Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Canada releases the National Freshwater Science Agenda to guide priorities over the next 10 years

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
Cision Newswire
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

GATINEAU, QC — Today, during Canada Water Week, the Honourable Julie Dabrusin, Minister of the Environment, Climate Change and Nature, is announcing the release of the National Freshwater Science Agenda, which aims to better align freshwater science and research efforts across Canada. The Science Agenda is the result of over two years of engagement efforts led by Environment and Climate Change Canada with input from more than 800 science experts, Knowledge Holders, experts, and science users across governments and sectors, Indigenous organizations, and Canada’s freshwater science community. It is grounded in Western science and Indigenous Knowledge and reflects the diverse scientific needs and perspectives that are relevant to partners and stakeholders across the country. It outlines interconnected themes including bridging, braiding, and weaving Indigenous science and Knowledge; water availability; land‑use stressors and water pollution; ecosystem resilience and biodiversity; socio‑ecological considerations; and economic research.

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Forests Canada Creating National Working Group to Improve Post-Wildfire Forest Recovery

Forests Canada
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

TORONTO – National charity Forests Canada supported the planting of more than four million trees across Canada in 2025, with over two million being planted to restore forests ravaged by storms, invasive species, and wildfires. Canada’s forest landscapes are experiencing unprecedented impacts from wildfire, creating urgent and complex challenges for post-fire recovery, regeneration, and long-term forest resilience. To support coordinated national action, knowledge exchange, and the development of best practices for forest resilience, Forests Canada is establishing a National Working Group on Post-Fire Forest Recovery Practices. …”With this new National Working Group, we will be able to gain new insights from a diverse group of participants so that we can all work together to help create lasting and positive outcomes for Canada’s forests,” says Val Deziel, restoration ecologist and Director of Restoration Ecology and Research, Forests Canada.

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A New Look for Community Forestry in Logan Lake

Logan Lake Community Forest
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Logan Lake, B.C. – The Logan Lake Community Forest (LLCF) has unveiled a refreshed brand, website, and film that highlight its commitment to the stewardship of local forests, through indigenous collaboration, supporting what makes the communities of the Logan Lake area strong: the people, the land, and our future. …[The] redesigned website that provides clear information about forest management activities, current projects, and the local benefits of community forestry in the Logan Lake area. … The film, launched in collaboration with the BC Community Forest Association provides a look at the planning and treatment activities of the LLCF specific to wildfire risk reduction, and the enhancement of trails and wildlife habitat, and is part of a broader provincial-wide storytelling initiative showcasing community forests across British Columbia.

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One minute for the future of BC forestry

Forestry is a Solution
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC’s forest sector is at a crossroads. While the industry faces significant challenges, we know that when given the right conditions to thrive, forestry is a solution for the biggest issues facing our province today:

  • A Solution for Housing: Providing the renewable, low-carbon wood products needed to build affordable homes and infrastructure.
  • A Solution for Wildfire Risk: Reducing fuel loads that drive catastrophic wildfires through active forest management.
  • A Solution for Communities: Supporting family-sustaining jobs and resilient local economies across the province.

Your Voice Matters — The Forestry is a Solution website gives you a direct line to Victoria. Add your name to the petition and send an automated letter to your local MLA, urging them to take practical steps to stabilize and strengthen our sector. Help Us Reach 5,000 Signatures — More than 1,300 British Columbians have already stepped up. We are working to reach 5,000 signatures by April to ensure the voice of the forest sector cannot be ignored.

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BC Timber Sales wants to create 500 hectares for logging east of Penticton

By Brennan Phillips
The Penticton Western News
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

BC Timber Sales is bringing forward an application to establish 17 new cut blocks on Crown land east of Okanagan Falls and Penticton. The application is being brought to the Regional District of Okanagan Similkameen on March 19 for support, as the proposed cut blocks are located within the boundaries of the Okanagan Falls electoral area. The 17 cut blocks total 494.7 hectares, and the proposal would also see road construction and road deactivation. The rehabilitation process for the roads would include tree replanting. The land is in an RDOS-designated resource area, and a staff report says the proposed cutblocks fall within watercourse development permit areas and “important ecosystem areas.” The advisory planning committee for Okanagan Falls gave its support to the application at its March 9 meeting, while requesting that any approval be subject to a full environmental assessment.

