned forestry that overlapped the community forest’s new timber licence. …The response essentially says that they are not required to do what we asked and they would rather wait until the minister makes a decision before they change what they are doing.” …Councillor Rob Southcott said the community forest indirectly compensates for the loss of a lot of revenue from a major taxpayer due to the permanent curtailment of the paper mill. …“We don’t want BC Timber Sales coming in and starting to log in the area that we believe should be included in the community forest,” said Powell River Community Forest president Greg Hemphill

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Inviting input on watershed plan for Goat River

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

People are invited to share their input and help guide the development of recommendations and long-term solutions for water supply and ecosystem health in the Goat River watershed. The Province of British Columbia, in partnership with yaqan nuʔkiy (Lower Kootenay Band) and the Regional District of Central Kootenay (RDCK), has launched a tripartite working group to address growing water-scarcity challenges in the Goat River watershed and develop recommendations for long-term water management in the Creston Valley. As part of the process, a survey will gather insights from community members, water users, farmers, industry and other interested parties about their vision for the Goat River watershed. The survey is available until Aug. 1, 2026. …The Goat River Watershed Collective Conversations Working Group brings together representatives from the Province, yaqan nuʔkiy and the RDCK. It will serve as a recommendation-making body, developing joint recommendations for consideration by yaqan nuʔkiy leadership, the RDCK board of directors and provincial ministries. 

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Why the ‘backbone’ of B.C. outdoor recreation access is in jeopardy, groups explain

By Glenda Luymes
Vancouver Sun
July 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

…As some resource roads across the province fall into disrepair … outdoor groups are working to save them. A survey created by the Outdoor Recreation Council of B.C. opened last week to understand which roads matter most for outdoor recreation. No one is suggesting that every metre of the 600,000 kilometres of resource roads across B.C. can be maintained, said Louise Pedersen, the council’s executive director. But creating an inventory is the first step in a process that could eventually include discussions with the B.C. government about saving the most important. …Many of the roads British Columbians use to access the backcountry were created by resource companies … said Monika Bittel, advocacy chairperson with the Federation of Mountain Clubs of B.C. When the projects wrap up, the company continues to hold liability for the road and must follow a process to decommission it. “Their mandate is not recreation,” she said.

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Interview with Jason Krips, President and CEO of the Alberta Forest Products Association

Impact Reports
July 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jason Krips

In Alberta, we take great pride in managing our forests for future generations. Few industries can truly say they plan on a 200-year horizon and that long-term approach allows us to remain deeply rooted in communities across the province. Today, the forestry sector is active in around 70 communities, primarily in northern Alberta. We work closely with the provincial government to develop long-term forest management plans that balance a wide range of priorities, including healthy watercourses, wildlife habitat, recreation, Indigenous values, climate adaptation and wildfire mitigation. The sector supports approximately 30,000 direct and indirect jobs across Alberta. It is a substantive industry that continues to create value for both our economy and our communities. As AFPA approaches more than 80 years of history, I would group our legacy into three key areas: Our members, the public and students, and the global economy. 

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Critical of forests minister

Letter by Kristi Chorney, Wildsight Revelstoke
Castanet
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Open letter to Premier David Eby, B.C.’s Minister of Forests, Ravi Parmar, spoke in Revelstoke about his hopes for sawmills, old- growth and caribou protection (recently). It is evident Parmar is misinformed about the issues critical to the Revelstoke community and other British Columbia residents, and is failing to act on your government’s commitments to climate action, environmental protection, and sustainability. When asked about protecting old-growth within the Revelstoke region, such as the Rainbow-Jordan Wilderness (RJW), Parmar stated: “What I wouldn’t support is just saving land for the sake of saving land and seeing mills close down.” That response demonstrated a lack of understanding of community priorities. …The minister’s comments also show a lack of understanding of the Old Growth Strategic Review, which your government commissioned and committed to implementing. Rather than perpetuating the volume-based resource extraction model, a shift to a value-added sustainable forestry is needed for the provincial economy and long-term employment opportunities.

