Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Globally, fires in 2025 burned the second-lowest area on record since 2002

By Matthew Jones
Nature Reviews
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

Globally, fires in 2025 burned the second-lowest area on record since 2002 and emitted the third-lowest CO2 total. Yet, a third successive year of extreme wildfire emissions prevailed in Canada, and catastrophic fires in Los Angeles, South Korea and Europe killed over 90 people and forced over 300,000 evacuations. At the global scale, land area burned by wildfire has declined in since 2002, mainly owing to reduced savannah burning in Africa. However, wildfires are expanding in extratropical forests, and show increasing intensity combined with extreme socioeconomic and environmental impacts1–3. In these areas, wildfire disasters are exacerbated by human land use and the wildland–urban interface4. Many regions are experiencing episodes of extreme wildfires with high rates of spread and intensity associated with substantial loss of life, infrastructure, or carbon stores, even in years with below-average burned area. These hallmarks define an era of declining global burned area but also of rising prominence of extreme and deadly wildfires.

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Suzanne Simard sealed paper birch and Douglas fir seedlings inside plastic bags … and found carbon crossed through fungal threads

By The Editorial Team
Make Tech Easier
May 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Suzanne Simard’s 1997 forest experiment did not show trees whispering to each other. It showed something narrower, stranger, and easier to test: carbon that began in the air around a paper birch seedling later appeared inside a neighbouring Douglas fir, after passing through roots and fungal tissue in the soil. The experiment, published in Nature in August 1997, used two carbon labels in the field. Paper birch and Douglas fir seedlings were sealed in plastic labelling chambers, exposed to carbon-14 dioxide or carbon-13 dioxide, left for a nine-day chase period, then harvested and analysed to see where the labelled carbon had gone. The result was not a fairy tale about kindness. It was a measurement. Carbon moved both ways between Betula papyrifera, the paper birch, and Pseudotsuga menziesii, the Douglas fir, with a net gain by Douglas fir in the second year of the field experiment. 

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Government of Canada invests $47.8 million to strengthen Parks Canada wildfire preparedness and protect communities

By Parks Canada
PR Newswire
May 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – Parks Canada’s National Fire Management Program helps protect people, communities, treasured national parks and national historic sites from the growing risks of wildfire while maintaining healthy, resilient ecosystems. Today, the Honourable Julie Dabrusin, Minister of the Environment, Climate Change and Nature, announced that the Government of Canada is investing $47.8 million over five years, to support wildfire preparedness, response, and risk reduction in places administered by Parks Canada. This investment will renew essential capacity under Parks Canada’s National Fire Management Program. Funded through Budget 2025, this investment will support the operational readiness of Parks Canada wildfire response personnel, nationally deployable equipment, and proactive wildfire risk‑reduction measures such as prescribed fire and vegetation management to reduce the build up of flammable material. It builds on previous investments to ensure Parks Canada can continue to prepare for, respond to, and reduce wildfire risks across the country.

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The Government of Canada provides update on the 2026 wildfire season preparedness and forecast

By Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Canada
PR Newswire
May 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – The Honourable Eleanor Olszewski, Minister of Emergency Management and Community Resilience … delivered an update on Canada’s wildfire preparedness and the forecast for the 2026 wildfire season. Minister Olszewski reported that, as of today, there are 65 active wildfires in Canada with six wildfires currently out of control. The total area burned so far this year is over 18,935 hectares. Long-standing precipitation deficits persist in Western Canada. Looking ahead, forecasts indicate above-normal temperatures for nearly all Canadian regions for June, July and August. Several regions of Canada have received significant amounts of precipitation over the past six months, which could delay potential wildfire conditions. Modelling of wildfire risk by Natural Resources Canada shows fire danger building across Canada through July, with British Columbia facing the highest and most sustained fire risk. 

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Ottawa launches national aerial firefighting fleet for 2026 wildfire season

By Craig Lord
The Canadian Press in the Chronicle Journal
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA – The federal government has set up Canada’s first-ever reserve of firefighting aircraft to help provinces and territories respond to the 2026 wildfire season. The Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, or CIFFC, has leased 10 aircraft and two unspecified support assets for 150 days starting this month, thanks to a $317-million spending allocation in the federal budget. The government said that the Pan-Canadian Aerial Asset Program will boost national firefighting surge capacity by increasing provincial and territorial access to aircraft during periods of intense wildfire activity. Provincial and territorial wildfire agencies will be able to request the use of four air tankers, one spotter plane and five heavy lift helicopters to fight wildfires. The fleet will be sourced from British Columbia-based firms Conair Group, Coldstream Helicopters and VIH Helicopters. …This is the first time a national fleet of aircraft will be available to respond where needed.