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siwɬkʷ Water and Climate Forum to take place in Kelowna

By Yashvika Grover
Penticton Western News
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Okanagan Nation Alliance is hosting a two-day water and climate forum in honour of World Water Day on March 23 and 24 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Delta Grand Okanagan Resort. In partnership with Okanagan Similkameen Watershed Collaborative Leadership Table (CLT), the alliance is bringing together Indigenous leaders, local government representatives, researchers, scientists, regional and international water experts and community partners to advocate for climate-resilient governance and collaborative watershed stewardship. ​The forum will teach participants about the importance of watersheds and how to build resilience amid rising risks from wildfires, drought and ecosystem stress.​ …“Our forests are burning, our waters are drying, and the time to act is now — the siwɬkʷ Water and Climate Forum is a call to protect our watersheds and ensure that there is cold, clean flowing water for all living things – now and for future generations,” reads the release.

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Tla’amin set to reclaim forest stewardship with $80M logging licence deal: ‘A generational opportunity’

By Abby Francis
IndigiNews
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Steven Hofer & hegus John Hackett

Tla’amin Nation is set to take back control over a large piece of its territory, after signing a deal to take over Western Forest Products’ licence to log more than 1,540 square kilometres of forest in their homelands. The nation agreed to buy Western’s tree-farm license for the massive parcel … for $80 million on Feb. 19. The license for the Stillwater Forest Operation covers a vast majority of forest in the qathet (Powell River) area, where Tla’amin is located. The lands themselves are not being returned to Tla’amin; tree-farm licenses are granted by the “B.C.” government to allow companies to harvest on “Crown” lands, typically over 25-year terms. But Tla’amin Hegus (Chief) John Hackett said the ability to steward his people’s land is a major step forward. “This acquisition brings another 43 per cent of Tla’amin territory back under our stewardship and control,” Hackett said in a statement.

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Sicamous endorses Forestry is a Solution to help root the industry

By Heather Black
The Salmon Arm Observer
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) was barking up the right tree with the District of Sicamous, with council officially endorsing its Forestry is a Solution initiative. The request came to the March 11 council meeting, explaining the program that launched on Jan. 20 is a province-wide initiative led by a coalition of community leaders, workers and industry advocates to support forestry in light of new challenges. COFI president and CEO Kim Haakstad said in a letter, “the sector currently faces significant headwinds from global competition, challenging operating conditions, and damaging U.S. trade actions. We believe that by working together, we can show the provincial government that forestry provides the solutions for B.C.’s most urgent challenges.” …The initiative’s goal is to get 5,000 signatures to show support of having government action on those points, with Sicamous council unanimously onboard.

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Osoyoos Indian Band’s Siya Forestry works with Interfor on forest management

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

Osoyoos Indian Band’s Siya Forestry is working with logging and manufacturing company Interfor on collaborative forestry management. “The partnership reflects a shared commitment to long-term stewardship and responsible planning, ensuring forestry activities align with community values,” reads a Siya Forestry release. The two teams are working to review potential harvest areas, assess wildlife and riparian areas, and identify culturally important areas before they are developed. The approach aims to focus on the forest as a whole system, going beyond legal requirements. Timber values are considered but so is wildlife habitat, visual quality, traditional use areas, and long-term forest health. …Vern Louie, OIB forest operations lead said “Forestry is a living thing; it needs to be treated that way.” …“There’s been a lot of changes over the years,” said Ron Palmer, Interfor Indigenous engagement representative. “So, it’s important that we are in alignment with their values.”

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When the Forest Breathes by Suzanne Simard review – the Indiana Jones of trees returns

By Mythili Rao
The Guardian
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…One part Indiana Jones, one part Mister Rogers, she is a Canadian national treasure and global environmental icon. …Simard’s new book, When the Forest Breathes, finds her back among the trees, furthering her research while also considering her legacy. …In this book it’s apparent Simard is a kind of mother tree, too – a giant, deeply rooted figure with a critical role to play in connecting and supporting the next generation of forest ecologists. …“Science is not enough,” she has concluded. Hence the search for other avenues for advancing conservation and restoration work: among them, books like this one, which allow her to step outside the linguistic constraints of peer-reviewed research and provide an “interpretation” of her findings and the philosophy behind it. There is poetry in this work deep in the forest, and she doesn’t shy away from it.

