Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Syilx Okanagan file emergency order for Canada to save southern B.C. caribou

By Evert Lindquist
Victoria News
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Syilx Okanagan Nation is petitioning the federal government to act swiftly to protect a prized and threatened caribou species that continues to fall off the map near Revelstoke and Nakusp. On May 28, the Nation announced it had filed for an emergency order under Section 80 of Canada’s Species at Risk Act to press Environment and Climate Change Canada to conserve federally threatened southern mountain caribou. The Nation says continued logging of critical old-growth habitat falls out of line with its forestry principles and standards, and jeopardizes the future of the three caribou herds that remain on Syilx territory. The Frisby-Boulder herd west of Revelstoke is already functionally extinct with just eight caribou, while the Central Selkirk herd … sits at around 27 caribou. The Columbia North herd, roughly 185 caribou strong in the Monashee Mountains north of Revelstoke, has the greatest likelihood of survival, though the Nation says long-term forest habitat recovery remains a challenge.

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Indigenous-led forest rehabilitation work at Palmer Lake site creating opportunities

By Yashvika Grover
The Williams Lake Tribune
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC) recently highlighted the Indigenous-led efforts of the Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. (CCR) at the Palmer Lake forest fire site. Through an article and video, WPAC described CCR’s work and how it treats fire-affected stands by removing dead and damaged material, reducing fuel loading, and spacing young lodgepole pine to support forest recovery. It is also demonstrated how the CCR uses recovered fibre to be put to productive use rather than leaving it at the site. “It’s such a good news story,” wrote Gord Murray, WPAC executive director. “CCR is turning what might otherwise be seen as waste into jobs, economic development, community pride, and contributions to the biomass industry.”

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Province establishes new compliance, enforcement agency for natural-resource sector

By Ministry of Environment and Parks
Government of British Columbia
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Province is creating a unified agency to bring together several compliance and enforcement functions from across the natural-resource sector, enhancing environmental protections and supporting a more fair and predictable business environment.  The BC Compliance and Enforcement Agency (BC-CEA) will take effect Wednesday, July 1, 2026. By consolidating several enforcement functions from natural-resource ministries, the change will improve consistency and timeliness of services, enhance accountability, and achieve efficiencies by bringing enforcement, compliance and investigations, as well as corporate and digital services, into a single integrated model that supports more co-ordinated operations, better data alignment and stronger, more consistent enforcement.

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Protest against logging in old growth falls short of intended audience

By Timothy Schafer
Castanet
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

It’s the universal Kootenay question: if a protest happens in Nelson, does Victoria hear? On Monday the answer was not likely, since a planned protest in Nelson against old growth logging had been organized for Premier David Eby’s arrival in the Heritage city, but he did not materialize. However, the message for the 150 people — some representing environmental groups from across the region — who arrived in front of the Kootenay Central constituency office in Nelson was clear and strong: stop old growth logging now or suffer the consequences. …Valhalla Wilderness Society biologist Amber Peters has been working on protecting ancient inland temperate rainforests in the Kootenay region for the last nine years, and has continued to “witness ancient growth and old growth forests fall.” She said the province is in “late stage corporate capture” because promises are being broken.

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Protesters urge province to follow through on old-growth promises

By Storrm Lennie
My Nelson Now
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Local forest advocates gathered in Nelson on Monday to call on Premier David Eby’s government to increase protections for old-growth forests. Eby was in the region this week, visiting and touring local facilities. More than 140 people attended a demonstration outside Kootenay Central MLA Brittny Anderson’s office… Organizer Rita Corcoran said protesters relocated to Taghum Hall after learning Eby was expected to attend an event there. …“We were hoping to talk to him directly and give him that same message directly in person about what we want and that we feel disappointed in the leadership,” said Corcoran. “But he didn’t arrive.” …“I’ve seen the premier meet with protesters across the province, and I know he would have been happy to meet with them here in Nelson as well,” Anderson said. “The RCMP made a security assessment, and we have to respect the decision that they made.”

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Inviting residents of Kootenay Lake region to help guide forest management

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Residents in Nelson, Creston, Kaslo and surrounding areas are invited to share their input on the development of the Kootenay Lake Forest Landscape Plan (FLP) to guide forest-management decisions in the area. The Kootenay Lake FLP initiative focuses on improving forest management for the 1.2-million-hectare Kootenay Lake Timber Supply Area. People can share their thoughts through a survey from June 22 until Aug. 21, 2026. The Kootenay Lake FLP team will be present at local events so people can learn more about forest landscape planning and ask questions. …FLPs are being developed through collaborative planning with First Nations and engagement with forest licensees, local communities and other stakeholders in each local area. The partnering First Nations in the Kootenay Lake FLP are yaqan nuʔkiy, Shuswap Band, Adams Lake Band, Skwlāx te Secwepemcúl̓ecw and Ktunaxa Nation Council Society.