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Mayor moves to protect tree funds and maintain record urban forestry investment

City of Winnipeg
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mayor Scott Gillingham announced today he will bring forward a proposal to City Council next week to maintain full funding for tree planting in the 2026 Urban Forest Renewal Program. The move follows public feedback about a proposed budget amendment that would have reduced 2026 tree planting work by $1.236 million to offset a provincial government change to the City’s Strategic Infrastructure Basket funding allocation. “Winnipeggers care deeply about our urban forest, and I’ve heard that clearly,” said Mayor Scott Gillingham. “The public wants this tree planting funding protected. I agree, and I’ll be bringing forward a plan to Council next week to do exactly that.” City Council adopted Winnipeg’s first Urban Forest Strategy in 2023, setting a long-term plan to protect, preserve, and grow the city’s tree canopy.

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Forest giants reveal harvesting plans

By Richard Froese
The South Peace News
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

ALBERTA — Harvesting plans for forestry companies operating in the High Prairie and Slave Lake regions were presented June 17 at a joint open house in High Prairie. Plans were displayed by West Fraser Timber that operates High Prairie Forest Products, Tolko Industries, and by Millar Western Forest Products that bought the Slave Lake Pulp Mill from West Fraser and became the owner in April 2024. No representative was present from West Fraser. Companies hosted the event to allow citizens to comment on the proposed plans. Tolko plans to have operations in the Sweathouse area south of Snipe Lake, Salt Prairie and Whitemud, says woodlands supervisor Callie Skellett. …Millar Western plans to harvest trees in three areas, forestry superintendent Stuart Adkins says.

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Tough watering restrictions threaten Metro Vancouver’s trees

By Douglas Todd
Vancouver Sun
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The average Metro Vancouver tree has a lifespan of less than eight years. That makes it even more important to preserve as many trees as possible. The startling statistic, from Brian Minter, a prominent B.C. horticulturist, serves as a deadly warning: Metro Vancouver’s unusually early and severe watering restrictions are a threat to the region’s trees. Given that so many young trees in Metro Vancouver do not reach their tween years — mostly for lack of watering — Minter has come to think of the metropolis’s relatively few older trees as rare and precious “gold.” …Because of lack of time, knowledge or concern, Bill Manning, retired director of horticulture for Vancouver parks said, many homeowners, tenants and strata councils don’t recognize that, though they’re not allowed to use sprinklers on trees, they are permitted to water trees by hand using a hose with a spring-loaded shut-off nozzle, a watering can, or drip irrigation.

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BC loggers innovate to scale up wildfire strategies

By Alice Palmer
The Truck LoggerBC Magazine
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Two BC communities are breathing a little easier, thanks to forward-thinking thinning operations by BC logging companies.  On the outskirts of the Xetólaçw Village subdivision of Mount Currie, Lilwat Forestry Ventures crews have thinned roughly 200 hectares of densely grown Douglas fir and applied cultural burning to reduce understory vegetation. If a wildfire were to reach this now-treated forest, it would travel more slowly. …In the Quesnel area, east of the Nazko First Nation community, Integrated Operations Group collaborated with the Nation to thin a beetle-killed pine blowdown stand, removing the dead stems and leaving the live stems standing. …Both projects were partly self-sustaining—the companies used revenue from the harvest and sale of a limited number of logs from the treated areas. …Logging contractors are increasingly taking on a greater diversity of projects. Not only are they adding wildfire mitigation to their offerings, they are also practicing different types of logging.

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Lake Babine Nation breaks ground on forestry campus

By Dave Branco
CKPG News Prince George
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

LAKE BABINE NATION – Construction crews have started work on the new Lake Babine Nation Forestry Campus. Community leaders say this project is an important step for local education and sustainable forestry. The groundbreaking happened on July 6, 2026. Construction is expected to finish by March 31, 2027. The campus will be named Nadut’en Dij’akh Wighidlee Beyikh, which means “The House Where Nadut’en Takes Care of its Forestry.” …Lake Babine Nation Chief Wilf Adam says the centre will help young people learn about forestry and other areas. Elders will share their knowledge along with the instructors. …Monty Palmantier, who manages capacity development at Lake Babine Nation Forestry Services LP, said said the Nicola Valley Institute of Technology has been their main partner for accredited programs. He also said the campus will join a provincial network of over 40 First Nation education institutes through the Indigenous Adult and Higher Learning Association.