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Inside B.C.’s Perilous Forestry Industry

By Jadine Ngan
Macleans Magazine
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A tree felled in B.C.’s coastal rainforest, is towed by tugboat to lumber mills along waterways like the Fraser River. It’s difficult work. In the cold months, gales tear through inlets and the river ices over; tides and storms can yank logs out of formation all year round. For decades, beachcombers salvaged escaped logs and sold them back into use. But fuel and boat costs are rising, and beachcombers’ ranks are thinning. Reave Dennison is sometimes a tugboat worker, sometimes a beachcomber and sometimes even an arborist, doing maintenance work on trees. …Over the last 10 years, he’s assembled a collection of photographs that document the beauty he sees while toiling in the field. …As part of this year’s Capture Photography Festival in Vancouver, Dennison’s images will be displayed at the Pale Fire art gallery from March 19 to May 9. The exhibit, called Tree Work, folds three of his projects into one. 

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Forestry is a solution; just not the way BC forest industry suggests

By Eli Pivnick and Janet Parkins
Castanet
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

At the Natural Resources Forum in Prince George, the Council of Forest Industries announced its new platform entitled “Forestry is a Solution”. It is asking British Columbians to voice their support for forestry workers by pushing the BC government to speed permitting and access to timber but the main problem is that much of the timber needed does not exist because of decades of over-cutting. That is why more than 100 mills in BC have shut down since 2005. What COFI is really asking for is more access to protected areas, fire- and insect-damaged forests and the very modest and dwindling areas of remaining, unprotected old growth forests. …What is needed now are some major changes in how forests are monitored and trees allocated, with a lot less cutting and no cutting in primary forests whether old growth or fire or insect-damaged forests. …But what is allocated for cutting must make ecological sense.

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Kira Hoffman Named a 2026 National Geographic 33 Honoree

UBC Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kira Hoffman

The Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship congratulates Dr. Kira Hoffman, a 2026 National Geographic 33 Honoree, for her groundbreaking work as a fire ecologist studying wildfire behavior, Indigenous-led fire stewardship, and resilience in northwest British Columbia. National Geographic 33 is a program inspired by the 33 founders of the National Geographic Society in 1888. It recognizes 33 individuals from around the world who are driving positive change through science, conservation, innovation, and storytelling, highlighting modern-day trailblazers whose work inspires solutions to global challenges. Dr. Kira Hoffman is a fire ecologist studying wildfire behavior and Indigenous-led fire stewardship. Through her postdoctoral fellowship at the University of British Columbia and the Centre for Wildfire Coexistence, she examines historic fire activity and wildfire resilience in northwest British Columbia.

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Prescribed Fire and Partnerships Help Restore Wildlife Habitat Throughout B.C.

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

British Columbia — As the Forest Enhancement Society of BC marks its 10th anniversary, the Society is reflecting on the investments made and the meaningful impacts achieved, many in partnership with other organizations. …“As we reflect on ten years of FESBC investments, it is clear that sustained funding and strong partnerships are an essential part of how we restore ecosystems and improve wildlife habitat across our province,” said Jason Fisher, Executive Director of FESBC. “Moving forward, we need to look at how all forest management activities, from thinning to fuel management, can be planned and carried out in ways that support and improve wildlife habitat over the long term. Continuing this work will ensure these benefits extend to future generations, setting the table for more healthy and resilient forests.”

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West Kootenay wildfire prevention projects receive $1.4M in funding

By Betsy Kline
Arrow Lakes News
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Columbia Basin organizations and residents are benefiting from $3 million in wildfire reduction funding through a partnership between the Province of British Columbia and Columbia Basin Trust, according to a March 17 funding announcement. The projects are guided by FireSmart principles and aim to reduce wildfire risk and strengthen local resilience. The practical projects range from managing wildfire fuels to educating residents. Actions include hiring FireSmart coordinators, preparing fuel-treatment plans, carrying out on-the-ground fuel management and providing FireSmart training. The program is tailored to the Columbia Basin and is part of B.C.’s Community Resiliency Investment Program. The Ministry of Forests, BC Wildfire Service and Columbia Basin Trust are partners in delivering this support.