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Wildfires are destroying trees faster than we are replacing them

By Karen Pauls
CBC News
May 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

MANITOBA — A northern Manitoba tree-planting program is trying to replace trees destroyed by wildfires, but the cancellation of the federal two billion trees program is making that more challenging. In 2016, this forest in Manitoba’s Interlake region, about 300 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg, was devastated by a jack pine budworm infestation. It was starting to regenerate when wildfire ravaged the Devils Lake area in 2021. Areas just north are already burning this spring. Marley Moose says she felt sad when she returned to the forest three years ago as part of a tree-planting program through Nekoté LP, an Indigenous-owned corporation representing seven Swampy Cree First Nations in northern and central Manitoba. According to the Canadian Tree Nursery Association (CTNA), the country is losing trees faster than nature can grow them or people can plant them.

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Concerns raised as BC Timber Sales begins 4km logging road above Roberts Creek

By Jordan Copp
The Sunshine Coast Reporter
May 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A new logging road project on the Sunshine Coast has drawn concern from local environmental advocates. At the same time, provincial officials say the work is designed to improve access and protect water resources. The Ministry of Forests confirmed to Coast Reporter that it is responsible for the road-building contract tied to Timber Sale Licence A94817. This project will see “just over 4km” of new road constructed to “move industrial traffic away from high-use public roads” and to create long-term access for multiple user groups. The ministry also said that the design has “enhanced overland techniques to minimize impacts to ground water,” along with water-quality monitoring and environmental oversight. However, Elphinstone Logging Focus’s (ELF) Ross Muirhead says the scope of the project is unusual for the region, saying four kilometres of brand new logging road is “unprecedented” on the Coast and that most projects are much shorter.

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B.C. Lions roar into Langford with assist for province wildfire program

By Ben Fenlon
Victoria News
May 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

For the B.C. Lions, wildfire safety and preparedness is a team effort. The CFL club has announced a new partnership to help champion B.C.’s FireSmart program, amplifying wildfire prevention and preparedness messaging across the province. The Lions have teamed up with Port Alberni-based aerial firefighting company Coulson Aviation for the campaign, while FireSmart has invested $17,000 to leverage the team’s extensive reach through digital and radio advertising, including live game broadcasts on 730 CKNW. During the off-season, wildfire resiliency messaging will also be delivered directly to students through B.C. Lions school visits, with the goal of empowering young people to be equipped to protect their own turf. …Minister of Forests and MLA for Langford-Highlands Ravi Parmar said the event demonstrated what can be achieved when communities work together to reduce wildfire risk.

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Wildfire activity low so far — but a hot and dry summer could change that, officials warn

By Peter Zimonjic
CBC News
May 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The start to the 2026 wildfire season has been slow with the number of fires raging across the country well below average, but government officials warn that as the summer progresses there’s a risk things could get much worse. “Despite the fact that we’re seeing so little activity so far this year … this summer retains the potential to be a significant one right across the country,” a government official said Thursday during a technical briefing. The official said that while the wildfire risk is unlikely to result in a record-breaking year like 2023 or 2025, the federal government is forecasting above average conditions as the season progresses. Whether that happens depends, officials explained, on what happens to the weather over the next few months. If the above average temperatures predicted for across the county come to pass, B.C. faces the highest wildfire risk, particularly in July.

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Forest tent caterpillars feast in Calgary as outbreak spikes population across Alberta

By Amir Said
CBC News
May 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Olds College entomologist Ken Fry says forest tent caterpillars are native to Alberta and relatively common, but their populations go through cycles in which they increase dramatically. Municipalities in Alberta are advising residents of an increase in the caterpillars this spring. “Roughly every 10 years populations increase enormously,” he said. The cyclical population explosion is called an outbreak. He said the causes of these cyclical outbreaks are still being studied but are believed to be influenced by weather, health status of trees, and other factors like predators, parasites and disease. Forest tent caterpillars are perhaps best known for the damage they inflict on trees. …”Trees can usually withstand a one-season munching, but when it comes to prolonged persistent defoliation over two, three years, that can result in some twig death or branch death or die back, you know, vulnerability over the winter to winter kill, things like that,” Fry said.