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New Forestry Training Fund to Support Province-wide Workforce Needs

Northern Development BC
July 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. – Northern Development is announcing the first funding program available under its newest partner program, The Canada-B.C. Workforce Tariff Response Forestry Grant: Forestry Training Fund. The $6.9 million funding program is built to support workforce needs across the entire province by enabling the recruitment, training and retention of individuals with demonstrated labour market attachment, including those impacted by recent macro-economic transition. …A maximum of $1 million is available to each employer applicant, providing up to 85 per cent of eligible staff’s combined wage and training costs over the training horizon up to a maximum of $50,000 per employee. …The program is available to those operating in the forestry sector within Indigenous organizations and First Nations, corporations of any size (public or privately owned and incorporated) and not for profit organizations whose sole purpose is to create jobs and economic benefit in their industry (i.e. community forests). 

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Category 1 Campfire Prohibition planned for the Kamloops Fire Centre

BC Wildfire Service
July 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

KAMLOOPS – Effective at 12 p.m. (noon) on Friday, July 10, 2026 Category 1 campfires will be prohibited throughout the Kamloops Fire Centre to help prevent human-caused wildfires and protect public safety. This campfire prohibition will remain in effect until October 9, 2026 at 12 p.m. (noon), or until the orders are rescinded. As of Friday, July 10, category 1, 2 and 3 fires are prohibited in the Kamloops Fire Centre: A campfire is defined as: Any fire no larger than 0.5 metres high by 0.5 metres wide (a fire larger than this is considered a Category 2 fire), Used by any person for recreational purposes or by a First Nation for a ceremonial purpose.

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‘We don’t want wood leaving this community’: Vanderhoof and Saik’uz First Nation call for forestry changes

By Hanna Petersen
CBC News
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Saik’uz First Nation and the District of Vanderhoof are calling for changes to how B.C.’s forests are managed. The two communities held a joint press conference on Tuesday calling for locally-harvested timber to stay in the region and for forests to be managed sustainably. Both Saik’uz First Nation Chief Priscilla Mueller and District of Vanderhoof Mayor Kevin Moutray said the region’s forests and forestry sector are facing a serious crisis. …The Saik’uz First Nation has spent several years developing a long-term land-use plan designed to restore forest health while maintaining a sustainable fibre supply for local mills and forestry workers in the region. “That work tells us that the remaining fibre supply is limited and must be managed carefully if we want healthy forests and a reliable forest economy into the future,” said Mueller. She said provincial forestry decisions continue to authorize harvesting levels that do not reflect the current conditions of the forests.

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North Cowichan closing forestry gates due to wildfire risks

By Adam Chan
Chek News
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Starting July 9, the municipality of North Cowichan will be closing forestry gates and restricting vehicle access to Mount Prevost, Mount Sicker and Grace Road, to help reduce wildfire risks in the area. The municipality notes that access roads to Mount Prevost will remain open for firefighting efforts, as a 2.23 hectare wildfire continues to burn on the west side of the mountain.  Access to the areas that have been closed by forestry gates will remain open to visitors using non-motorized means, such as hiking, biking and horseback riding. “Everyone is reminded to be extremely careful with campfires, vehicle exhaust, and other potential fire-causing activities,” said the municipality Tuesday. “Overnight camping, campfires, and fireworks are not permitted in the Municipal Forest Reserve at any time.” It’s unclear when the forestry gates will reopen, but North Cowichan says they are “typically reopened in the fall, once rain has returned and the fire risk is reduced.”