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Province preparing for 2026 wildfire season as Environment Canada predicts hot year ahead

CBC News
March 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireFacebook

Thousands of people have applied to be wildland firefighters in B.C., as the province prepares for whatever kind of wildfire season may lie ahead. Environment Canada expects 2026 to be one of the hottest years on record. Meanwhile, B.C.’s River Forecast Centre says low snowpack in some regions could increase the potential for drought this spring and summer. Last year, 1,370 wildfires burned more than 8,863 square kilometres of land in B.C., well above the province’s 10-year average, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service. It was a hot, dry season, particularly at the end of August and beginning of September, which extended fire season into the fall. After several tough wildfire seasons in recent years, the province says it is preparing. …The province says about 2,400 people have applied for seasonal firefighter positions, and it’s given special urban wildfire training to more than 1,700 fire departments, First Nations and contractors.

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Forest minister sees hope for forestry through industry and trade diversification

By Chris Bush
Nanaimo Bulletin
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Ravi Parmar

…B.C. Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar was on Vancouver Island March 13, to meet with the B.C. Forest Safety Council and to talk about supports for forestry workers. … “We know the biggest challenge to our national forestry sector is the unfair, unjust and unprovoked duties and tariffs that Donald Trump has imposed on us … we are focused on being sure that we can get a long-term deal with the United States,” Parmar said. According to him, the path forward is “very uncertain” for many workers on the Island, especially in Chemainus and Crofton where lumber and pulp mills have shut down. …“We have to move this sector away from ‘boom and bust’ to stability and certainty.” That means getting more value out of lumber produced in B.C. … Raw logs exports, Parmar said, have been reduced by 80 per cent since the NDP took office and new companies are taking up the challenge of manufacturing wood products in B.C.

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District of 100 Mile House endorses Forestry is a Solution initiative

By Misha Mustaqeem
100 Mile Free Press
March 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

District of 100 Mile House Council voted unanimously to write a letter of support, as well as sign a petition related to the Forestry is a Solution initiative. A letter was written to the District Council by Kim Haakstad, the president and CEO of B.C. Council of Forest Industries, which outlined its key priorities: speeding up access to economic wood, improving competitiveness and cost certainty, fixing B.C. Timber Sales and supporting First Nations partnerships. The letter asked council to endorse the campaign, sign a petition and send a letter to their MLA, government officials and the Forests critic. Finally, it asked council to support the District of 100 Mile House staff to share information about the campaign through official communication channels.

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‘My ideas are a little revolutionary’: ecologist Suzanne Simard on intelligent forests, the climate and her critics

By Sophie McBain
The Guardian
March 14, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Suzanne Simard

…Wildfires have become an ever bigger problem in Canada. …When logging companies clear forest, they replant it with fast-growing conifer species, but these trees are much more flammable than Canada’s diverse, native forest. …But deforested areas do not fully recover, and thanks to logging, the wildfires and a devastating pine beetle outbreak, Canada’s forests, once a vast carbon sink, have since 2001 been a net emitter of carbon. For four decades, Simard, a professor of forest ecology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, has been trying to convince foresters and policymakers that it doesn’t have to be this way. ..Simard says she sometimes feels straitjacketed by science, which moves too slowly to meet the urgency of the climate crisis. …In her latest book, When the Forest Breathes, as in her first, Simard blends science and memoir, a stylistic choice that reflects how closely her personal life and the forest entwine.

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Woodlots Weekly – News and Updates

Woodlots BC
March 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Woodlots BC’s latest Woodlots Weekly highlights opportunities for learning, connection and professional development across the province’s woodlot community. Applications are now open for the Woodlots BC Bursary, a $5,000 award supporting individuals pursuing goals that benefit forestry and their communities, with submissions due May 1, 2026. Planning is also underway for the 2026 Woodlots BC Conference and Workshop, scheduled for October 1–4 at the Tigh-Na-Mara Resort in Parksville. The event will feature the association’s AGM, field tours and presentations, with a theme focused on strengthening communication, collaboration and the long-term resilience of BC’s woodlot sector. The newsletter also promotes an upcoming Woodlot Talk featuring COFI’s Jim Costley on engaging youth in forestry, upcoming BC Forest Safety Council training courses, and updates from the Boundary Woodlot Association. Readers will also find notices about surplus seedlings seeking new homes and a calendar of upcoming forestry conferences and industry events.