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Be Not Afraid. Bats Are Amazing

By Kerry Banks
The Tyee
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

In his 2025 book, The Genius Bat, Yossi Yovel, an Israeli ecologist, describes experiments he conducted with six Egyptian fruit bats, including an exercise in which he trained them to land on a target and wait for him to approach with a reward — a slice of banana. …Many readers will find the image of bats as trainable, friendly and possessing intelligence, distinct personalities and perhaps even a sense of humour to be quite jarring. But this effect is exactly what Yovel is striving to achieve. His goal with the book is to dispel the many myths surrounding bats and to convey what remarkable and endlessly fascinating creatures they actually are. …Due to misinformation many people are unaware of the benefits bats provide by eating massive amounts of harmful insects, producing guano, which is an important natural fertilizer, and pollinating plants and spreading seeds. Without bats, humans would be in deep trouble.

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Columbia Shuswap protective services manager urges haste on ‘Canada on Fire’ recommendations

By Barb Brouwer
Victoria News
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Wildfires in Canada are now a crisis. Canada on Fire, a report of the federal Standing Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, calls for immediate action on managing the rapidly escalating wildfires across the country and the impact they have on forestry and agriculture industries as well as rural and Indigenous communities. Considering the report to have many positive aspects, Derek Sutherland, the Columbia Shuswap Regional District’s general manager of community and protective services, has concerns about the roles of the federal and provincial governments, including their ability to respond to wildfires quickly and the need for long-term funding for wildfire mitigation programs. …The report indicates there is no single authority responsible for wildfire preparedness, response and recovery in Canada and that municipalities struggle with limited resources, including adequate evacuation supports and training for firefighters. …Overall, Sutherland called the recommendations contained within the report “super positive,” but cautioned that putting them into play quickly is important.

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Millions in Forest ‘Enhancement’ Funds May Be Spurring More Logging

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbians are subsidizing the province’s forest companies to the tune of tens of millions of dollars each year under a government program that defrays the cost of shipping logs from remote forests to distant mills. In 2023, logging companies received nearly $33 million in public funds to underwrite the costs of hauling “low-value” logs to wood pulp and pellet mills. …The subsidies are posted online by the Forest Enhancement Society of BC, or FESBC, an organization created and funded by the provincial government and that reports to Forests Minister Ravi Parmar. The society’s mandate includes “preventing and mitigating the impact of wildfires” and “improving habitat for wildlife.” But many FESBC funds simply underwrite the increasing costs of hauling logs. Those expenses have been marching upward as logging activities push farther into the hinterland. That has some questioning whether the funding is accelerating the logging of forests, rather than enhancing them.

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B.C. environmental group’s ad campaign during World Cup puts spotlight on old-growth logging

By Tiffany Crawford
Vancouver Sun
June 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

If you were downtown in Vancouver on Thursday celebrating Canada’s big win at the World Cup you may have noticed several large billboards alerting visitors to one of B.C.’s controversial forest practices. Environmental group Sierra Club B.C. launched ads this month to coincide with the Cup in Vancouver to put the spotlight on logging of B.C.’s old-growth forest. The ads, which are online, on buildings, streaming in bars and restaurants, on TV and on billboards downtown and at SkyTrain stations, say an average of 100 soccer fields of old-growth forest in B.C. are still being clear-cut every day. This figure is from a 2025 report by the same group on the state of B.C.’s forests called Closer to the Brink. …B.C.’s Forest Ministry said in an emailed statement that there are 111,000 square kilometres of old forests and, of that, 89,000 are either protected, deferred or uneconomic to harvest, or 80 per cent of old-growth forest.

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New Forest Act introduced at Powell River City Hall

By Paul Galinski
The Powell River Peak
June 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Jennifer Houghton

City of Powell River councillors were introduced to a proposed New Forest Act, which would change the way that forests in BC are managed. On June 18, Jennifer Houghton, campaign director from Boundary Forest Watershed Stewardship Society, introduced the act and its implications for public and private forested lands and community watersheds. “The New Forest Act is a citizen-developed legislative proposal that has been under development for several years, with input from foresters, scientists, rural residents and people from communities across BC,” said Houghton. “I’m here to discuss the larger forestry system that governs BC, how it affects communities, and a proposal for a replacement.” Houghton said she wanted to focus on three questions. The first was: what problem is the proposal trying to solve? The second was: what is the New Forest Act? The third was: why would it matter to communities like Powell River?

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Witnessing Wildfire Forest Recovery: My Visit to the Cariboo Chilcotin Region

By Gordon Murray
The Wood Pellet Association of Canada
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

I recently had the opportunity to see firsthand how Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. (CCR), a joint venture of three First Nations, is transforming stands of burned trees just outside Williams Lake, BC, into a fibre source for wood pellet and pulp & paper production. We recorded the visit so that others could experience what we saw. …The recovered deadwood is chipped, ground, and used in pulp, paper and wood pellet production. WPAC members will take the lower-end fibre and pelletize it for use in a renewable, low-carbon energy source that can help displace fossil fuels in heat and power generation. It’s such a good new story. CCR is turning what might otherwise be seen as waste into jobs, economic development, community pride, and contributions to the biomass industry. At the same time, they are strengthening partnerships across industry and government—collaboration that is essential to scaling these solutions.