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New study finds clear‑cut logging can dramatically increase flood risk

By Spencer Pearson-Atkins, Xu Jian Yu and Younes Alila
The Conversation
July 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

…The 2021 floods in British Columbia’s Fraser Valley cost an estimated $14 billion in damages. Human activity that changes landscapes can make floods larger and more frequent. Our recently published study shows that clear-cut logging can dramatically increase flood risk, turning a 50-year event into a flood recurring every three years, with the largest and rarest floods showing the greatest sensitivity to forest disturbance. We studied a watershed on the west shore of Lake Okanagan near Summerland, British Columbia. Around 40 per cent of the site experienced logging. This watershed is no exception, as B.C.’s landscape has become dominated by clear-cut logging. …In our study, we found climate change is causing a reduction in flood risk due to reduced snowpack in the area. However, logging is not just compensating for that reduction, it’s also increasing the overall flood risk in the watershed. …The legal liability associated with logging and floods is significant. 

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Work underway on three conservation planning projects

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
July 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Province is working with First Nations and other partners on conservation-planning projects in Qat’muk (west of Invermere), Skagit Headwaters (in the Manning Park area) and Raush Valley (in the Robson Valley south of McBride). This work will address watersheds, ecosystems and wildlife over a combined 127,000 hectares. Feedback collected from the public during fall 2026 engagement opportunities will shape conservation recommendations. The proposed conservation measures would support the B.C. government’s goal of protecting 30% of land and inland waters in B.C. by 2030 (the “30×30” goal).

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A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
PR Newswire
July 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

REGINA, SK — Today, the Honourable Nathalie Provost, Secretary of State (Nature), highlighted eight tree-planting projects across Saskatchewan. These projects represent a $24.5 million investment to plant over five million trees, helping to protect nature and biodiversity in Canada by restoring critical habitats for species at risk and advancing Indigenous-led forest planting and restoration efforts. Announced in March 2026, the $3.8 billion A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature is based on three pillars for action to harmonize nature protection and economic growth… Federal programs have made historic progress in restoring forests and building greener communities across the country as we work toward to our goals of protecting 30% of lands, waters, and oceans in Canada by 2030. Indigenous leadership is at the heart of protecting nature. Anchored in traditional knowledge and stewardship, it is critical to achieving our national and international commitments on nature.

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Vancouver Island: Less snow and rain leads to higher risk of wildfire this summer

By Eric Plummer
Ha-Shilth-Sa | Canada’s Oldest First Nation’s Newspaper
July 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Vancouver Island, BC — The Coastal Fire Centre reports a shift from warm, dry conditions to cooler, wetter weather over the first week and a half of July. However, previous weather conditions point towards a drier summer season for Vancouver Island. “Looking at the next seven days from a typical standpoint, we’re not elevating dryness specifically. But we’re also not bringing in much precipitation either. So, we’re essentially just keeping conditions generally steady,” said Ken Dosanjh, meteorologist with Environmental and Climate Change Canada, on July 2. In early July the Fire Danger Rating measure … shows much of Vancouver Island at the ‘low’ level, which entails easy fire start and quick spread but with minimal involvement of deeper fuel layers or larger fuels.  Port Alberni, Nanaimo and the Victoria area have a ‘moderate’ fire danger rating, with forest fuels drying and an increased risk of surface fire starting. 

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McGill study provides further evidence that aspen patches can mitigate wildfires

McGill University Newsroom
July 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Flavie Pelletier

Researchers at McGill University have confirmed that aspen play a key role in forest fire prevention and mitigation across Canada. Planting these trees near communities can reduce both the likelihood and severity of fires and limit how far they spread, the researchers said. “Aspen is not a 100 per cent effective fire deterrent, but compared with other species, it is a better choice to plant around communities or critical infrastructure,” said Flavie Pelletier, lead author and recent PhD graduate in Natural Resource Sciences. While individual aspen trees burn easily due to traits like thin bark, large aspen stands have the opposite effect, with bigger patches linked to lower fire severity. …Pelletier said that the team used previously unavailable remote-sensing data to do a large-scale analysis of how fires and aspen interact. …Because some forestry companies remove aspen to promote commercially valuable conifers, the findings could also influence forest management practices.

