Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

CBC News speaks with Canadian provinces about wildfire season

CBC News
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

CBC News features on the Canadian wildfire season:

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Grow Your Forestry Career With One Application

Project Learning Tree Canada
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Interested in a career in forestry but don’t know where to start, or looking to grow in the field? If you are a Canadian or American between the ages of 18 and 30, apply to join PLT Canada’s free 2026 Green Mentor Cohort and start building your future in forestry today! …Not sure what your next step is? From resume tips to career guidance, Nic Weeks has got you covered. Register for PLT Canada’s Career Coaching and get the one-on-one support you need to move forward. …The interactive presentation Growing Your Career Pathway in Ontario’s Forest Sector explores the diverse and exciting job opportunities available in forestry now and in the future, where those jobs are in Ontario, and how you can land them! …Rooted for Success: Career Readiness 101: Transition from the classroom to a career in the forest and conservation sector! 

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Canada invests in climate competitive jobs for young people

By Natural Resources Canada
Government of Canada
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

As youth across Canada are working toward their future, the Government of Canada is supporting their next steps by building more pathways to rewarding careers and skills development. The Government of Canada announced $30 million to create 900 employment and skills training opportunities over two years for youth across the country in the natural resource sectors, including energy, forestry, mining, earth sciences and clean technology. Through the Science and Technology Internship Program (STIP) – Green Jobs, employers can apply for funding to hire, train and mentor youth aged 15 to 30 for up to 12 months. These jobs provide hands-on experience to help young Canadians develop marketable skills and support Canada’s clean economy. Since 2017, STIP – Green Jobs has created more than 6,000 jobs and skills training opportunities for young people in all provinces and territories. On average, about 80 percent of youth found full-time employment after participating in the program. 

Backgrounder: Ten organizations have received funding to create jobs and training opportunities for youth in the natural resource sectors, including $2,805,000 to Project Learning Tree Canada

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Criminal contempt charges approved for Walbran protesters

By Roxanne Egan-Elliott
Victoria Times Colonist
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Charges of criminal contempt have been approved for 10 people accused of breaching an injunction by blocking a Walbran Valley logging road. The charges were approved in 10 of 13 cases involving protesters who set up blockades in the area last year to prevent logging of old-growth trees. Those arrested initially faced civil contempt of court charges for the alleged breaches of the injunction. But forestry company Tsawak-qin Forestry Limited Partnership, which has rights to log in the area, asked the attorney general of B.C. in January to take over the proceedings and determine if there is enough evidence to charge those arrested with criminal contempt. …The lawyers said that if those charged plead guilty, the Crown would seek sentences ranging from a $2,250 fine to 10 days in jail, depending on whether they used devices to impede their arrest and the complexity and risk involved in those devices.

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UBC reshapes forestry research to connect nature and human health

By the UBC Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
Globe and Mail
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The University of British Columbia’s (UBC’s) Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship (FES) – formerly known as the Faculty of Forestry – is advancing research that links forests and nature-based solutions to human health and sustainable forestry. It’s training the next generation of environmental stewards to think beyond traditional forestry and toward solutions for people and the planet. “Foundationally, our focus is on forests and forestry, but it goes well beyond that,” says Dr. Robert Kozak, professor and dean of FES, which recently rebranded to better represent its expanding scope. “We wanted a name that reflected what we do, and that’s thinking about environmental issues in big, holistic, interdisciplinary ways.” The faculty’s name change is part of its evolution. “We’re just beginning to fully understand the impacts that nature and natural elements can have on human health,” Dr. Kozak says.

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Province upset because feds aren’t classifying all Alberta Crown land as ‘protected’

By Zoe Mason
Medicine Hat News
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The government of Alberta is contesting new federal environmental strategy on the grounds it has already met the benchmark outlined, a claim environmental groups describe as misleading. … Alberta Minister of Environment and Protected Areas Grant Hunter released a statement Tuesday criticizing the strategy for using what he considers a needlessly restricting definition of protected land. …However, Hunter argues that the nearly 60 per cent of tAlberta’s land base that is publicly managed Crown land should be considered protected. …According to the federal definition, only about 15 per cent of Alberta’s land is classified as protected. …The new federal nature strategy proposes funding up to 14 new marine protected and conserved areas and at least 10 new national parks and fresh water national marine conservation areas, adding at least 1.6 million square kilometres of protected lands and up to 700,000 sq. km of protected ocean over the next four years.

