Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Canada promised new parks and nature protection. Has that shifted with Carney in power?

By Inayat Singh
CBC News
December 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

In 2022, Canada hosted a pivotal UN nature summit in Montreal, where the Liberal government led a diplomatic push for a global deal on protecting ecosystems. Countries agreed to conserve 30 per cent of the world’s lands and oceans. Canada pledged to reach that target by 2030 with a plan to more than double the current amount of protected spaces. Three years later, the landscape is very different. Steven Guilbeault, the former environmental minister … has quit cabinet over new moves to expand oil and gas resource development. Prime Minister Mark Carney’s first budget barely mentions nature and his government is focused instead on major resource projects. Now, environmental groups and others are concerned that the apparent pivot from the Carney government will reverse years of progress made on nature conservation. Among the initiatives now facing uncertainty: new national parks and protected areas, as well as federal support for the “win-win” Indigenous guardians program…

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‘We all share the same goals’: Tŝilhqot’in and syilx foresters learn from each other

By Dionne Phillips
Penticton Herald
December 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Percy Guichon

Separated by hundreds of kilometres and very different landscapes, Tŝilhqot’in and syilx territories in fact share similar forestry challenges. That’s what Indigenous-owned companies are discovering after a series of site visits between operators run by bands in both nations. … “They’re both, in terms of ecosystems, quite distinct from one another,” said Percy Guichon, from the Tŝilhqot’in community of Tŝideldel First Nation. …Guichon is CEO of Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation (CCR), a nearly decade-old forestry company owned by three bands within the Tŝilhqot’in Nation. In October, it and the syilx-owned Nk’Mip Forestry invited each other to visit their counterparts’ work sites, hoping to share lessons from their respective operations. …There’s also a Forest Landscape Planning table, Guichon explained, which has members from the Tŝilhqot’in, Secwépemc, Southern Dakelh and other nations. …During the visit to Tŝilhqot’in territories, Guichon and the CCR team showed their Nk’Mip Forestry guests their large-scale projects, including road restoration, wildfire operations, and ecosystem management.

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BC Timber Sales ‘flexible’ to Sunshine Coast views on cutblock harvesting

By Connie Jordison
The Coast Reporter
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Over an hour of discussion followed BC Timber Sales’ (BCTS) presentation at the Sunshine Coast Regional District’s (SCRD) Dec. 11 committee of the whole meeting. …BCTS representatives, a delegation at the committee meeting, faced a direct ask from Gibsons area alternate director Annemarie De Andrade to pause harvesting activities on TA0519, in the Gibsons aquifer recharge area pending further study of the impacts of such logging. “We can continue to listen and continue with a light footprint, but we cannot pause,” was the response from BCTS’s Chinook Business Area timber sales manager Stacey Gould. She explained BCTS has a role as a revenue generator for the province. …That “lighter” BCTS footprint… is havesting about half of the volume it is permitted to on the lower Sunshine Coast. To make up for that, higher levels of harvesting need to be undertaking in other locations.

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Vancouver overstepped authority when it logged Stanley Park trees without board approval, rules judge

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A B.C. court has issued a rebuke to the City of Vancouver, declaring it overstepped its authority when it authorized the cutting down of thousands of trees in Stanley Park without approval from the park board. Handed down Dec. 17, the decision from B.C. Supreme Court Justice Jasvinder Basran analyzed a multi-stage approval to cut down thousands of trees in Vancouver’s largest park. In 2023, the city entered into an $1.9-million supply agreement with B.A. Blackwell and Associates to remove an initial 7,000 trees over six months [due to] a hemlock looper moth infestation… According to Basran’s judicial review, the initial decision to cut down trees in Stanley Park … was made without the proper authority. …The judge found the city circumvented the park board’s authority in the first phase of the tree removal, but that it went through the proper channels to approve the second and third stages of the work.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
December 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jason Fisher

Ravi Parmar

Ken Day

We know that 2025 has had its share of challenging news in the forestry sector. FESBC continues to invest in the long-term health and resilience of the forests by investing in forest enhancement projects led by local organizations throughout the province. This spring, Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar highlighted 64 projects specific to wood fibre recovery and wildfire mitigation initiatives funded by FESBC, many of which are successfully wrapping up. In this newsletter:

  • A message from the Minister of Forests, Ravi Parmar.
  • A holiday greeting from FESBC’s Board Chair, Ken Day.
  • A Holiday Safety Tip from our friends at the BC Forest Safety Council. 
  • An insight into FESBC Operations Managers’ favourite winter activites.
  • Faces of Forestry: Famiheh Yazdan Panah, Wood Pellet Assn.