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An unprecedented coalition lays out a new vision for the future of Quebec’s forests

Unifor Canada
July 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

An unprecedented coalition bringing together First Nations, unions and environmental, tourism and wildlife organizations is seeking to lay the foundations for a unifying project that will ensure the future of Quebec’s forests. This initiative, presented in an open letter published in La Presse, focuses on concertation as a means of building a more resilient forestry sector that creates good jobs, respects the rights of First Nations and is committed to protecting the environment. Unifor’s Quebec director Daniel Cloutier, one of the letter’s signatories, also delivered this message during a news report by Radio-Canada. This project is the direct outcome of the consultation process launched by Unifor in 2024 with the creation of an inter-union council and the organization of the Union Forestry Summit in Chicoutimi in May 2025. 

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Canada and Quebec reach an agreement for the recovery and protection of caribou

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
The Government of Canada
June 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTRÉAL — Ministers Julie Dabrusin and Pascale Déry announced they have reached an agreement for the recovery and protection of caribou in Quebec. This agreement includes funding of $25 million over five years from the Government of Canada. This funding will be in addition to the Government of Quebec’s investments totalling $59.5 million for 2024-–2028 to support the deployment of conservation measures. …Canada and Quebec intend to consult and involve Quebec’s Indigenous communities in implementing actions for the recovery of the species, which include, in particular: Habitat management… Population management… and Participation of Indigenous communities in understanding the species, including monitoring and managing populations, implementing habitat management, projects for increasing knowledge, developing and distributing tools to raise awareness, and knowledge-sharing workshops. In addition, the Government of Canada also committed $15 million over five years to Quebec’s Indigenous communities for the recovery of caribou or its habitat in Quebec.

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Trump admin narrows Endangered Species Act protections

By Ian Stevenson
E&E News by Politico
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Doug Burgum

The Trump administration redefined how the federal government will interpret a key word in the Endangered Species Act, narrowing the protections afforded to wildlife in the bedrock environmental law. The move focuses on the word “harm” in the ESA, which prohibits injuring or killing any species that the federal government determines to be endangered or threatened. The Interior Department announced that the change had been finalized, but the regulation was not yet in the Federal Register. Under the change laid out last year, regulators with the Fish and Wildlife Service and NOAA Fisheries will no longer interpret “harm” of a protected species to include modifications to a plant or animal’s habitat that could be detrimental to its survival. Trump administration officials have argued that the more expansive interpretation — which has been in place nearly as long as the 1973 law — does not meet the original intent of the Endangered Species Act.

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Trump administration seeks to stomp out all fires quickly, reviving policy that has been discredited

My Martha Bellisle and Matthew Brown
Associated Press in Oregon Public Broadcasting
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

©US Forest Service FB

The deaths of three U.S. government firefighters in a Colorado wildfire are casting a spotlight on the Trump administration’s creation of a new federal fire service and its revival of a previously discredited policy to stomp out all wildfires quickly. …And the administration’s focus on “full suppression” of new fires marks a sharp reversal from a decades-long trend toward embracing flames as a tool — to burn off old vegetation and growth that acts like fuel and lessen the risk of catastrophic blazes being stoked by a warming planet. The changes benefit private fire aviation companies that are key to hitting blazes fast. Federal officials have not released details on the circumstances preceding the weekend deaths, including the firefighters’ objective at the site where they were overrun. “The question is, why were they attacking that fire in the first place?” asked Timothy Ingalsbee, a former federal firefighter and cofounder of the advocacy group Firefighters United For Safety, Ethics and Ecology. 

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Bayer seeks to end federal Roundup litigation after Supreme Court win

By Dietrich Knauth
Reuters
July 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

NEW YORK — Bayer will try to convince a federal judge ​to dismantle the federal litigation that consolidates nearly 4,000 lawsuits alleging that its Roundup weedkiller causes cancer, seeking ‌to build on a recent legal victory at the U. Supreme Court. US District Judge Vincent Chhabria in San Francisco is holding a status conference to determine the path forward for those cases after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled last month that plaintiffs cannot sue Bayer by arguing that Roundup’s warning ​label failed to warn users about cancer risks. Bayer has argued that the decision should lead to the dismissal ​of the consolidated federal litigation. The company has separately said the ruling is unlikely to affect more ⁠than 60,000 similar claims pending in state courts, most of which it is seeking to resolve through a proposed $7.25 billion settlement that ​a Missouri judge will review in August.