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BC’s forests are being reviewed to death

By Sarah Korpan, government relations, Ecojustice
National Observer
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

If reviews could save old growth, British Columbia would have the healthiest forests on Earth. Instead, the province has produced a stack of reports as tall as an ancient Douglas fir. Their wording may differ, but their conclusion does not: BC’s forestry system is broken. Fixing it will not be easy or quick, but instead of acting, the government continues to produce new reports to delay tough decisions — especially when those decisions mean standing up to large logging companies that profit most from the status quo. Rather than using the reports to inspire action, the BC government is hiding behind them. …Nearly six years into BC’s OGSR commitment, we now have a sixth report by the Provincial Forest Advisory Council called From Conflict to Care. It again concluded that systemic reform is needed in the province’s forestry regime. Each report acknowledges the same truth: what we’re doing isn’t working.

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Forestry company secures five years of wood, adding stability to sector

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A non-replaceable forest licence has been awarded to Box Lake Lumber Products, enhancing its operations and the sustainable use of local timber. The opportunity is targeted to boost B.C.’s value‑added wood sector, putting to work unlogged timber. “A stable supply of wood to small-town forestry companies is a win for everyone in the community,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “This means more wood … for manufacturing companies, logging contracts for haulers and another boost to our value-added wood manufacturing sector. Our independent wood manufacturers put B.C. on the map as the global leader in high-quality wood products, and this licence is one more way to support that work.” A competitive opportunity provided specifically to value-added wood manufacturing companies, the non-replaceable forest licence will provide a consistent and stable supply of wood to Box Lake Lumber Products in the Kootenays.

Additional coverage in Castlegar News: Nakusp wood company granted logging licence near Slocan

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The Walking Dead actress opposes zoning proposed near Cable Bay

By Jessica Durlin
The Nanaimo News Bulletin
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Sarah Wayne Callies, from AMC’s The Walking Dead, has urged her fans to oppose a Nanaimo zoning change west of Cable Bay trail. On April 16, a hearing will be held in Nanaimo, for the possible rezoning of 74.71 hectares of the total 86-hectare property at from rural resource to industrial, with site-specific provisions over its use, allowed density and lot coverage. Included in the application for rezoning is a provision of an average 100-metre buffer zone around Cable Bay trail, about 13 per cent of the property. The zoning application was submitted by Harmac Pacific. During an information session in 2024, the company shared it would like to turn the land into a private industrial park. At the time, a representative with Harmac told the News Bulletin that the process to lease out the land would be phased over many years, and it would be marketed to businesses that “might have synergies” with Harmac’s existing business. 

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When a Provincial Park Is Open for Private Business

By Sarah Cox
The Tyee
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A private company is seeking exclusive rights to part of a coastal park near Victoria, sparking concerns about the B.C. government’s priorities for public wilderness areas. One With Nature Corp. aims to use 72 hectares of East Sooke Regional Park, …for an outdoor education and wilderness survival skills school. Five hectares near a hiking trail would be used for overnight accommodation and would be off limits to the public if approved. …The school would include an archery range, an outbuilding to process animals, a learning centre, a camping area, bathrooms, a boat dock and cabins built with trees the company would cut down in its exclusive use area, according to One With Nature’s application to the B.C. government. …A spokesperson for the B.C. Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship said the land is available because it was never transferred to the regional district or dedicated as park land when the East Sooke protected area was created in 1970.

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Wildfires play major role in boreal forest biodiversity: report

By Derek Cornet
Laronge Now
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

LA RONGE, Saskatchewan — With Canada aiming to protect 30 per cent of land and water by 2030, a new study shows the federal government should pursue a conservation method which takes wildfires into account. That’s according to La Ronge’s Aaron Bell, who recently had a research paper published by the Ecological Society of America on March 30 as part of his PhD in Biology. The project, which includes experiments on 42 islands in the Lac La Ronge region, focused on testing competing ideas on how government’s design protected areas such as nature reserves, or provincial and national parks. …Bell proposing government’s use a pyrodiversity-biodiversity method, which promotes and maintains diverse plants and fauna and thereby generating diversity. …“I’m hoping it enables people in the North to say we’re not managing fires at all for biodiversity and maybe this is something we should think about moving forward,” he said. 