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Group rallies in Campbell River to protect old-growth forests

By Robin Grant
The Campbell River Mirror
March 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A small but passionate group rallied in front of the B.C. Timber Sales office in Campbell River at the end of February to show their frustration with the government’s failure to fulfill its 2020 promise to protect B.C.’s remaining old-growth forests. “We are sending the message to the people making decisions about logging B.C. forests that we need sustainable forestry, not clearcuts and the urgent need to protect our last remaining old-growth forest,” said Paula Fee, ”Save Our Forests Team – Comox Valley.” Since the 2020 Old-Growth Strategic Review was released, Fee pointed out, just two per cent of the proposed old-growth deferrals have been actually set aside, while logging in other areas proposed for deferral has increased fourfold. …The group is also championing the New Forest Act, a proposed legislative framework introduced by the Boundary Forest Watershed Stewardship Society.

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BC challenged over old growth logging

By Kylie Stanton
Global News
March 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The provincial government is being accused of ignoring recommendations from a panel of experts urging protection of old growth forests. As Kylie Stanton reports, the province maintains it is trying to strike a balance between protecting industry and jobs and the environment.

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Revelstoke, regional district pass motion to protect ‘ancient forest’ from logging

By Jacqueline Gelineau
CBC News
March 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The City of Revelstoke and the Columbia-Shuswap Regional District have passed motions formalizing their intention to push the provincial government to protect an old-growth forest. The proposed Rainbow-Jordan park would stretch 11,000 hectares… Until now, the forest has been spared from logging because the area is difficult to access… But David Brooks-Hill, a Columbia-Shuswap Regional District director said the steep slopes and lack of roads will not protect the rainforest forever. …Brooks-Hill said there is a forest tenure on the Rainbow-Jordan forest, a harvest agreement between a logging company and the B.C. government. …Brooks-Hill brought the motion to protect the area to the regional district after the City of Revelstoke passed its own resolution in February. Next, the city and regional district will present the resolution at the Southern Interior Local Government Association meeting in April. If successful, it will then be presented at the Union of B.C. Municipalities meeting in September.

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Now Available: Winter 2026 Woodland Almanac

By Woodlots BC
The Woodland Almanac
March 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Woodland Almanac from the Federation of BC Woodlot Associations is now available, offering a look at the people, programs, and practical tools shaping woodlot management in British Columbia. This issue highlights the Charles Bloom Forestry Program, a hands-on training initiative that introduces high school students to forestry skills and careers while working on a real operating woodlot. The newsletter also features the Executive Director’s report, details on the 2026 Woodlots BC bursary program, and an invitation to attend the Woodlots BC Annual Conference and Workshop in Parksville, October 1–4. Readers will also find updates on value-added opportunities for woodlot licensees and revisions to the Commercial Thinning Guide, along with two “Meet a Woodlotter” profiles featuring the Zemanek Family and Garrett Ranches. Together, the stories showcase the innovation, stewardship, and community connections that continue to define BC’s woodlot sector.

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Is Fix Our Forest Act a fix or a free pass for loggers?

By Greta Solsaa
VTDigger
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Vermonters are weighing the impacts of a federal bill — the Fix Our Forest Act — that would dramatically change environmental review processes and bring a big shift in the government’s approach to forest management. Proponents of the bill, including foresters and loggers, say that this bill will streamline projects in fire-prone areas and protect forests from wildfire and disasters. Critics of the proposal, including some environmental lawyers and conservationists, say it could defang key environmental oversight laws. …The bill comes after President Donald Trump sent shockwaves through the environmentalist community in Vermont by declaring wildfires a national emergency and issuing executive orders directing a 25% increase in timber production on public lands. The Fix Our Forest Act passed the U.S. House, and goes before the U.S. Senate for a vote. …A key feature of the bill would more than triple the acreage cap for projects receiving so-called categorical exclusions, from up to 3,000 acres to 10,000 acres. 