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A Wildfire Bill Is Splitting Northern California Over the Shasta-Trinity Forest

Active NorCal
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A bill pitched as a shield against catastrophic wildfire is dividing Northern California over the future of forests like the Shasta-Trinity. The Fix Our Forests Act has lawmakers and conservationists lining up on opposite sides, each claiming the region’s safety is at stake. Supporters argue the legislation cuts through bureaucratic delay, speeding approval for the controlled burns and vegetation-thinning projects meant to reduce fire risk. One provision would let electric utilities holding permits or easements clear vegetation near power lines on federal land without a separate timber sale, a change backers say removes a needless bottleneck. Rep. David Gallagher, who recently won a special election to represent the district, framed the bill as essential in an era of nearly year-round fire seasons, and the measure has drawn support from figures including Gov. Gavin Newsom and Sen. Alex Padilla.

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Wildland firefighters say things are ‘basically as dry as they can get’ in Colorado’s forests, fueling erratic wildfire behavior

By Ryan Spencer
Sky-Hi News
July 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A historic drought is turning Colorado’s mountain landscapes into a tinderbox. After last winter’s record-low snowpack, wildland firefighters who continuously monitor indexes of weather and climate data to help predict wildfire risk and how conditions might affect fire behavior say they’re staring down unprecedented levels of dryness. “That lack of snowpack has had a very real impact on the fuels, the vegetation — specifically the large logs that are on the ground,” said Jim King, the fire behavior analyst for the Willow Fire burning near Leadville. “Those are 1,000-hour fuels. The way we measure those in this line of work, they’re just at the very peak. They’re basically as dry as they can get.” …King described how bone-dry logs in the dense forest near Turquoise Lake, along with high winds, contributed to 100-foot columns of flames and extreme fire behavior that at times threw “spots” …more than a half mile ahead of the blaze.

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From Sweeping Floors to Becoming CEO: The Story of Pierce Pacific

By Forestnet
You Tube
June 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

When investment bankers tried to kill this American factory, one fired employee bought it back to protect his crew. This is the incredible true story of Pierce Manufacturing and the survival of the blue-collar American Dream.

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Fire protection bill sparks debate over Shasta-Trinity National Forest

By Jessica Skropanic
The Redding Record Searchlight
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CALIFORNIA — A bipartisan bill intended to protect people and forests from wildfires in the Shasta-Trinity and other national forests is dividing lawmakers and conservationists in Northern California and nationwide. Supporters of the Fix Our Forests Act say it speeds up the bureaucratic process for approving projects that reduce wildfire risk in national forests. These include control burn and vegetation removal projects. A chorus of conservationists opposed to the bill say they worry about uncontrolled logging in some of the country’s pristine forestlands. …According to the bill’s wording, it would limit how much environmental protection oversight projects that reduce vegetation would have to surmount before they’re approved. It also would limit legal challenges to those projects from community and environmental groups. The latter has been dividing lawmakers across both parties for more than a year.

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Oregon wildland firefighters prepare for potentially ‘very busy’ fire season

By Troy Brynelson and Joni Auden Land
Oregon Public Broadcasting
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©Oregon Dept Forestry

…Like many states, Oregon is coming off a warm winter that did little to fill the reservoirs of snow that melt in the spring and summer and refresh downstream forestlands. That dryness makes kindling – or “fuels” in the firefighting community – out of brush, shrubs, plants, small trees and the like. About 86% of the state is currently facing drought conditions, according to a June 26 report from the Oregon Water Resources Department. Several counties – a belt stretching from Douglas and Lane counties to Umatilla and Union counties – are facing “extreme” drought conditions. “There was no snow this year,” Craig Pettinger, a unit forester with the Oregon Department of Forestry said. “All those fuels that are usually buried under a blanket of snow, they’ve had sun on them for months.” Firefighters train for worst-case scenarios. On June 26, roughly 200 wildland firefighting trainees completed a five-day academy, which culminated in a controlled burn near the lower Santiam River. 