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Wildfire-risk reduction harvesting in Mule Deer Winter Range near Alkali Lake largely compliant

By Tanner Senko, Communications Manager
BC Forest Practices Board
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

WILLIAMS LAKE – The Forest Practices Board has completed an investigation into wildfire risk reduction harvesting in wildlife habitat areas near Alkali Lake in the Cariboo, following a complaint that activities did not meet legal requirements. The board found that most activities met those requirements, with one administrative error resulting in two non-compliances. The board received a complaint in July 2024 alleging that harvesting in mule deer winter range and old-growth management areas did not meet legal requirements and commitments set out in forest plans. Investigators reviewed five cutblocks harvested since 2020 within these areas as part of wildfire risk reduction treatments. Four cutblocks met requirements. In one case, harvesting proceeded without a required exemption, resulting in non-compliance with both forest stewardship plan commitments and general wildlife measures. While the exemption was not obtained, the board observed that the work on the ground reduced wildfire risk and maintained mature forest cover important for mule deer winter habitat.

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Watchdog’s report on controversial RCMP unit delayed due to lack of chairperson

By Chantelle Bellrichard
CBC News
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A years-long investigation into a special RCMP unit that polices protests against resource extraction in BC is finished but can’t be finalized because the RCMP’s oversight body has been without a chairperson for more than a year. The Civilian Review and Complaints Commission (CRCC) receives and oversees public complaints against the Mounties. It recently announced the completion of a systemic investigation into the Community-Industry Response Group (C-IRG), which drew national attention in 2019. …It’s unclear why the CRCC has been without a chairperson since January 2025. …At the top level of the agency there is meant to be a chairperson and up to four other members. According to the CRCC, all of those positions are currently vacant. …The majority of complaints against C-IRG came in response to civil court injunction enforcements and arrests in relation to Wet’suwet’en-led opposition to Coastal GasLink pipeline and protests against old-growth logging in the Fairy Creek area.

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Wildfire strategy reshapes logging plans in Bragg Creek

By Izaiah Louis Reyes
Airdrie City View
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The widely discussed West Fraser forest management plan for West Bragg Creek and Moose Mountain has been updated to incorporate a new provincial wildfire mitigation program. West Fraser outlined the changes during its annual spring open house April 1 at the Cochrane RancheHouse, including a new supplementary harvest area in West Bragg Creek and a delayed timeline for Moose Mountain operations. The updates align with Alberta’s Community Hazardous Fuels Reduction (CHFR) program, introduced last year to reduce wildfire risk near vulnerable communities. “Working with forest companies, the program prioritizes the harvest of hazardous fuels within five kilometres of surrounding vulnerable communities,” the province said in an information package. “The CHFR program leverages existing forest tenure holders to adjust harvesting plans to make an immediate impact.” …“They’ve asked us as industry to prioritize our operations in that area,” said Tyler Steneker, woodlands manager for West Fraser Cochrane. 

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NDP must lead on forests says MLA for Saanich North and the Islands

By Rob Botterell
Gulf Islands Driftwood
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Rob Botterell

“Talk and log” old growth, mill closures, drought, wildfires, lack of value-added products from second-growth forests and climate change have shaken the very foundations of the forest sector in our province. Key NDP forestry initiatives such as the Old Growth Strategic Review have stalled. Nor is the province any closer to protecting 30 per cent of the B.C. land base by 2030, implementing the biodiversity and ecosystem health framework, local watershed governance and a paradigm shift to a sustainable industry that protects workers and communities. Following the money tells the same story: the Ministry of Forests’ 2026 budget is $910 million, essentially unchanged from last year. No new money means no new effort to deliver on previous NDP forestry promises. …as the Green Caucus forests critic, I will continue to press for immediate implementation of the PFAC report, as well as full implementation of the Old Growth Strategic Review, 30X30, the biodiversity and ecosystem health framework, and local watershed governance.