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‘We’re looking at everything’: Alberta considers lifting 20-year hunting ban on grizzlies

By Teri Fikowski
CTV News
December 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Alberta government isn’t ruling out lifting a near 20-year ban on hunting grizzly bears, a divisive issue between conservationists, politicians, and hunters. Forestry and Parks Minister Todd Loewen says all options are on the table following several recent bear attacks and close encounters in the province. Grizzlies are being spotted in parts of the province they haven’t inhabited in more than a century. “There’s no plans at this time yet. We don’t want to take anything off the table. I think it would be irresponsible not to have all options on the table so we’re looking at everything,” Loewen said. There has been a ban on hunting grizzly bears in Alberta since 2006. …Loewen says there are several factors that would have to be considered …including the number of bears in the province and recent grizzly-human interactions, and their expansion into the foothills.

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RCMP make more arrests at forestry blockade

The Chemainus Valley Courier
December 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The RCMP made more arrests over the weekend for allegedly breaching the court-ordered injunction at a blockade near a forestry operation in the Carmanah Valley, near Lake Cowichan. A police statement said that on the evening of Dec. 12, while patrolling the injunction area around the Walbran Forest Service Road, police located a cantilever structure across a bridge and a tripod structure in the middle of the roadway a short distance away. The two structures blocked both directions in and out of the cut block where the Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership and Tsawak-qin Forestry Inc. forest companies were conducting work.

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First Nation sues B.C. government over alleged secret land policy

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
December 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A First Nation is suing the B.C. government alleging it advanced a secret land claim policy to give away rights to its traditional territory, surrender control over lucrative carbon credits, and prevent it from safeguarding threatened caribou. The allegations, made in a Dec. 12 lawsuit filed by Chief Johnny Pierre on behalf of the Tsay Keh Dene First Nation, target the B.C. government’s handling of overlapping land claims—specifically, a policy that allows First Nations to switch between multiple identities to give them the best chance of claiming traditional territory. Tsay Keh Dene says it learned of the alleged government policy in October 2025 after the province confirmed the nation would see a sharp drop in the amount of money it received from a previously negotiated agreement to share revenue from forestry activities. In 2023, the province had quietly started negotiating with the neighbouring Kwadacha Nation to develop a similar agreement, the lawsuit claims.

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BC Community Forest Association December Newsletter

The BC Community Forest Association
December 17, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

As 2025 comes to a close, the BCCFA extend warm season’s greetings to our members, partners, and supporters. This past year has underscored both the challenges facing the forest sector and the resilience of community forests. Their locally grounded, long-term approach continues to inspire optimism and demonstrate the strength of the community forest model. …We are pleased to welcome the Burns Lake Community Forest (BLCF) back to the BCCFA membership. Licensed under Agreement K1A, BLCF was the first community forest to receive a pilot agreement and the first to transition to a long-term tenure. …BLCF is known for innovation on the land and strong community presence. …BCCFA Conference & AGM in Vernon June 3-5, 2026 will be hosted by Monashee Community Forest—a partnership between the Splatsin First Nation and the Village of Lumby BC. 

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Major conservation of B.C. forestry land totalling 45,000 hectares announced

Canadian Press in CBC News
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…The Nature Conservancy of Canada says it is among the country’s largest private land conservation projects to date, and it becomes part of a network of protected areas in the Rockies that stretches into Montana. The group says the land being conserved is known as the Kootenay Forest Lands located in southeastern B.C., within the homelands of the Ktunaxa Nation. The land involved is described as “high elevation grasslands” that provide a “rare ecosystem considered to be at risk,” with old-growth forests, 930 kilometres of streams and critical habitat for grizzly bears, whitebark pine, bull trout and bighorn sheep. It says among the private partners to the conservation agreement is Glencore-subsidiary Elk Valley Resources, which operates coal mines in the valley, and it is endorsed by the Ktunaxa Nation.