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Spruce budworm outbreak prompts planned aerial spraying around Whistler

By Luke Faulks
The Pique News Magazine
May 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

WHISTLER — As Western spruce budworm populations continue to spread through Whistler’s forests at historically unprecedented levels, the BC government is preparing to spray thousands of hectares around the resort municipality with a biological insecticide to blunt the outbreak. The Ministry of Forests is planning to aerially treat areas using Bacillus thuringiensis var. kurstaki (Btk)—a naturally occurring soil bacterium used for decades to control defoliating insects. Taylor Holt, the provincial resource coordinator, said… the aerial overview surveys in 2025 picked up 275,000 hectares of damage. [It’s] nearly three times as much damage as noted ever historically.” …Cheakamus Community Forest (CCF) executive director Heather Beresford, said. “So this is really the only viable treatment.” Still, she acknowledged the decision comes with uncomfortable trade-offs between wanting to prevent dead trees from posing a wildfire risk and protecting local non-budworm species who will be affected by spraying BtK.

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‘It’s an evolving relationship’: Prescribed fire gains renewed attention in B.C. ahead of wildfire season

By Amber Wang
CBC News
May 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Prescribed burning is getting renewed attention in parts of B.C. as communities look for ways to reduce wildfire risk before summer. In Kimberley, B.C., that conversation recently took residents onto the trails near the city’s nature park. The city-led walk gave residents a look at treated areas where crews have been reducing forest fuels. They also heard from local fire officials and wildfire specialists about how planned fire can help protect nearby homes, trails and forested parkland from wildfire risk. Kimberley Fire Department Chief Will Booth says the tour was meant to help residents understand prescribed burning before more fuel management work happens in the city. The local tour comes as prescribed and cultural burning are getting more public attention after years of being less visible. …Bob Gray, a wildland fire ecologist and fire scientist, says warmer temperatures and drought are adding pressure to forests that already have too many trees competing for moisture.

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B.C. wildfire documentary draws 160K views and four Leo Award nominations

By Rob Gibson
Castanet
May 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The independently-produced B.C. documentary, BC is Burning, has drawn more than 160,000 YouTube views and earned four Leo Award nominations in its first week of public release. The documentary, a 47-minute film released May 20, has attracted viewers from eight countries, including Canada, the United States, Australia and Finland. It has received nominations for best picture, best direction, best picture editing and best sound in the short documentary category at the 2026 Leo Awards. “We are very honoured by this recognition from the B.C.film community,” says producer and director Murray Wilson, adding the response shows “this conversation about BC forests and wildfire is resonating with many people.” …Earlier this year the documentary took home Okanagan Screen Awards for best feature documentary, best director and best cinematography. The 2026 Leo Awards take place July 4 and 5 at the Hyatt Regency Vancouver, with winners selected by industry professionals from more than 1,400 entries.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
May 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

British Columbia’s forests support a diversity of trees, plants, fungi and wildlife, while also providing recreational opportunities, cultural values, and economic benefits to communities. As we recognized the International Day for Biological Diversity on May 22 and Wildfire Awareness Month throughout May, it’s an important time to reflect on the connection between healthy forests, resilient ecosystems, and the communities and wildlife that depend on them. Wildfire resilience and biodiversity are deeply connected. Thoughtful forest management activities, including strategic fuel reduction treatments and cultural and prescribed burning, can help reduce wildfire risk while also creating healthier and more diverse forest ecosystems for generations to come. …Today, FESBC is investing in treatments that reduce wildfire risk around communities, infrastructure and other resources. We are supporting the return of cultural and prescribed burning to the landscape. We are asking questions about how wildfire risk reduction treatments can also support biodiversity and other forest values, such as recreation.

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Experts urge B.C. to halt logging in Tsitika Watershed, north of Sayward

By Robin Grant
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Experts are calling on the B.C. government to halt logging in a Tsitika watershed cutblock on northern Vancouver Island that has been designated for old-growth deferral. But the some First Nations whose territory it falls in say they have their own approach to managing the area sustainably. Pacific Wild, an environmental organization, says B.C. Timber Sales (BCTS) is selling off rare and ecologically significant forests for minimal economic return. In letters sent to BCTS and other government decision-makers in April, the organization presented new data, maps and field evidence showing that cutblock TA1375 — identified by the Old Growth Technical Advisory Panel as a Priority Deferral Area — provides essential habitat for threatened species and stores significant amounts of carbon. The cutblock was auctioned in March despite opposition from scientists, community members and many First Nations whose territories overlap with the Tsitika watershed.