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Save Okanagan & Peachland Old Growth Forests & Water

Letter by Taryn Skalbania
Kelowna Capital News
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Do you know the Okanagan is home to some of the very last remnants of interior old growth fir and spruce forests, specifically Peachland’s watershed, near Glen Lake? Do you know Glen Lake is a major source of our community drinking water, as it joins Peachland Creek before supplying our brand-new $35M water treatment plant? …Tell your government, Peachland’s trees are not destined for mills, ships to Asia or a flailing forestry industry safety-net. Peachland watershed’s forests are worth more standing, they store 83 per cent more carbon than pine plantations and mono-culture conifer farms. Most importantly we rely on their free infrastructure services and natural ecosystem benefits. …Act now before your back country is compromised. Four ways to make a stand! Write, call, online submissions and a petition…

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Nakusp wood company granted logging licence near Slocan

The Nelson Star
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

NAKUSP, BC — A Nakusp company has been awarded a five-year licence to log in an area west of Slocan. Box Lake Lumber Products will be allowed to harvest approximately 445 truckloads of logs per year, according an April 8 announcement by the Ministry of Forests. The accepted bid allows the company to access Interfor’s Tree Farm Licence 3, located south of Valhalla Provincial Park on what the ministry describes as steep mountain slopes where wood has been damaged by wildfires and pests. “This licence will help us secure logs to keep our mill operating,” said Box Lake Lumber Products president Daniel Wiebe. “We look forward to working with the ministry and Interfor, and are very appreciative of their support.” Box Lake Lumber Products, located southeast of Nakusp, specializes in split-rail fencing that it ships to North American and European markets. The licence is part of the province’s Value-Added Accelerators program.

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Tla’amin Nation, B.C. enhance collaborative stewardship

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
April 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Government of British Columbia and Tla’amin Nation have signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) to enhance collaborative stewardship actions in Tla’amin Nation territory, focusing on advancing key treaty commitments through a shared stewardship framework. The MOU, or the yiχmɛtštəm ʔəms gɩǰɛ Territorial Stewardship Action Plan, sets out how the B.C. government and Tla’amin Nation will work together to care for land and water, heritage resources, and Tla’amin wildlife harvesting rights in the region. In the Tla’amin language, yiχmɛtštəm ʔəms gɩǰɛ means “together we are taking care of the land.” “With the signing of this memorandum of understanding, the Province and Tla’amin Nation have taken a significant step forward to implement key commitments of the Tla’amin Treaty,” said Randene Neill, Minister of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship.

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New Brunswick hiring more year-round firefighters, buying planes as fire season begins

By Eli Ridder
Canadian Press
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Susan Holt

FREDERICTON – New Brunswick’s government kicked off wildfire season earlier than usual on Wednesday as it announced millions of dollars in spending to improve its preparedness ahead of what’s expected to be another dry summer. The province will spend $6.7 million to increase the number of year-round firefighting forest rangers to 169, up from 95. It’s also allocated $3 million to secure availability for four Fire Boss specialized water-scooping aircraft. Premier Susan Holt said the government learned from a “scary and stressful time” last year after hundreds of fires burned more than 30 square kilometres of land to give the province its worst wildfire season in decades, according to government figures. As Holt announced the start to wildfire season, which typically begins in the third week of April, she said she wanted to calm public anxiety ahead of this summer. 

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Forest Nova Scotia Strengthens Canadian Forest Owners network

Canadian Forest Owners
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

OTTAWA, ON—Canadian Forest Owners (CFO) is pleased to welcome Forest Nova Scotia to its membership, expanding its national network in Nova Scotia, home to Canada’s largest private forest region. The province has the highest proportion of privately owned forest land in the country, supported by a diverse ownership base and a highly integrated forest sector. “Forest Nova Scotia represents a strong diversity of interests within its membership and is a valuable complement to our existing Nova Scotia members, including the Federation of Nova Scotia Woodland Owners and several large corporate members,” said Andrew de Vries, CEO of Canadian Forest Owners. “Forest Nova Scotia will further strengthen our national policy efforts and help raise awareness of the important role private forests play across Canada.” CFO represents approximately 480,000 private forest owners nationwide. Collectively, they manage 10% of Canada’s forest land base, contribute 20% of forest production, and play a vital role in sustainable forest management across the country.