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B.C. government eyes wildfire fighting drones, other tech to deal with emergencies

By Martin MacMahon
CTV News
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…On Tuesday, the government detailed its approach, which will allow companies to apply for funding, reducing financial risk while developing technology in the areas of wildfire and flood prevention, mitigation and management, forestry management and emergency response. It calls this the “Forestry Innovation and Emergency Management Testbed,” having previously offered “testbeds” in the areas of airports, marine ports and health care to encourage innovation in those sectors. …Drones offer some potential advantages over helicopters. One operator can fly multiple drones at once, while delivering similar payloads of water or retardant. …The program is run as part of what the government calls its “Integrated Marketplace,” which receives up to $41.5 million from the Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth and $11.7 million from the federal government.

See Government Press Release, by Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth: Strengthening government’s response to emergencies – Forestry Innovation and Emergency Management Testbed launched

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Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Project Shows Early Success Near Palmer Lake

By Sabrina Spencer
CFNR Network
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. says it is making strong progress on its large-scale land rehabilitation project near Palmer Lake in the Cariboo Chilcotin, with early results showing positive outcomes for both the land and local communities. The project focuses on restoring forest areas heavily damaged by catastrophic wildfires, many of which have been considered difficult to rehabilitate and left untreated for years. ….According to CCR’s Forestry Superintendent, Registered Professional Forester Daniel Persson, the project has delivered significant economic benefits. He says every dollar invested in the Palmer Lake project is generating roughly four dollars in return, flowing directly back into Indigenous employment and local communities. …While burned, much of the wood fibre can still be used and is being shipped to pulp mills and bioenergy companies, supporting operations during a period of fibre scarcity.

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Researchers receive funding from B.C. Knowledge Development Fund

By the Faculty of Forestry
University of British Columbia
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

On Dec 15, the Province of British Columbia announced new investments through the B.C. Knowledge Development Fund (BCKDF) to support research infrastructure and innovation across the province. Among the 71 UBC-led projects receiving funding are nine initiatives led by researchers from UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship, spanning forest and conservation sciences, wood science, and forest resources management. These projects address critical challenges such as Indigenous land relationships, ecosystem and climate resilience, wildfire science, sustainable building materials, and zero-carbon construction. The funding strengthens UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship’s research capacity and highlights the faculty’s leadership in advancing solutions for climate change, sustainable natural resource management, and resilient communities in British Columbia and beyond. Congratulations to our researchers on this significant achievement and recognition of their impactful work.

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Old growth vital to Vancouver Island’s threatened screech-owls, says scientist

By Jessica Durling
Nanaimo News Bulletin
December 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Megan Buers

Coastal screech-owls once flourished over the east coast of Vancouver Island, but now the subspecies has become a rare sight for birders. …Both subspecies have been considered threatened for more than a decade, with the committee on the status of endangered wildlife in Canada noting that the coastal subspecies faces ongoing threats including predation from barred owls, as well as habitat loss where logging has altered the age structure of the forest. “They were ubiquitous, they were everywhere at very high densities and not that long ago,” ornithologist Megan Buers said. …The largest reason for the low number along the east coast, the scientist said, is land development. “Those Garry oak ecosystems are highly degraded,” she said. …Currently, Buers believes Vancouver Island should be able to support “three or four times” the population of coastal screech owls that it has now.

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354-year-old forest found in Algonquin Park

By Sadeen Mohsen
The Toronto Star
December 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — Researchers have discovered old-growth forests nestled within Algonquin Park that have been thriving for more than 350 years, sheltering some of the oldest trees in the area. And by 2031, they could be cut down, according to a new report by the Algonquin Park Old-Growth Forest Project. …At Algonquin Park, 65% of the land is designated for “commercial logging,” according to the Wilderness Committee. “What it comes down to is it’s one of the last chunks of pristine forest,” he said. “They’re going to selectively log it and it will never be the same again.” …As part of the province’s Forest Management Planning process, old-growth was “of special consideration during the planning process” and the plan also considers other “forest values”, said Tracey Bradley, general manager at the Algonquin Forestry Authority. …“Only one per cent of the Park area is impacted by harvesting activities in any given year.”