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Wildfire training exercise set for May 30 in Cowichan Bay

By Sarah Simpson
Ladysmith-Chemainus Chronicle
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Residents and visitors to Cowichan Bay on Saturday, May 30 take note. A large-scale exercise to help emergency responders train for potential wildfires is taking place in Cowichan Bay from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. “Please do not be alarmed and help ensure crews can safely complete their training by obeying signage and giving personnel and equipment plenty of space,” said CVRD spokesperson Lisa Moilanen. The exercise will include Shawnigan Lake, Malahat, Mill Bay, Cowichan Bay, Duncan, Sahtlam, Ladysmith, and North Oyster fire departments, as well as BC Wildfire Services and more “working, practicing and learning together to help be aligned, prepared and keep our communities safe,” Moilanen added. The exercise features a scenario where a forest fire is threatening a developed area or community. Moilanen said people will notice emergency vehicles, personnel, traffic cones, and wildfire response activities around Falcon Crescent, and Wilmot, Galdwell, Rondeault, and Hillbank Roads.

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Island firm to supply two helicopters for national firefighting fleet

Canadian Press in the Victoria Times Colonist
May 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A North Saanich aviation company will provide helicopters as part of the federal government’s first reserve of firefighting aircraft to help provinces and territories respond to wildfires this season. VIH Helicopters is supplying two Sikorsky S-92A heavy helicopters for the season, with contracts starting immediately and continuing to Oct. 18. They’re among 10 aircraft and two unspecified support assets being leased for 150 days starting this month by the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, thanks to a $317-million allocation in the federal budget. …Along with VIH Helicopters, which is based at Victoria International Airport, the fleet will be sourced from B.C.-based firms Conair Group and Coldstream Helicopters. …Kelsey Winter, executive director of CIFFC, said at a media event at the Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa on Monday that the newly leased fleet will add to the existing model, not replace it.

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Masters of International Forestry Instructors Make Global Impact as Lead Authors of Landmark UN Forest Report

By the Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
May 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

When the United Nations released its Global Forest Goals Report 2026 this month in New York, the expertise behind it traced back to the classrooms of UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship’s Master of International Forestry program. Professor Terry Sunderland and Lecturer Peter Wood, director and coordinator of the MIF program respectively, served as lead authors of the report, released at the UN Forum on Forests. It is one of the most comprehensive assessments of global forest management ever produced, drawing on voluntary submissions from 48 nations representing more than half of the world’s forests. The fact the report’s lead authors are also shaping the next generation of international forestry professionals at UBC FES is no coincidence — it is exactly the kind of real-world engagement the MIF program is built around.

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What does it mean when a fire is Out of Control?

By BC Wildfire Service
Facebook
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

When you hear a wildfire is classified as Out of Control, it’s easy to picture massive flames racing through the forest. But Out of Control is used as an operational term, not a description of how dramatic or aggressive a wildfire looks. A wildfire is classified as Out of Control when it is spreading, or expected to spread, beyond the current containment lines. Think of it like plumbing, a slow leak and a burst pipe are both uncontrolled situations, but they behave very differently. One may grow slowly over time and require monitoring and management. The other may move quickly and need immediate, aggressive action. Wildfires can behave the same way.

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Forest Practices Board to audit BC Timber Sales operations near Hazelton

By Tanner Senko, Communications Manager
BC Forest Practices Board
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

HAZELTON – The Forest Practices Board will audit the forest planning and practices of BC Timber Sales (BCTS) and timber sale licence holders in the Kispiox Timber Supply Area (TSA) portion of the Skeena Business Area, starting Monday, June 1, 2026. The audit will examine harvesting, roads, silviculture, protection activities and associated planning. These activities will be assessed for compliance under the Forest and Range Practices Act and the Wildfire Act. BCTS operates throughout the Kispiox TSA, within the Skeena Stikine Natural Resource District. Activities in the audit area are administered from the Hazelton Field Office. The audit area overlaps the territories of the Gitxsan, Wet’suwet’en, Gitanyow, Nisga’a, Lake Babine Nation, Kitselas, and Tsetsaut Skii km Lax Ha First Nations. …The area includes mountainous terrain, rivers and lakes that support recreation, wildlife habitat and important fish populations, including several salmon species, bull trout, Dolly Varden and lake trout.