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First Recipients Announced for Community Wildfire Prevention and Mitigation Program

By Forestry, Agriculture and Lands
Government of Newfoundland and Labrador
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The initial round of funding under the Community Wildfire Prevention and Mitigation Program will help communities across the province reduce the risk of wildfire and better protect homes, critical infrastructure, and the environment around them. An investment of approximately $2.26 million will help 58 communities develop community wildfire resiliency plans and community-based wildfire prevention/mitigation projects. A list of successful applicants is available in the backgrounder below. Applications for the first round of funding were submitted to the newly formed Newfoundland and Labrador FireSmart Committee. A technical sub-committee reviewed the applications. Recommendations for funding were based on whether the proposed activity qualified for funding under the parameters of the program, the quality of the application, and the value of the proposed activity to reduce the risk of wildfire for that area/community.

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The surprising truth about logging

By Benji Jones
Vox
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The value of forest ecosystems is hard to overstate. …It’s for this reason that environmental advocates widely opposed a plan announced by the Trump administration last spring. …Failing to “fully exploit” forests for timber, Trump said, weakens our economic security, degrades fish and wildlife habitat, and sets the stage for wildfire disasters. …It is indeed hard to see a good intention for our nation’s forests through Trump’s track record. …Yet there are two important points these concerns tend to overlook, starting out with this: Logging isn’t always the environmental boogeyman it’s made out to be. …The first thing to know is that many of our public forests are already not in a truly “natural” state. …While it may sound counterintuitive, selective logging or thinning — i.e., removing some but not all of the trees — can actually make these forests healthier.

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The U.S. Forest Service is closing down research stations ahead of a catastrophic wildfire season

By Kristin Toussaint
Fast Company
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Last week, the US Forest Service announced that it will be closing three-quarters of its research facilities as part of a reorganization. Now, experts are worried not only about the number of scientists who might be leaving the agency, but also about how the disruption could affect the gathering and dissemination of crucial wildfire and climate change data. The restructuring comes as parts of the US face what is expected to be a catastrophic wildfire season. The most recent wildland fire outlook shows that wildfire activity is already “well above average,” with more than 16,000 wildfires reported this year. Under the reorganization plan, the Forest Service will close 57 of 77 research facilities, as well as move its headquarters from Washington, D.C., to Salt Lake City, Utah. It will also close all nine of its regional offices; some states will then get their own offices, but others will be consolidated. 

Additional coverage in News from the States: Drought and low snowpack raise wildfire risk as Trump’s budget creates a funding puzzle

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Invasive plant drives ecological change in America’s gigantic Selway–Bitterroot Wilderness

By Lyle Lewis
Mongabay
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The Selway–Bitterroot Wilderness was part of the original class of lands designated under the United States’ 1964 Wilderness Act: 1.3 million acres of steep river canyons, cold subalpine ridges, dense forest, and weather so unforgiving it shapes everything that survives there. It remains one of the most remote places in the continental U.S. …But unlike Yellowstone, it isn’t wolves or ungulates driving the most dramatic changes here. It is something easier to overlook: a lavender-flowered invader spreading through meadows, ridgetops, and the dim understory of the forest. …Thirty years ago, spotted knapweed (Centaurea stoebe) crept in from private inholdings and from hay carried by packhorse hunters. Few noticed until it was impossible to ignore. A biologist I knew was spraying it from horseback in the early 2000s, trying to hold the line. It didn’t matter. …And knapweed is not merely a competitor; it is a slow-motion trophic cascade. It suppresses native forbs, reducing nectar for pollinators. 

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US Forest Service seeks big increase for timber operations

By Marc Heller
E&E News by Politico
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

For more than a year, the Trump administration has said it wants to harvest more timber from national forests. Now, officials are asking Congress to pay for the promise. The administration’s budget request would more than quadruple Forest Service spending on timber preparation and sales in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1, even as many other agency priorities face steep reductions or elimination. The proposal calls for $175 million in the forest products account, up from $39 million this year. The administration didn’t ask for an increase a year ago, as it was settling in after taking the reins from the Biden administration. Spending on forest products has been flat for years, said Nick Smith, a spokesperson for the American Forest Resource Council, which represents companies harvesting timber from federal lands… saying the requested increase was a long-overdue investment in a programme that had operated at a small scale for decades. [to access the full story an E&E subscription is required]

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Trump’s Forest Service Reorganization: Timber Over Conservation

By Ethan Brooks
The Times News
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The administrative architecture of America’s national forests is undergoing its most radical transformation in decades. In a series of swift moves designed to prioritize industrial output over conservation, the Trump administration has initiated a sweeping overhaul of the US Forest Service (USFS), relocating its headquarters and dismantling the regional oversight structures. …By moving the agency’s center of gravity from Washington, DC, to Salt Lake City, Utah, and shuttering nine regional offices, the administration is pivoting away from a centralized, science-driven conservation model toward a decentralized system focused on the immediate extraction of timber and wood products. For rural America, the impact is twofold. While the administration is pumping hundreds of millions of dollars into the timber industry and sawmill infrastructure, the move guts the scientific research and environmental safeguards that many rural communities rely on. This transition effectively replaces long-term ecological stewardship with a short-term commodity-driven mandate.