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Federation of Northern Ontario Municipalities calls for continued provincial partnership for forestry sector

By Richard Coffin
My NorthBay Now
December 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The Federation of Northern Ontario Municipalities (FONOM) is thinking long-term as it calls for a renewed provincial partnership to help sustain the forestry industry. “When Ontario invests in the North, the entire province benefits,” says Dave Plourde, FONOM President and Mayor of Kapuskasing. “We are asking the government to build on the progress already made by continuing to work with communities, industry, and workers to secure long-term solutions that will keep Northern Ontario strong.” FONOM says Northern Ontario municipalities are facing mounting pressures as global market shifts, aging infrastructure, and rising operating costs challenge the forestry sector.

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Province, feds funding wildfire planning for 50 New Brunswick communities

By Ian Curran
CBC News
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Michael Boyle

The federal and provincial governments are providing 50 New Brunswick communities with a combined $2.6 million for wildfire planning. According to the Department of Natural Resources, there have been 448 wildfires in 2025, burning over 3,412 hectares of New Brunswick’s forests. This is almost double the 281 wildfires that were recorded in 2024. “I think in New Brunswick and the Maritimes, we’ve sometimes not thought that wildfires were much of an issue,” said Kennebecasis Valley Fire Chief Mike Boyle. “It’s obvious that it’s something that we need to be aware of and a concern for us.” Boyle said his community is one of the 50 that have been selected to receive some of the funding. It will go towards allowing fire departments to hire consultants who will help create or update wildfire preparedness plans.

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Lawsuit Challenges Trump Plan to Shut Americans Out of Public Lands Decisions

By Wendy Park and Ian Brickey
The Center for Biological Diversity
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

WASHINGTON— Conservation groups sued the Trump administration today for scrapping decades-old rules protecting Americans’ right to participate in environmental reviews for logging, mining, drilling, road construction and other industrial projects on their public lands. Environmental reviews under the National Environmental Policy Act, one of the nation’s bedrock environmental laws, are often communities’ only way to obtain information and provide input into the thousands of projects up for approval each year on public lands. “Trump is taking a wrecking ball to public lands so his industry cronies can make a quick buck, but we’re pushing back and demanding a voice for the American people,” said Wendy Park, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “The National Environmental Policy Act is what keeps the public in the loop and lets people speak up when destructive projects threaten our backyards. Cutting the public out locks big decisions away in bureaucratic backrooms.”

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EU Deforestation Rule: Creating Administrative Hurdles and Market Barriers Rather than Saving Forests

By Samantha Ayoub, Economist
The American Farm Bureau Federation
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

The EU Deforestation Rule has already caused supply chain hurdles for American farmers, ranchers and foresters, and the rule has not even begun being enforced. EU farmers themselves have raised concerns over their compliance requirements and received additional flexibilities, and member governments are still navigating how to implement the complex auditing system. With these logistical challenges clear even to EU officials, the European Commission has voted to once again delay the rule’s implementation until 2026 and 2027 for large and small businesses, respectively. However, as long as the rule stands as currently drafted, agricultural supply chains will be strained from the looming enforcement deadline. Overall, the EU fails to recognize the long-standing position of American farmers and ranchers as global leaders in agricultural production with environmental stewardship. A rule that was originally targeted to penalize bad actors in the global marketplace has now hindered some of the most productive producers in the world.

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Hope—and Many Fears—Follow in the Wake of Trump’s Plan to Transform Wildland Firefighting

By Kiley Price
Inside Climate News
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

One of the most profound shifts in how the United States manages wildland fire is underway. Federal wildland fire forces are spread across several agencies, closely collaborating but each tackling prevention and protection somewhat differently. Now, the Trump administration is creating an entirely new “U.S. Wildland Fire Service” to combine as much of that under one headquarters roof as it can. A firefighter with decades of federal and local experience says he has been tapped to head that agency, news that heartened much of the wildfire community when it broke just over a week ago. …But the muddled rollout of these plans—along with widespread layoffs at agencies that fight wildfires and a crackdown on efforts to combat the climate change that’s fueling the flames—have sowed concerns that this is not the right administration to carry out such a significant transformation.