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How to weigh in on BLM’s plans to quadruple logging in Oregon’s forests

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

You have until Monday to provide input on the Trump administration’s plan to dramatically increase logging in western Oregon forests. Last month, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management announced its plans to quadruple the amount of logging that could happen in the forests it manages. Specifically, the agency aims to revise management plans for areas designated as O&C Lands, named after the Oregon and California Railroad company that once owned them. BLM is eyeing 2.5 million acres of forests spanning 17 counties across Oregon. They include mature and old-growth forests treasured by recreationists, hunters, conservationists and tourism businesses who now worry about Oregon’s remaining old trees that are on the chopping block. Timber industry representatives welcomed the news, celebrating a potential return to 20th-century logging levels that once supported rural economies.

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Lawsuit claims Forest Service project will harm whitebark pine near Yellowstone

By Darrell Ehrlick
The Daily Montanan
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Three organizations and an individual are suing the Gardiner District of the Custer Gallatin National Forest — for a plan they say hurts the already-endangered whitebark pine tree while ignoring lynx and grizzly habitat, and relying on unproven studies. The groups say the federal government is ignoring its rules and seems to be disregarding its own maps of protected lynx area in an effort to preserve the rare whitebark pine trees, despite admitting in its own documents that the efforts to preserve the trees could actually harm them. The lawsuit … centers on logging north of Yellowstone National Park. A technique, called “daylight thinning,” which involves removing trees near a whitebark pine, is not backed by scientific research according to the court documents, and the organizations point out that the Forest Service admits that in the process of thinning, it could actually wind up killing some of the whitebark pine trees. 

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Further proof is coming: Idaho can’t afford a federal lands grab

By Bryan Clark
Idaho Statesman
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

This week, we have yet another reminder that Idaho can’t possibly afford to take over or manage federal lands. A forthcoming study, which will be published Friday, provides the most recent reliable estimates of exactly how much Idaho would lose if it were to take over federal lands. The study, which was commissioned by Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, Idaho Business for the Outdoors, the Idaho Outfitters and Guides Association, and the Idaho Wildlife Federation, was performed by Peterson and Associates, which has long been a go-to source for economic analysis of this type in Idaho. While the full results won’t be released until Friday, the top-line figures are stark. Idaho would lose $837.7 million directly, in the form of spending by the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management and other federal agencies, as well as Payment in Lieu of Taxes and Secure Rural Schools payments. That’s nearly 16% of Idaho’s general fund budget.

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Federal law doesn’t mandate minimum amounts of logging in Alaska’s Tongass rainforest, judge says

By James Brooks
News From The States
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A federal judge in Alaska has rejected a lawsuit that sought to reinstate a management plan that would allow heavier logging in the world’s largest temperate old-growth rainforest. The result leaves an Obama-era management plan in place, but it could be short-lived: The administration of President Donald Trump is already at work on a new plan that could allow more logging in Alaska’s Tongass National Forest. …The three groups sued the U.S. Department of Agriculture — the parent organization of the U.S. Forest Service — last year, alleging in part that the federal Tongass Timber Reform Act of 1990 required the Forest Service to offer enough timber sales to meet market demand. Gleason ruled otherwise, finding that TTRA does not impose “a mandatory duty” on the Forest Service to ensure that market demand is met by Tongass timber sales.

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Mild winter helps Oregon forestry crews plant over two million seedlings ahead of schedule

KVAL 13 Oregon
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A mild winter and spring-like weather has helped the Oregon Department of Forestry stay ahead of schedule on replanting state forest timber harvest areas this year, with about two million seedlings already planted. “This has been a great planting season with no shutdowns due to weather,” said John Walter, ODF’s state forests silviculturist. “All our districts are done or will be this month. The only exception being Klamath Lake—they typically plant into May and have about 60,000 to get in.” Douglas fir remains the dominant species in most Western Oregon forests, but ODF said it builds diversity into its reforestation plans to promote resilience and provide additional types of timber products. “This year we planted about 74 percent Doug(las) Fir, 17 percent Hemlock, two percent each of Western Red Cedar and Noble Fir, one percent each of Grand Fir and Sitka Spruce with the remaining three percent Pondarosa Pine,” Walter said.