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Cheakamus Community Forest awards inaugural grants to Sea to Sky stewardship and recreation projects

By Luke Faulks
Pique News Magazine
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Three Sea to Sky organizations have been named the inaugural recipients of the Cheakamus Community Forest (CCF) Community Benefit Program, which has awarded more than $25,000 to projects tied to forest education, habitat stewardship, recreation access, and invasive species management. The funding, announced on May 19, comes from the community forest’s carbon offset sales revenue. …The community forest said the program reflects its broader goal of operating “as a model of regenerative forestry and reconciliation” while supporting partner communities through locally driven initiatives. The announcement comes ahead of the CCF’s spring 2026 information session, scheduled for May 28 from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Istken Room at the Squamish Lil’wat Cultural Centre.

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Lindsay Cuff Receives Killam Teaching Prize

UBC Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
May 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Lindsay Cuff

Lindsay Cuff is an Assistant Professor of Teaching in the Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences, jointly appointed with the Faculty of Land and Food Systems. She has developed, implemented, and shared innovative approaches to teaching and strives to weave real-world applications into the classroom. She is a UBC Sustainability Fellow, contributes to an interdisciplinary team developing an Indigenous Land Stewardship Program, and is the author of the open educational textbook Writing Place. As an instructor of discipline-specific scholarly writing, Lindsay supports students from diverse backgrounds, including those in their first year, helping them discover writing as a powerful tool for learning, reflection, and connection. Her impact is reflected in the outstanding feedback she receives from students, who consistently describe her teaching as motivating, engaging, and inspiring.

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Province turns to the Microsoft cloud to update its forest inventory

By Ian Ross
Northern Ontario Business
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©KevinHolland LinkedIn

Ontario’s Forest Resources Inventory is getting a high-tech upgrade. The province is providing more than $14 million over the next two years to technologically improve the database on how the province collects, stores and shares information on its 70.5-million hectares of forest. The funding is part of the roll-out of the province’s forestry road map, a 10-year strategy designed to protect the industry, jobs, and reposition the sector to make new products for the domestic market. Ultimately, it will also allow the province’s struggling forest industry to make better data-driven business decisions to stay competitive. Kevin Holland, the province’s associate minister of forestry and forest products, was on hand at the Ontario Forest Research Institute in Sault Ste. Marie May 26 to deliver the news. The Forest Resources Inventory (FRI) is considered the backbone of the entire sustainable forest management system in Ontario.

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Inside the Fight to Protect an Urban Forest in BC

By Sarah Cox
The Tyee
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Three years ago, Barb Round heard heavy machinery chewing through the urban forest behind her home in Campbell River, a small city on east Vancouver Island that bills itself as the salmon capital of the world. Round waved down a man in a hard hat and asked why the excavator was working in the greenway, which is a haven for birds, dotted with pocket wetlands and adjacent to Simms Creek, home to four salmon species. “He explained to me that the property had been sold,” Round, a retired nurse, tells The Tyee. “Everyone in the neighbourhood thought it was protected land.” When residents found out a local developer planned to cut down much of the forest and fill in the wetlands to build a large housing development near the creek, “they were gobsmacked,” Round says.

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Forests Canada and Ontario Parks Complete Projects to Restore and Enhance Provincial Parks

By Forests Canada
PR Newswire
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO – In an effort to restore the natural beauty and support species conservation in provincial parks impacted by extreme weather events, invasive species, tree loss due to insects and disease, or shoreline erosion, national charity Forests Canada and Ontario Parks have worked together to plant 12,000 native trees and shrubs across nine provincial parks. “Forests Canada is proud to lead the restoration efforts and promote the long-term health of these incredible spaces,” Jess Kaknevicius, CEO, Forests Canada, says. “We approach our forest recovery work in a systematic way – considering every stage from seed collection and seedling production to planting and long-term survival, and we are honoured to put our knowledge, experience and network of partners to work benefitting Ontario’s provincial parks.” This past fall and spring, 4,500 potted trees and shrubs of 39 different native species were planted in targeted areas… 

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Lawmakers delve into Forest Service shake-up

By Marc Heller
E&E News by Politico
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Tom Schultz

Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz returns to Capitol Hill to field questions from House and Senate lawmakers on his agency’s policies and direction. …Schultz can expect questions on the Forest Service’s plans to consolidate research facilities and on the Trump administration’s proposal to move wildfire management out of the forest agency and into the Interior Department’s U.S. Wildland Fire Service. That’s not all that’s confronting Schultz, a former timber industry executive. Schultz is tasked with the administration’s top forestry goal of increased logging on public land to reduce the nation’s dependence on imported wood. He is managing those objectives while aiming to reduce the 193-million-acre national forest system’s wildfire risks, which officials say goes hand in hand with forest thinning and commercial logging. [to access the full story an E&E News subscription is required]

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Why Wildfire Experts Are So Worried About This Year’s Fire Season

By Peter Aldhous
Inside Climate News
May 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

As bad as things got in Los Angeles in January 2025, when 31 people died and more than 16,000 buildings were destroyed by wildfires roaring into residential neighborhoods, many wildland firefighters look back on the rest of last year as a dodged bullet. Across the nation, according to the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC), which coordinates the federal wildfire response, the total area burned in 2025 was about two-thirds of the average over the past 10 years. This year is shaping up to be a very different prospect, wildfire experts warn. Key environmental indicators show that the nation is a tinderbox, gripped by widespread drought and with a light snowpack in the mountains that will offer little relief as its remnants melt away. At the same time, upheaval in the federal wildland firefighting effort and the loss of many staff qualified to join wildfire incident teams since Donald Trump took power for the second time have left firefighters deeply concerned about their ability to mount an effective response.

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Trump repeals rules governing off-roading on public lands

Center for Western Priorities
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

President Donald Trump rescinded two executive orders on Friday evening that aimed to balance off-road vehicle (OHV) use on public lands. The 1972 and 1977 orders, signed by Presidents Richard Nixon and Jimmy Carter, required federal agencies to minimize ecological damage, harassment of wildlife, and recreational conflicts due to OHV use on public lands. Repealing the orders prioritizes motorized recreation and resource extraction over conservation, increasing the risk of widespread environmental degradation. The White House called the rescinded orders “outdated and burdensome” hurdles to energy and timber production. Without this guidance, fragile ecosystems—including national parks—are at risk of unmitigated OHV use, which can degrade streams, displace wildlife, and significantly damage soil and vegetation. …“Rescinding guidance meant to reduce conflicts in the backcountry and protect wildlife habitat isn’t popular; that’s why Trump tried to bury it by putting this order out on a Friday evening,” Center for Western Priorities Communications Director Kate Groetzinger said.

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Savannah Bound: EXPO 2027 is Open for Business

2027 Forest Products Expo
May 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

There is something fitting about bringing the forest products industry together in Savannah, Georgia. The city sits at the intersection of timber country and global commerce, flanked by working forests to the north and west, and by one of the nation’s busiest container ports to the east. For an industry that turns trees into the materials that build homes, frame walls, and move goods across the world, Savannah is not just a backdrop. It is a statement. This month, SFPA officially launched exhibit space sales for EXPO 2027, and it is worth taking a moment to appreciate how far this event has come. …This year’s theme, Industry in Motion, captures where the forest products trade finds itself today. Mills are modernizing. Supply chains are adapting. Wood products are showing up in new applications, new markets, and new conversations about sustainable building. …75 years is a remarkable run for any industry event. EXPO 2027 in Savannah is the next chapter, and it is one worth being part of. Exhibit space is available now, and the best locations will go quickly.

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Sustainable Forestry Initiative Announces First Round of U.S. Funding Recipients to Implement Climate Smart Forestry Practices

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
May 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Washington, D.C. — Sustainable Forestry Initiative® (SFI) is pleased to announce funding to five organizations that are expanding climate-informed management practices across 5,000 acres in five states. These awards are provided through the SFI project Advancing Carbon Stewardship Practices for Large Landowners in the United States, and targets priority interventions in the Lake States and the Pacific Northwest. Part of the SFI Climate Smart Forestry Initiative, “These awards reflect the power of large-scale forest managers to deliver meaningful climate outcomes,” said Lauren T. Cooper, Chief Conservation Officer at SFI. “By investing in forest decision-makers who are committed to long-term care of their lands in a changing climate, we are learning alongside these partners to ensure that Climate Smart Forestry practices are durable, scalable, and rooted in local expertise, priorities, and values.”