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Conservation groups hold public meetings on Oregon forest protections after feds won’t

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Public Broadcasting
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Before issuing sweeping protections on more than 30% of U.S. Forest Service-managed lands in 2001, federal officials spent more than a year holding 600 meetings across Western states and received more than 1.6 million public comments. …But federal officials have not held a single public meeting since they announced in August an effort to terminate the 2001 Roadless Rule, which prohibits road construction, logging and mining on roughly 60 million acres of public land, including about 2 million acres of forests in Oregon. …Instead, U.S. Rep. Andrea Salinas — a Democrat representing Oregon’s Willamette Valley and ranking member of the House Agriculture Committee’s forestry subcommittee — and several conservation groups led by the Oregon chapter of the Sierra Club are taking up the mantle. …The U.S. Department of Agriculture has so far opened a single three-week comment period since its leader, Brooke Rollins, proposed terminating the rule in August.

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Forest Service axes research stations as severe fire season threatens Pacific Northwest

By John Ryan
KUOW News
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The U.S. Forest Service is shutting down research stations around the country, including centers in Portland, Seattle, and Wenatchee, Washington. Though much of the stations’ research is long-term, some fire experts say the cuts could hamper firefighting efforts as soon as this summer. …The agency is shutting down 50 of its 70 research stations. More than 200 people work in the Northwest research stations that are closing. …“There is a position for every permanent employee willing to accept reassignment,” Forest Service Chief Thomas Schultz Jr. said in a memo to research branch staff. Schultz Jr., a Trump appointee, was previously a lobbyist for Idaho Forest Group, one of the nation’s largest lumber producers, based in Coeur d’Alene. …Nick Smith, a spokesperson for the American Forest Resource Council, a Western states timber industry group, said he welcomes the Forest Service restructuring.

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Another year, another drought emergency declared in Washington state

By Dyer Oxley
Oregon Public Broadcasting
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

As Washington’s current snowpack conditions become worse than last year, a statewide drought emergency has been declared. It’s the fourth drought emergency for the state in as many years. According to Casey Sixkiller, director of the Washington State Department of Ecology, “widespread shortages and challenges across our state” are expected. “Going into April with half of our usual snowpack is alarming,” Sixkiller said. “… Issuing a drought emergency now helps water users prepare for what is likely to be a very difficult summer. This is becoming an all-too-common experience and is another example of how climate change is visibly reshaping our landscape.” The Department of Ecology declared the drought emergency on April 8.

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New U.S. Forest Service unit aims to support timber economy

David Lepeska, Editor
Jefferson County Monitor
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MONTANA — The U.S. Forest Service plans to create a logging unit across regional national forests, seeking to boost economic stability by committing to process timber only via local businesses. The new Sustained Yield Unit – a concept created by 1944 federal law – would include 22 Montana counties and all of Helena-Lewis & Clark and Beaverhead-Deerlodge national forests, as well as most of Custer Gallatin. …Speaking for the Governor’s Office, Amanda Kaster, director of Montana’s Department of Natural Resources and Conservation, expressed the state’s strong support. …The draft plan estimates that the unit would directly support 192 jobs per year over the next decade, plus an additional 225 jobs via economic ripple effects. But the Marks saw the yield unit’s harvest plan as inadequately ambitious. …Barb Cestero, Montana director at the Wilderness Society, feared that given the Forest Service’s recent staff cuts, a potential over-emphasis on logging could be problematic.