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‘Do I trust the administration?’ Western Democrats split on backing forest clearing bill

By Helen Huiskes
The Salt Lake Tribune
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

©National Interagency Fire Center

Some in Congress worry the Fix Our Forest Act ignores community input and would result in new timber cutting. Democrats are split over whether to support a bill that would allow the U.S. Forest Service to clear more land, faster, in an effort to prevent wildfires. The legislation, which has bipartisan support and is headed for a full Senate vote after passing out of committee, has already run up against concerns from environmental groups and some Democrats who don’t want to open the door for President Donald Trump’s administration to amp up logging. For some Western Democrats, the urgency is worth the risk. “[Firefighters are] handcuffed in terms of the vegetation management that they can do, which doesn’t make a lot of sense,” said Josh Harder, one of the Democratic cosponsors of the original House version, who represents a northern California district.

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New map shows where high-risk wildfire areas overlap with Utah communities

By Julia Sandor
Fox 13 Salt Lake City
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SALT LAKE CITY — Utah Division of Forestry, Fire & State Lands released their new High-Risk Wildland Urban Interface (WUI) Map. They created this map because of House Bill 48, which passed during the 2025 legislative session. You can find the map here. Any property owner can access the map using the Utah Wildfire Risk Tool. The map shows the structure’s exposure score, and different layers can be seen on the same page. The High-Risk WUI layer identifies areas where wildfire risk and structural development overlap, helping communities understand and address risks to protect their homes and neighborhoods. There are about 60,000 structures within the high-risk boundary and multiple factors that go into assessing those risks including vegetation and fuel characteristics, previous fires in the area, and topography. Joseph Anderson, the Wildfire Risk Reduction Program Manager with Utah DNR said the areas in the state affected by the new map is narrower than he expected.

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US Lawsuit seeks final protection for spotted owls

The Plumas Sun
December 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CALIFORNIA — The Center for Biological Diversity, represented by Earthjustice, reports it recently sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for failing to finalize Endangered Species Act protections for California spotted owls. “The survival of the California spotted owl hangs by a thread and they desperately need protections,” said Noah Greenwald, endangered species co-director at the Center for Biological Diversity. …In February 2023 the agency proposed protecting spotted owls in southern California as endangered and those in the Sierra Nevada — including in Plumas County — as threatened, starting the clock on a one-year deadline to finalize protections. Those decisions are now more than two years overdue. The center and partners first petitioned to protect the owls 25 years ago. …“The Fish and Wildlife Service’s long delay in granting the owl protections under the Endangered Species Act continues to hinder the California spotted owl’s fight for survival.”

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Pine beetles are poised to decimate Front Range forests: ‘Our ability to stop the spread is very limited’

By Elise Schmelzer
The Denver Post
December 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

DENVER — Vast swaths of the ponderosa pine forests that blanket Colorado’s Front Range mountains could turn rust-colored and die over the next five years as pine beetles begin to spread aggressively, new federal forecasts show. Aerial surveys conducted by the U.S. Forest Service over the last year found evidence of rapidly spreading beetle infestations along the mountains and foothills that stretch from southern Larimer County to southern El Paso County, including the western flank of metro Denver. Already, pockets of dead trees are visible from Interstate 70 and U.S. 285. The rapid uptick in beetle-killed trees near the state’s largest cities and major highways prompted state leaders to form a task force this month to grapple with the outbreak. Gov. Jared Polis issued an executive order Dec. 15 and created the Mountain Pine Beetle Ponderosa Outbreak Task Force to address the growing wildfire threat and the beetles’ potential impact to watersheds, recreation and infrastructure.

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The western U.S. Tried to stop wildfires and it backfired

By The American Geophysical Union
Science Daily
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Wildfires are not always purely destructive. In many forests, fire can clear out built up dead material, return nutrients to the soil, and help ecosystems reset. For more than 100 years, the United States has spent billions of dollars on fire suppression to protect people, homes, and sensitive environments. But putting out too many fires can also prevent landscapes from getting the burns they need, allowing extra fuel to accumulate and raising the risk of larger fires later. New research … reports that nearly 38 million hectares of land in the western United States are historically behind on burning. The researchers describe these areas as being in a “fire deficit.” …”Conditions are getting so warm and dry that it’s causing huge amounts of fire compared to the historical record,” said Winslow Hansen, director of the Western Fire and Forest Resilience Collaborative and scientist at Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies. 