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New report shows pine beetle devastation surging in Colorado’s forests

By Lucas Boland
Rocky Mountain PBS
May 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

DENVER — A longstanding specter of the Colorado mountains is gaining ground in a new conquest of ponderosa pine forests. An outbreak of the mountain pine beetle is spreading quickly and expected to continue this summer under “prime conditions,” according to a 2025 forest health report and pine beetle article by the Colorado State Forest Service. Survey flights over parts of nine Colorado counties showed a 148% increase in beetle-impacted acreage from 2024 to 2025. Observers recorded 5,544 acres of dead or dying trees during flights last year, up from 2,236 acres the year prior. …Victimized trees were observed at nearly every Colorado latitude, from the northern border to Pueblo in the Front Range, and Grand Junction to the southern border on the Western Slope. …As of May 29, the state’s snowpack stood at 15% of median, depriving forests of moisture needed to prevent both wildfires and the spread of the pine beetle.

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The US Forest Service is too important to be a political pawn

By Dan Glickman and Ann Veneman
The Los Angeles Times
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

While most folks think that the US Department of Agriculture focuses on farm policy, the largest agency within USDA is the Forest Service. As secretaries of Agriculture during the Clinton and Bush administrations, we spent years getting to know what this agency does: not only timber management but also stewardship of the 193-million-acre National Forest System. But now, the Trump administration has taken significant steps to dramatically change the agency, to consolidate the firefighting work of USDA and Interior. …While some changes to the service appear warranted and well-intentioned, others have been criticized as seemingly intended to dismantle this storied institution. …During our tenures leading USDA, we both worked to streamline various programs and to right-size the workforce. …When leaders undertake significant changes, they need to be driven by data, based on compelling evidence and carefully reviewed facts — not based on ideology or simply meant to “shake things up.”

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The world’s largest fungus is hiding in Oregon’s Blue Mountains — and its really big

By Rebecca Shavit
The Brighter Side of News
May 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©NRCan

In Oregon’s Blue Mountains, patches of dying trees once looked like separate outbreaks, scattered across ridges and drainages as if disease had struck at random. Instead, scientists found something far stranger beneath the soil: many of those distant pockets belonged to the same fungus. That fungus, Armillaria ostoyae, covered about 9.65 square kilometers, making it the largest known individual fungus on Earth at the time of the study. It had likely been growing there for at least 1,900 years, and possibly as long as 8,650. For researchers, the discovery did more than set a record. It challenged a basic biological idea: what counts as an individual. “It’s one organism that began as a microscopic spore and then grew vegetatively, like a plant,” said Dr. Catherine Parks, a research plant pathologist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service and coordinator of the team.

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Forest Service and state of South Dakota sign agreement to work together on forest management

By Joshua Haiar
South Dakota Searchlight
May 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©USForestService

The U.S. Forest Service announced Friday that it has signed a five-year agreement to work with the state of South Dakota to carry out projects on national forest and adjacent land, possibly including timber harvesting, prescribed burning, forest thinning, grazing, and habitat and watershed restoration. …The shared stewardship agreement is between the state Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources and the Forest Service. It follows similar agreements in other states and comes after President Donald Trump’s executive order last year calling for an “immediate expansion” of American timber production. Following the initial five-year term, the agreement may be extended in increments of three years. …Specific projects involving money, services, property or other resources would require separate agreements and approvals. …“I’m suspicious that the primary reason for it is to help the Forest Service get more trees cut,” Dave Mertz, a retired Black Hills National Forest natural resource officer, said.

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University of Montana ecologist: Western forests need high-severity fire

By Laura Lundquist
Missoula Current
May 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Richard Hutto

UM ecologist Richard Hutto frowns every time he hears U.S. Forest Service managers and others make the black-and-white comparison of wildland fire as “good” if it’s low intensity and “bad” if it’s high intensity. The Trump administration is also using those reasons to justify the elimination of the 2001 Roadless Rule. …(They say) there’s ‘good’ fire and ‘bad’ fire,” Hutto told a crowd supporting the Roadless Rule a few weeks ago. “But I’m here to tell you, they’re wrong. The story is misleading. Most western conifer forests have always harbored mixed- to high-severity fire. And by most, I mean 85%, according to Land Fire database. Only 15% – mostly in Arizona and New Mexico – is low severity.” …The wide variety of species that can be found in forests prove that wildfires of all severities have burned across the landscape for centuries, creating the ecosystems that exist today.