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Trump Administration Declares War on American Conservation

By Glynn Wilson
The New American Journal
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

COULTERVILLE, California – Teddy Roosevelt, John Muir and Gifford Pinchot are turning over in their graves as Donald Trump launches a devastating war against the conservation movement. “With the subtlety of a wrecking ball and the morality of a foreclosure notice the Trump administration announced the most devastating attack on the US Forest Service in the agency’s 121-year history. …The administration announced it would move the USFS headquarters out of Washington, D.C. to Salt Lake City, Utah. “They’re shuttering every single one of the 10 regional offices that have governed this agency and with them, the career professionals,” wrote Jim Pattiz. More than 50 research outlets across 31 states are set to close, labs that house decades of irreplaceable long-term science, “the kind you literally cannot restart once it’s gone,” Pattiz says. …Unfortunately, conservation groups like the Sierra Club built by John Muir have lost their focus and their power to bring change.

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Supporting Roadless Rule is rational for economic, ecological reasons

By George Wuerthner
The Bozeman Daily Chronicle
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

In 2001, the Forest Service signed the Roadless Rule. The Trump administration is seeking to rescind the rule. During a brief public comment period, 99% of the respondents opposed the idea. The Roadless Rule affected 58.5 million acres of Forest Service roadless lands and put them off-limits to new road construction, logging, and road reconstruction. As the Forest Service recognized in its original review, these roadless lands “have the greatest likelihood of altering and fragmenting landscapes, resulting in immediate, long-term loss of roadless area values and characteristics.” Abolishing protection from logging and roading provided by the Roadless Rule has major economic consequences, both in direct costs and in avoided costs. For instance, a practical rationale for the rule is the Forest Service’s acknowledgment that the roughly 370,000 miles of existing Forest Service road network could not be maintained. There is already an $11 billion backlog in road maintenance, and creating even more roads would exacerbate this situation.

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How a dubious emergency timber directive is fast-tracking logging into 25 million acres of protected wilderness

By Dillon Osleger
High Country News
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

For the last 25 years, 58 million acres of American forest have had no new roads, no logging equipment, and no reason to appear on anyone’s industrial map. This year that is changing — and much faster than most people realize. The 2001 Roadless Rule has functioned as a safeguard for some of the most secluded and pristine lands in the Western US. …On June 23, 2025, Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced the intent to rescind the rule entirely. As of 2026, the process has moved into its most critical phase; the USDA has announced an imminent release of the draft environmental impact statement and a formal proposed rule this spring. This release triggers a final public comment period. Compounding this shift, on March 31, the USDA issued a formal reorganization order for the Forest Service. This structural overhaul, including the moving or closure of regional offices and science centers, is anticipated to accelerate the implementation of extraction orders.

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Mississippi State University researchers enhance original forestry decision-making software

Mississippi State University
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Steve Bullard

STARKVILLE, Miss.—Mississippi State researchers have developed an updated version of a widely used forestry decision-making tool, improving accessibility and usability while maintaining its analytical strength. Originally created in 1999 by a team of scientists in the university’s Forest and Wildlife Research Center, the Forest Valuation and Investment Analysis software program, known as FORVAL, helps foresters and other land managers quantify and evaluate complex management decisions. Steve Bullard, CFR associate dean and FWRC associate director, who helped create the program, led the development of FORVAL-XL, the new version built specifically for Microsoft Excel. “This is the most user-friendly version yet,” Bullard said. “We maintain the ability to make complex calculations, including varied costs and revenues over time, but new features include discounted cash-flow results, sensitivity analyses and easy-to-read tables and graphs to support informed forest management decisions. The final product can also be easily exported as a PDF for sharing.”

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Leading cause of tree death in Northeast shifts from logging to natural causes

By University of Vermont
Vermont Business Magazine
April 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

New research suggests that in just 15 years, the causes of most tree loss have flipped from human hands to a handful of natural causes. University of Vermont researchers studied forests in 18 states: in 2009, human harvesting accounted for most tree loss, but by 2024, pests, diseases, and other “natural” causes activities were causing far more tree loss. They compared nearly 324,000 records of tree mortality across 18 states and almost 62,000,000 hectares, from the federal Forest Inventory and Analysis dataset from 2009 to 2024. In 2009, human harvesting caused a bit more tree loss than natural causes. Fifteen years later, tree loss from natural causes was outpacing harvest-caused loss by nearly 40%, and overall tree loss also increased by nearly 16% during this period. It wasn’t a change the researchers were looking for. 