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Harvesting Burned Trees May Seem a No-Brainer. But It Poses Big Risks

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, US West

From the moment he became BC’s forests minister, Ravi Parmar has been under pressure to increase logging rates in the province. One way he has decided to do that is by expediting the logging of forests burned in recent wildfires. He issued the Fort Nelson First Nation a new licence to log 100,000 cubic metres of trees in burned forests in BC’s remote northeast corner. …A number of industry associations, including the Council of Forest Industries, asked him to set “definitive, aggressive timelines for completion” of plans to accelerate logging in burned forests. …But increasing “wildfire salvage” of forests, Parmar is travelling down the same road that has seen BC’s logging rates plummet by more than half since the heyday of the 1980s. …Accelerated logging of burned trees may help bend the curve, but history shows that it is short-lived and comes at the cost of degraded ecosystems and even sharper declines ahead.

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Bureau of Land Management wants to write plan to increase logging in western Oregon

By Alan Torres
The Eugene Register-Guard
March 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©BLM_Flickr

The Bureau of Land Management wants to increase logging in western Oregon and public comment is open on the proposal. The “Oregon and California Revested Railroad Lands Act” from 1937 gives the BLM authority to govern 2.46 million acres of federal land in 18 western Oregon counties. The BLM wants to rewrite the plan governing this area to increase timber harvesting in line with “historically higher levels of production” and “the nation’s need for domestic sources of timber and fiber.” According to the BLM, 267 million board feet of timber was harvested from these lands in 2025. From 1960 through 1989, the lands produced an annual average of 1,078 million board feet, before harvesting declined in 1990 in response to the northern spotted owl’s endangered species listing. …The BLM is seeking public comment on “the scope of the analysis, potential alternatives and identification of relevant information, studies and Areas of Critical Environmental Concern” to take into account while writing this plan.

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Alaska Court Ruling Halts Massive Old-Growth Rainforest Logging Plan

Sierra Club
March 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Sierra Club and our allies Southeast Alaska Conservation Council…  secured a major victory in our lawsuit challenging an enormous commercial timber harvest and road-building plan for Prince of Wales Island in the Tongass National Forest of Southeast Alaska.  A federal judge ruled that project approval violated the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), which sets standards for public engagement on federal projects that will alter the environment, and the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA), which requires federal agencies to evaluate how federal use of public lands will affect subsistence uses and needs. The court found that the Forest Service “presented local communities with vague, hypothetical, and over-inclusive representations of the Project’s effects over a 15-year period.” It’s not yet clear whether the Forest Service will have to abandon the project entirely, because the judge has not yet decided on a legal remedy. Read the court ruling

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Alaskan Logging Case Dismissed in a Blow to the State’s Dwindling Lumber Industry

By Ryan Dezember
The Wall Street Journal
March 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A federal court in Anchorage has dismissed a case filed last year by an Alaska sawmill seeking to force the Forest Service to increase logging in the Tongass National Forest. …Log sales have slowed to a trickle in the forest that covers most of southeast Alaska, endangering the region’s remaining logging and lumber operations, Viking Lumber and its co-plaintiffs… said that without additional sales from the Tongass, it would run out of logs to saw. Without more it would have to close the mill it operates on remote Prince of Wales Island, where the biggest town, Craig, has about 1,000 residents and few other options for jobs. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins had been supportive of Viking… but in court her department argued successfully that a 2016 management plan for Tongass merely mapped out goals and doesn’t bind the Forest Service to offer specific quantities or types of timber for sale, contrary to Viking’s claims. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

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Drone footage shows herculean effort to remove 60 acres of logs in Clackamas County

By Tatum Todd
Oregon Live
March 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — For months, the surface of a popular boating waterway in Clackamas County has been jammed with logs and branches, stretched across 60 acres of surface water. But that’s already starting to change. Portland General Electric, which manages the dam at one end of the log-choked North Fork Reservoir, said on Thursday that the company has started the painstaking process of removing the logs and debris, which washed into the waterway during December’s heavy flooding. PGE spokesperson Grace Boehm said that most of the logs ended up in the reservoir over the course of a short period that also dumped 62,000 cubic feet per second worth of water into the reservoir — notching a place as the 4th highest flow into the waterway on record. …PGE will be setting aside 800 logs from the recovery effort for the company to donate to stream restoration habitats.