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Western leaders demand probes into wildfire mitigation cuts

KNAU Arizona Public Radio
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©NPS Flickr

Several elected leaders from northern Arizona are calling on Attorney General Kris Mayes to determine if the Trump administration’s cuts to wildfire mitigation efforts are illegal. Coconino County Supervisor Lena Fowler, Tusayan Mayor Clarinda Vail and Flagstaff mayor Becky Daggett are among the 160 western officials who are concerned about the drop in federal fire preparedness in recent months. They signed onto a letter as part of the Mountain Pact, a group that advocates for western communities in climate, public lands and outdoor recreation policy. They are urging their respective state attorneys general to push back against layoffs, voluntary deferred resignations and early retirements within the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service and the National Park Service. It comes months after the Dragon Bravo and White Sage fires burned more than 200,000 acres on the Kaibab National Forest and in Grand Canyon National Park.

Additional coverage in the Aspen Times by Ryan Spencer: Colorado local elected leaders call on state attorney general to take action on ‘rapid decline of federal wildfire preparedness’ under Trump administration

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Rush to Avoid Red Tape Derails Logging Project Near Yellowstone

By Robert Chaney
The Mountain Journal
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Cutting red tape and streamlining project work have been marching orders for the U.S. Forest Service throughout the first year of the second Trump administration. Last week, a federal court ruling on a Greater Yellowstone landscape project showed how far those directives can backfire.  …Initially proposed in 2020, it received a decision notice in 2023. Opponents referred to it by its acronym, SPLAT, and promptly sued to block it. In his December 11 opinion, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy wrote that South Plateau failed to meet requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act, National Forest Management Act and Endangered Species Act. But he added the “primary challenge concerns the project’s conditions-based management approach.” Molloy generally agreed with the plaintiffs’ concern. “This approach,” he said, “conflates a promise of future statutory compliance with actual compliance.”

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Rainforest Action Network Resigns from the Forest Stewardship Council, Citing Loss of Credibility

Rainforest Action Network
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

San Francisco — Rainforest Action Network (RAN) has resigned from the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), ending more than 30 years of membership in the world’s most widely recognized forestry certification system. RAN says the FSC’s certification label is failing to provide credible assurances of responsible forest management. RAN was a founding member of FSC in 1993 and remained engaged for decades because of the need for a robust third party verified forestry certification scheme. The FSC previously set the gold standard for responsible forestry in a market flooded by timber and paper products bearing logos of weaker forest certification schemes such as the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification. But the organization says recent decisions by the FSC have fatally undermined its credibility.

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Massive wildfire reduction projects coming to Colorado forests, which could include logging

By Ishan Thakore
Colorado Public Radio News
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Two major U.S. Forest Service projects — authorized under federal emergency powers — will target up to around 308,000 acres of public land along the Front Range with treatments meant to reduce wildfire risk, including logging. That’s a massive area, around the total size of the city of Los Angeles. The projects, spread out over at least two decades, may include clear-cutting patches of national forest up to 20 acres, using prescribed burning to reduce timber that could fuel blazes, and spreading herbicide over thousands of acres. Completing those treatments may also require building temporary roads through thousands of acres of previously untouched forest — known as roadless areas. …The plans, and other Forest Service proposals, have drawn sharp criticism from some environmental groups, who say they encourage large-scale logging on public lands.

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Federal judge strikes down logging project near Yellowstone National Park

By Darrell Ehrlick
The Idaho Capital Sun
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

IDAHO — A federal judge halted a large logging project near Yellowstone National Park because he said the US Forest Service submitted plans that made it impossible to judge how it would affect critical grizzly bear habitat. The 16,500-acre project located in the Custer Gallatin National Forest would have allowed the US Forest Service to select timber and build roads for logging. But without offering specifics, the project only pledged that its plans would consider the total distance of the roads and not exceed certain parameters in acreage size, designed to protect critical bear habitat. However, Judge Donald Molloy said that the plans amounted to giving the Forest Service permission and trusting that it would be compliant later. He also said that the plans also made it difficult to judge how the logging project would impact grizzly habitat.