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Public invited to comment on plan to possibly triple logging in eastern Oregon national forests

By Alex Baumhardt
News From The States
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Officials at the U.S. Forest Service are proposing new management plans for eastern Oregon’s Blue Mountains that include potentially tripling the amount of logging across 5.5 million acres in the next decade. The Forest Service published a draft of proposed changes to the 35-year-old Blue Mountain Forest Plan last week. It would allow more logging, mining and grazing across four national forests spread across eastern Oregon, as well as parts of southeast Washington: the Malheur, Ochoco, Wallowa-Whitman and Umatilla National Forests. The public has until Sept. 30 to submit comments on the 350-page draft proposal. The draft plan … predicts everything from habitat conservation to forest carbon storage would improve over the long term if more logging is allowed because strategically logging and grazing parts of the forest would prevent wildfire, which officials characterize as the biggest threat to habitat and forest loss. Environmental advocates disagree with the framing.

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Forestry scientists stay upbeat in face of federal turmoil

By Robert Chaney
The Montana Free Press
July 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

International ecology conference in Missoula focuses on problem-solving, both in the woods and the lab. The research featured at the event has major implications for Greater Yellowstone. The 15th annual North American Forest Ecology Workshop took place at the University of Montana University Center June 23-26 with 50 concurrent sessions, each featuring at least three experts displaying their latest work. “We went through the first six months of reign of terror, followed by the reign of chaos,” Washington Department of Natural Resources Forest Health Scientist Derek Churchill  said of the Trump administration’s firings and resignations in early 2025, and the subsequent restructuring of U.S. Forest Service and Interior land-management leadership. “We just keep doing the work. A lot of research grants have been going dark, but we’ve still got legacy funding from others. There’s lots of new problems to solve. Forest ecosystems are very dynamic, and we love disturbance. We love studying how they change and adapt.”

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As Trump focuses on timber in the Blue Mountains, elk hunters fear habitat could diminish

By April Ehrlich
Oregon Public Broadcasting
July 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — The federal government has released its long-awaited proposal to triple logging across three national forests in northeast Oregon and southeast Washington. But critics say the Trump administration’s effort to boost a flagging timber industry in the Blue Mountains could ultimately harm another key pillar of the local economy: Elk hunting. It could also push elk out of forests onto private land, where the animals could damage crops and other property, according to a regional manager with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. The federal government’s plans for the Blue Mountains, which were released in draft form Thursday, could shape logging, recreation and environmental protections across 4.9 million acres spanning the Malheur, Umatilla and Wallowa-Whitman national forests for the next 15 years. …And more roads are likely to mean fewer elk. …People can weigh in on the draft proposal on the Forest Service’s website

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State forester defends Utah’s wildfire mitigation efforts amid destructive fire season

KSL.com
July 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©Interagency Fire Center

SALT LAKE CITY — In trying to understand why so much of their state has burned this year, some wildfire victims have blamed U.S. Forest Service officials for what they call a lack of forest management. Those officials disputed the claims, saying the state’s drought and fire conditions are so bad that no amount of wildfire mitigation could have prevented the devastation. Andy Anderson, whose family ranch was destroyed in the Cottonwood Fire, accused the U.S. Forest Service of inaction. “The forest service has done nothing for 50, 60 years,” Anderson said. “In the olden days, they used to use the forest.”  …Jamie Barnes, director and state forester for the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands, said the Beaver area was actually one of the state’s model zones for wildfire prevention — a place she would take people to showcase interagency success. But despite that work, Barnes said extreme conditions overwhelmed years of treatment.