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State, U.S. Forest Service use new agreement to target 400,000 acres of forest for management

By Jordan Hansen
The Ekalaka Eagle
March 13, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Montana and the U.S. Forest Service announced last week they were moving ahead on a shared agreement between the two to do forestry work in large swathes of the state. Last summer, the state and Forest Service signed an agreement formalizing closer cooperation between federal forest management operations and the state Department of Natural Resources and Conservation. That came about two months after a Trump Administration executive order seeking to increase domestic timber production. On Friday, Gov. Greg Gianforte, DNRC Director Amanda Kaster and U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz said that two large areas have been selected for state and federal work. The focus of the work will be on approximately 213,910 acres in the Flathead and Kootenai National Forests and 200,000 acres within the Bitterroot National Forest. The project areas were selected due to wildfire risk and how close they are to being implemented.

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This is our chance to transform how Cal Fire manages its forests

By Evan Mills, environmental analyst (energy, forests and climate change)
The Mercury News
March 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Dismantling environmental protections is in vogue, even those enhancing safety and economic prosperity. But California is bucking the trend and now on the verge of modernizing how its 14 Demonstration State Forests are managed. Cal Fire manages these public lands, which span 85,000 acres and 10 counties. Redwoods and other trees are routinely logged to pay for operations, according to a 1947 law that mandates “maximum sustained yield” – that’s simply a euphemism for removing as much lumber as possible without shrinking the forest. This extractive agribusiness model prioritizes revenues, often contrary to the goals of demonstration, recreation and forward-looking research. …In February, Assemblyman Chris Rogers, a Democrat from Santa Rosa, introduced AB 2494, sponsored by the Environmental Protection Information Center, to modernize and align forestry management with the state’s broader goals. The new science-based approach prioritizes restoration and tribal co-management. It decouples funding from timber operations, financing it instead through an existing lumber tax. 

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Pests and storms in changing forests bring new problems for Maine woodlot owners

By Elizabeth Walztoni
The Bangor Daily News in Digest Wire
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Years after logging at his Mariaville woodlot, Bob Seymour expected to see new hardwood trees growing in the understory. In fact, he took it as a given after decades in the Maine woods that natural regrowth would crop up. Instead, almost all of the young trees in some sections are eastern white pines he had planted. He believes that’s largely because deer populations are growing and eating more hardwood saplings, which means fewer trees and less diversity in the future. …It’s one of the most concerning changes that Seymour, a retired UMaine silviculture professor, has seen in almost five decades of experience researching forest management. …Such challenges to understanding and managing the Maine woods have grown in recent years amid climate change, which has brought destructive new pests, fast-moving diseases, invasive plants that take over, and warmer winters that change growing, harvesting and wildlife conditions.

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Sustainable Forest Supply Chain Collaborative launches

By Max Esterhuizen
Virginia Tech News
March 16, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

BLACKSBURG, Virginia — The College of Natural Resources and Environment has launched the Sustainable Forest Supply Chain Collaborative, a new interdisciplinary effort designed to strengthen one of the commonwealth’s most important natural resource systems, from working forests to the wood products used every day. The goal of the collaborative is to bring together faculty, students, industry partners, landowners, and communities to connect research, teaching, and Virginia Cooperative Extension in support of a forest supply chain that is sustainable, resilient, and prepared to meet the needs of future generations. …Scott Barrett, director of the Sustainable Forest Supply Chain Collaborative said “By working across disciplines and with partners on the ground, we can help ensure this supply chain remains strong, viable, and sustainable for the long term.” …Affiliated faculty represent multiple departments across the college, including the Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation and Department of Sustainable Biomaterials.

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European Union bioeconomy strategy must embrace wood supply growth, say Nordic forestry chiefs

Bioenergy Insight
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Two of Sweden’s largest forest companies have called on the European Union to revise its bioeconomy strategy to include a stronger commitment to expanding sustainable wood supply, warning that current policy signals risk undermining Europe’s green transition goals. In a joint statement published this week, the chief executives of SCA and Holmen argued that the EU Commission’s updated bioeconomy strategy — released last November — underestimates both the economic weight of the wood-based sector and the primary biomass volumes needed to meet its own ambitions. The two executives estimated that wood-based value chains account for around seven per cent of total EU economic value and support approximately 17 million jobs across the continent — figures they said the strategy fails to capture by focusing narrowly on upstream production. The Commission’s own figure of roughly €240 billion in added value and fewer than three million jobs, they argued, represents less than a quarter of the sector’s true contribution.

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