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Failure to harvest Alaska timber degrades both forest and economy

By Rep. Kevin McCabe
Alaska Watchman
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Kevin McCabe

There’s a narrative floating about that Alaska lacks merchantable timber, or that permits exist without wood to harvest. That claim is convenient for those who oppose active forest management, but it doesn’t hold up when examined against hard data or realities on the ground. …The path forward is not complicated, but it does require political will. Recent federal directives create opportunities to increase responsible timber production if agencies choose to act. That means active young-growth management in the Tongass, improved access and infrastructure in the Interior and regulatory reforms, including updates to plans such as the Chugach’s to incorporate sustainable timber objectives. It means addressing Roadless Rule barriers where appropriate, offering predictable and appropriately scaled timber sales, updating lumber grading standards for young-growth products, certifying small mills and building local processing capacity. …Alaska’s forestry challenge is not a shortage of trees. It is a shortage of policies that work.

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First lodgepoles, now ponderosas, Colorado is fighting beetles on multiple fronts

By Bente Birkeland
Colorado Public Radio News
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Gov. Jared Polis signed an executive order aimed at curbing a mountain pine beetle outbreak in ponderosa forests along the front range. Polis attributes the outbreak to drought, and a warming climate. He said he recently received a briefing and was shocked by the projections of how much the infestation is expected to spread. “This means that most or nearly all mature Ponderosa pines will be killed by pine beetles in the western front range over the next several years,” Polis said. …His executive order creates a task force to try to use the best science to coordinate a response with landowners, from counties and private individuals, to the state and federal government. …“It’s absolutely critical that we have mitigation to take down affected trees quickly,” Polis said. “Especially near residential areas, creating defensive barriers.” Polis said he is also concerned about the risk for wildfires, water quality, recreation, and the economy.

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Forestry holds place as second largest ag commodity in Mississippi

By Nathan Gregory
Mississippi State University Extension
December 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

STARKVILLE, Mississippi — For all the major investments and structural changes in 2025, marked by significant sawmill expansions, shifting market dynamics and continued pressure in the pulp and paper sector, Mississippi’s timber industry observed limited monetary change. The state’s total timber value for 2025 is estimated to be $1.47 billion, which is down 1% from last year. This year’s harvest amounted to 36.4 million tons of timber products, which is down slightly from last year based on timber severance tax receipts. The value of standing timber paid to landowners as stumpage was $660 million, a 9% decline from 2024. The harvest and trucking industries, however, added $807 million to timber’s value in 2025, which was 7% more than last year. Eric McConnell, associate professor of forest business, said the industry experienced a sizable increase in the small pine sawtimber. …The forestry industry also faced pulp and paper headwinds. 

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Agriculture commissioner urges residents to be diligent as Florida faces increased wildfire risks amid dry conditions

By Caleb Yauger
News4JAX
December 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

FLORIDA – Florida state officials warned of heightened wildfire risks across the state as dry conditions were expected to continue into 2026. “I’ve been with the agency a long time, and this is the driest winter that I can remember in quite a while,” Florida Forest Service Director Rick Dolan said during a Friday press conference. The number of wildfires had increased significantly, with more than 3,000 reported in 2025 compared to approximately 2,000 in 2024. This surge came months before Florida’s typical peak wildfire season, which usually occurs between April and June. Florida Commissioner of Agriculture Wilton Simpson emphasized that human activity was a major concern. “The majority of those fires are started by backyard fires, arson, things of that nature,” Simpson said. “We need everyone to be diligent as we come into the new year with the drier conditions.”

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How the Trump administration is fast-tracking logging in Illinois’ only national forest

By Juanpablo Ramirez-Franco
WBEZ Chicago
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

…Shawnee is the only national forest in the state and one of the smallest in the nation. The agency initially billed the timber sale, called the McCormick Oak-Hickory Restoration Project, as a “thinning” operation to remove older trees and make room for younger saplings. But logging operations contribute to habitat loss, and Stearns found the Forest Service’s justification lacking. … For months, he and other local environmentalists scoured the web and newspapers for mentions of the sale to prepare for the comment period, but the McCormick Project never turned up. …It turned out that the Forest Service advertised the project under a different name — “V-Plow” — and by the time advocates realized it, they were a week into the project’s three-week comment period. …The following month, Stearns and other environmentalists sued the agency, trying to block the plan.