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Maine’s old growth forests are disappearing. This program could help save them

By Peter McGuire
Maine Public
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

To Caleb Chaplin, it’s clear what sets a patch of old forest on his family’s land in Naples apart from the woods around it. …Some of the trees are up to 200 years old. Foresters call these woods “late successional and old growth.” They’re also some of the rarest features on Maine’s landscape, trap lots of greenhouse gas and provide critical habitat for unique species. Chaplin said his family was planning to harvest the stand this year. …Then they learned the New England Forestry Foundation would pay them to delay harvesting. Chaplin said it was a tough decision at a time when these big trees are drawing some of the highest prices in the timber market. Ultimately, the family agreed to leave the stand alone for 10 years, and work with the foundation to develop a permanent conservation plan.

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European forests are growing, but the timber industry relies on imports

En.ilsole24ore.com
July 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

ITALY — The good news is that European forests continue to grow: according to the 2025–2026 Annual Report of the European Organisation of the Sawmill Industry (EOS), a body representing around 80 per cent of European sawn timber production, European forests now cover over 232 million hectares, equivalent to 35.4% of the continent’s land area, and over the last 35 years they have expanded by more than 23 million hectares, with an average increase of around 665,000 hectares each year. At the same time, Europe’s forest stock has reached 38.3 billion cubic metres, an increase of around 45% compared with 1990. Yet – and this is the less positive news – the availability of raw materials for the timber industry remains one of the main challenges to the sector’s competitiveness and to Europe’s sustainability objectives, as emerged from the Forestry-Timber General Assembly organised in Bologna by Filiera Legno (an association representing almost 600 companies in the timber industry). 

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Greece deploys world‑first wildfire‑detection satellites as AI system begins sending real‑time alerts

International Association of Fire and Rescue Services
July 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The system, developed with German company OroraTech, (A CTIF Associate Member) uses thermal sensors capable of detecting hotspots as small as 4×4 metres, far surpassing conventional satellites that typically identify fires only once they reach the size of a cruise ship. The satellites scan Greece’s fire‑prone mainland and more than 100 inhabited islands, feeding imagery into AI models that instantly analyse heat signatures, filter out false alarms such as solar panels or hot factory roofs, and send verified alerts directly to fire‑service command units. When multiple fires ignite simultaneously — a growing challenge during Europe’s increasingly severe heatwaves — the system provides commanders with location, size, intensity, and predictive spread simulations to help prioritize resources. Officials say the technology is a critical response to Greece’s escalating wildfire threat.

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Scientist Warns Locking Up Australian Forests Only Shifts Responsibility Offshore

By Jason Ross
Wood Central Australia
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — One of the country’s most senior forest scientists has warned Tasmanians that locking up native forests would not end the demand for timber, only shift that demand onto someone else, met by imports that carry higher environmental and emissions costs. That is according to Dr John Raison, a former CSIRO chief research scientist, in an opinion piece published in News Limited newspapers today. “Serious answers require evidence, not slogans,” Raison wrote, restating the findings of a peer-reviewed paper he co-authored in the journal Australian Forestry. The review tested the standard criticisms of native forestry using the available science, decades of management records and field outcomes. …Raison’s intervention comes as the timber industry fights a run of native forestry closures, from Victoria’s harvesting ban to the Great Koala National Park in New South Wales. …The paper did not argue that forestry should be beyond criticism.

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Foresters adapt as insects become driving force in tree mortality

By Erika Tally
VT Digger
July 6, 2026
Category: Forestry

BURLINGTON — Across Northeastern forests, natural causes now account for more tree deaths than harvesting, including in Vermont, according to a recent study from the University of Vermont.  But these natural causes are still cause for concern. Insects, disease and extreme weather are now to blame for the majority of tree deaths in the region, a significant shift from just 15 years ago, the study found. This shift comes at a time when Vermont’s warming climate is already posing dangers to the health of the forest, including worsening the threat of introducing an invasive species. Now, forest health experts are determining what strategies they can use to preserve Vermont’s woods. “Our forests are really resilient,” said Savannah Ferreira, a forest health specialist with the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks & Recreation. “We’re doing a lot of great forest management that really helps increase the health and vigor of our trees.”

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