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Conservation groups challenge Red Lodge area logging project again

By Mike Garrity
Billings Gazette
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Alliance for the Wild Rockies, Council on Wildlife and Fish, and Native Ecosystems Council filed a lawsuit in federal district court against the Custer Gallatin National Forest to stop them from sacrificing habitat for lynx, grizzly bear, elk and whitebark pine trees near the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem and just north of Yellowstone National Park to subsidize the timber industry. …The groups first sued to stop the Greater Red Lodge logging project west of Red Lodge, Montana in July 2015 and again 2021. In both cases, the court ruled that the Forest Service violated the Endangered Species Act because the logging would have harmed lynx critical habitat. …They are effectively a single, landscape-scale logging project that the Forest Service illegally split into two. …To get around the requirements to protect lynx habitat and actually analyze the effects of logging on wildlife, the Forest Service authorized the logging projects under the Healthy Forest Restoration Act.

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More than $4 million is going toward protecting Maine’s oldest trees

By Katie Delaney
News Center Maine
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

NAPLES, Maine — The New England Forestry Foundation (NEFF) is giving out grants to landowners to help preserve some of Maine’s oldest trees. The organization got $4.3 million from the U.S. Forest Service in 2024 to pay loggers to put off cutting late-successional and old-growth forests, which are typically over 100 years old. The first grant was awarded to Chaplin Logging Inc. in Naples to conserve 23 acres of late-successional forest and improve other parts of their land. This type of forest is rare for southern Maine. The one on the Chaplins’ property has been mostly untouched for likely more than a hundred years. According to Brian Milakovsky, senior forester of NEFF, these trees provide a unique habitat for many important species and they’re good for the atmosphere. …Since these trees are being taken out of production, part of the grant is going toward timber stand improvement, removing undesirable trees in landowners’ other, younger forests.

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How carbon finance could give a boost to Japan’s ailing forestry industry

By Annelise Giseburt
The Japan Times
May 31, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Japan’s forestry sector is at a crossroads. Population decline and cheap imported timber are driving down prices. Forest ownership is fragmented and small-scale, further limiting profitability. The workforce is aging and shrinking. As a result, many forests — planted decades ago, when timber profits seemed surer — are now under-managed, abandoned, or not replanted after being clear-cut. “Especially over the past few years, we have seen a lot of forest owners decide to give up their land,” says Akio Abe, associate director of the Ishinomaki District Forestry Association in Miyagi Prefecture. …Carbon credits, Abe hopes, can provide the financial backing needed to turn the Ishinomaki District woods into a boon, not a burden, for both local landowners and the environment. Together with corporate partners, the foresters are applying for credits certified by an international body, a rarity among forest carbon projects in Japan.

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Coalition makes last urgent call for changes to EU Deforestation Regulation

By Stephen Powney
The Timber Trades Journal
May 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

European timber organisations have made a last, united call for changes to be made to the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) before it comes into force this December. Eighteen organisations from various sectors, including timber, panels and packaging groups, called for an EUDR Information System “without flaws and technical constraints, aligned with business practice”. The coalition underlines that the Information System must be operationally workable and aligned with real business practices. The EUDR Information System, which represents the backbone of the traceability feature of the EU regulation, is aimed to prevent products linked to deforestation from entering the EU market. Particular coalition concerns relate to DDS aggregation, technical limitations of the TRACES-based system, the usability of simplified declarations for SMEs and micro-enterprises and the lack of clear procedures in the event of system disruptions or outages.

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Biomass’ first year of mapping Earth’s vegetation

Spatial Source
May 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

After its first year in orbit, ESA’s Biomass satellite is offering new views of Earth’s vegetation cover. Launched in April 2025, the satellite — one of the European Space Agency’s Earth Explorer missions — has been busily mapping forests and other vegetation, with the primary aim of determining the extent of stored carbon and how it changes globally with time. The spacecraft is equipped with a fully polarimetric P-band synthetic aperture radar and 12m-wide mesh antenna, used for interferometric imaging. The radar’s 70cm wavelength is optimised for penetrating forest canopies and measuring ‘biomass,’ the woody trunks, branches and stems where trees store most of their carbon. “With Biomass, we are poised to gain vital new data on how much carbon is stored in the world’s forests, helping to fill key gaps in our knowledge of the carbon cycle and, ultimately, Earth’s climate system,” said ESA’s Director of Earth Observation Programmes, Simonetta Cheli.

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