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Noah’s Ark for plants: The man in charge of logging every native seed in Ireland

The Journal Ireland
December 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Darren Reidy

THE MAN IN charge of logging each native seed in Ireland has described the project as like “Noah’s Ark” for plants – a vault for renewal after ecological disasters. Conservation ecologist Darren Reidy has been researching, gathering and banking native seeds across Ireland since his appointment in 2022. ‘Banking’ the seeds of a native Irish plant is complicated – ideally you would need 10,000 seeds per species. If the plant is endangered, an assessment of all populations on the island is done to decide if it is safe to bank the species’ seeds, and if it is, they can take only 10% of the fruit. Reidy gave the example of critically endangered whitebeam trees that grow only in Ireland. “We only have five individuals of this species on the entire island, and they all occur in Killarney National Park in Kerry,” he said. “Only one of them is producing fruit. So this summer, I travelled to Killarney to collect fruit.

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Establishment of Forest Certification Ireland Board a Positive Development

Irish Farmers Association
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

IFA Farm Forestry Chair Padraig Stapleton has acknowledged the establishment of the Group Forest Certification Ireland Board as a positive development for the Irish forestry sector. This follows the inaugural meeting of the Board which was held this week. IFA Forestry Policy Executive Amy Mulchrone has been appointed as a member of the Board by Minister Michael Healy-Rae. “The establishment of the Group Forest Certification Ireland board is a positive initiative by the Minister. The increased focus on voluntary certification of privately-owned forests that this Board will now hopefully bring should significantly scale up the area certified. To date, only 8% are certified, substantially lower than Coillte plantations, which have dual certification from both the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and the Programme of Forest Certification (PEFC).”

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Forestry chief warns Scotland set to miss planting targets again

By Katharine Hay
The Scotsman
December 18, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Forestry leaders have warned Scotland will fail to meet its planting targets for yet another year amid concern investment is going elsewhere. Since annual targets for woodland expansion were set, the Scottish Government has missed the goal every year apart from 2018, when it was met for the first time. In recent years, planting rates have often fallen significantly short of the set targets, with the year from 2022 to 2023 seeing only 8,190 hectares of a 15,000 target planted. Jon Lambert, of Goldcrest Land & Forestry Group, an independent UK firm of chartered surveyors and foresters based in Edinburgh, warned the figures are down because of the lengthy and clunky grant application process. “The amount of planting in Scotland is way down than it should be,” said Mr Lambert.

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Douglas-fir shows early promise as Sitka spruce replacement

By Jack Haugh
UK Forestry Journal
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Douglas-fir may prove to be a productive alternative to Sitka spruce for the UK’s commercial forestry sector. That is one of the early conclusions from ongoing research to test the suitability of 17 tree species as potential options for future timber production. Taking place across a network of nine large-scale experiments (in locations such as the Newcastleton, Cowal, and the Black Isle), the Forest Research-led investigation also found Douglas fir had the promise for further use in the south and east of the country, where the climate is forecast to become significantly hotter and drier than today. While already considered by many as a serious option, the species only makes up around 4 per cent of the UK’s total commercial forest.

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Six researchers receive Wallenberg grants for forestry-related social research

Umeå University
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Six researchers at Umeå University will receive SEK 38 million in grants from the Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation and the Marcus and Amalia Wallenberg Memorial Fund for humanities and social science research with forestry relevance. Almost half of the thirteen projects approved are going to Umeå University, which demonstrates the university’s strength and breadth in this field. “The Swedish forestry issue has largely relied on research in natural sciences and technology, but forestry is really a social and humanistic issue, which is why this call for proposals is both relevant and innovative. And the fact that we have six projects … is a good indication of the breadth of our research in this area,” says Thomas Olofsson, Deputy Vice-Chancellor for research. Louise Eriksson, docent in psychology and researcher in environmental psychology, will receive a grant of six million Swedish kronor to investigate acceptance of climate-adapted forest management.

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