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New Specialized Sawmill Outside Boston Taps Potential of Urban Forests

By Justin Wolf
The Green Building Advisor
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

BOSTON — Urban forestry is a noble and necessary pursuit, yielding environmental and health benefits almost too numerous to count. …Urban forests, broadly speaking, also happen to be sources of large amounts of wood waste. The most recent estimates from the USDA Forest Service indicate that 46 million tons of sellable wood from urban areas is felled each year, most of which gets chipped, landfilled, or burned for energy. There is a missed opportunity afoot; not one of those pathways—with the possible exception of biomass power generation—involves making something of tangible value that’s inversely proportional to the amount of waste being generated. …Tridome Structures, a Massachusetts-based manufacturer of mass timber products, saw the gap in the Northeast market and acted accordingly. Only six months ago, the company opened a subsidiary mill operation called TimberWise in the town of Millis, a Boston suburb.

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Illinois Forestry Expert on U.S. Forest Service Reorganization

Morning AgClips
April 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Chris Evans

URBANA, Ill. — Last week, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced a substantial reorganization of the Forest Service, moving its headquarters to Salt Lake City, Utah, and closing its existing regional offices. According to the announcement, the move is designed to move leadership “closer to the forests and communities it serves.” Chris Evans, forestry expert with University of Illinois Extension in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, explains the role of the Forest Service and how the change could affect public lands. …”Anytime there is a shift of this scale, there will be an adjustment period. I hope that all of the vital missions and services that the Forest Service provides will continue uninterrupted, but we will have to see how things shake out. For forests of Illinois, the research being conducted by the Forest Service’s Northern Research Station is incredibly important, as it looks at oak ecosystem sustainability and invasive species management…”

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Study finds Tasmanian native forest logging increases potential for more severe bushfires

By Madeleine Rojahn
ABC News, Australia
April 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Scientists have analysed satellite images of bushfire damage and found that regrowth eucalypt forest is much more flammable than mature forest, which act as “natural fire breaks”. …David Bowman, a professor of pyrogeography who co-authored the study, said the findings supported earlier research suggesting younger trees were more flammable due to their denser canopies. Professor Bowman said this raised concerns around community safety and the sustainability of the state’s timber industry. …Suzette Weeding, from the state-owned producer Sustainable Timber Tasmania (STT), said she acknowledged Dr Bowman’s study and the importance of continued bushfire research, but noted multiple factors shaped bushfire risk. …Professor Bowman said this was true due to mature trees acting as natural fire breaks, but fire-risk could arise when large landscapes were made up of regrowth.

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Forest loss persists despite certification and protection

Chris Taylor, Maldwyn Evans & David Lindenmayer, The Australian National University
Nature.com
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Forest loss is a significant global problem. Forest certification schemes and protected areas are two key approaches for improving forest conservation and management outcomes, but their effectiveness in reducing national-level forest loss remains unclear. Here, we analysed an 11-year high-resolution satellite dataset on tree canopy removal from 2013 to 2023 to assess associations between forest loss, certification, protection, and economic factors globally. We found that forest loss persisted globally with no evidence of decline in countries with higher levels of certification under the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) or the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC). Forest loss was lower in higher-income countries (measured by gross domestic product per capita) and higher where industrial roundwood and fuelwood production was greater. While forest certification may improve management of certified forests, our results suggest limited effectiveness in reducing overall forest loss. Strengthening certification and protected-area strategies will be essential to slow global forest loss.

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Vanimo ideal for forestry downstream processing, official says

The National Papua New Guinea
April 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

©Wikipedia

PAPUA New Guinea Forest Authority (PNGFA) managing director John Mosoro says Vanimo is ideal for the development of forestry downstream processing. Mosoro said there was potential to expand shipping infrastructure to export processed timber. “The ban on round-log exports policy will be implemented by the time the processing facilities are built and able to export processed timber and non-timber forest products like paper, wood pellets which are high-density biomass fuel for energy production, etc) directly from Vanimo to international markets supported through the Vanimo Forestry SEZ, as well as supplies for local consumption,” he said. There are three sustainable forest management area (FMA) projects operating in Sandaun (West Sepik): Amanab 1 to 4 and Imonda FMA; Amanab 5 and 6 FMA; and, Aitape Lumi FMA. “These projects are operating within a 50-year lifespan subject to project reviews every five years and will support the sustainability of the timber supply to the processing facilities for export,” Mosoro said.

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