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Bees and Bark

By Melissa Steidle
Woodlots BC
June 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Did you know that BC has nearly 600 native bee species? This is among the highest diversity in Canada. The Southern Interior alone has around 400 species. The forest provides both forage opportunities and nesting habitat for bees. Many bee species live in trees, specifically cracks, bark sloughs and small crevices. So snags! We knew they were good for something. Over the decomposition of a standing tree it provides different types of standing habitat. As the tree rots, the bark begins to slough. Sloughing Bark on a snag is an important old forest attribute. While we can’t maintain everything in a block, keeping snags provides habitat for a variety of bees and other insects.

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Polinators, Plants and Forestry in Eastern Canada

By Joe Bowden, Lucas Brehaut and Healy Hamilton
Sustainable Forestry Initiative Blog
June 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEWFOUNDLAND — Pollinators play a critical role in ecosystems around the world. Pollination is essential for the majority of the fruits and vegetables we depend on for our agricultural systems. But pollination is just as critical for the health of our forest ecosystems. This makes the well-documented downward trend of global insect populations very concerning, including in northern regions, where climate change may be exacerbating the drivers of pollinator decline. …In the boreal forest of the Island of Newfoundland, a diverse group of partners are working to understand the role of managed forests in conserving pollinating bees and other insects. …The team is studying plant and pollinator diversity across forests of differing ages and therefore different stages of forest regeneration. This project aims to advance ecological understanding of how the biodiversity of plants and pollinators change in response to time-since-harvest, while also focusing on plant species in a changing climate.

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Ban on open fires in or near forests

Société de protection des forêts contre le feu
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Quebec – The Ministère de la Sécurité intérieure (MSI) will prohibit open fires in or near certain forests as of June 23 due to current conditions. This decision has been made in collaboration with the Société de protection des forêts contre le feu (SOPFEU). Currently, there are 33 active wildfires across the entire province of Quebec. Since the start of the fire prevention season, 205 fires have affected 193.9 hectares in the intensive protection zone, and 41 fires have burned 4,195.8 hectares of forest in the northern zone. The aim of this ban is to limit the risk of forest fires. Everyone’s cooperation is essential. Consequently, it is forbidden to set or maintain an open fire or to be in the vicinity of such an active fire.

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Quebec town recognizes trees as living beings with rights

By Morgan Lowrie
Canadian Press in CBC News
June 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A small town west of Montreal has decided to officially recognize trees as living beings with rights of their own, in what an environmental organization describes as a first in Quebec and Canada. A resolution adopted by Terrasse-Vaudreuil city council on June 9 declares that trees are worthy of protection, “including the right to life, to natural growth, to integrity and to regeneration.” Mayor Michel Bourdeau says Quebec filmmaker André Desrochers inspired the community to take action. He said Desrochers’ film, called Des arbes et des arts convinced citizens that trees are living entities that breathe and communicate with each other through their root systems. …Bourdeau says the new resolution means the town will review its existing rules and bylaws to ensure that trees are protected or replaced if they must be cut down.

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Political hires break with tradition at the Forest Service

By Marc Heller
E&E News by Politico
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Tom Schultz

Tom Schultz’s appointment was already unusual when Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins plucked him from the timber industry to lead the Forest Service in February 2025, bypassing the agency’s career foresters. Now Schultz, in what’s historically a nonpolitical position, is in another atypical situation: He’s sandwiched between a presidentially appointed undersecretary he reports to and new political hires who work for him as “senior advisers.” All of these officials are now leading a big reorganization of the agency, which is relocating the headquarters to Salt Lake City, replacing regional offices with state-based leadership and consolidating dozens of research facilities. …Former Forest Service officials said it’s unusual if not unheard of for the agency’s chief to both manage and be managed by political appointees. The arrangement is a reflection, they said, of the Trump administration’s desire to exert more control over the forest agency, steer it toward greater timber production. 

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U.S. Forest Service survey reveals potential for increased urban wood use

By Rich Christianson
The Woodworking Network
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The U.S. Forest Service published the results of a six-city study delving into consumers’ participation in urban wood systems and their interest in urban wood products. According to the Forest Service, for the past 20 years, approximately twice as many trees were removed annually from urban areas in the United States as has been harvested annually from the U.S. National Forest System. Yet, most of this urban wood is treated as waste instead of as a valuable resource to generate economic growth and sustainable cities. The waste and underutilization of this neighborhood resource has been countered by a growing movement to divert urban wood from the waste stream and utilize this significant resource in an array of wood products, from high-end furniture to construction grade lumber to wood chips. Using removed wood for valuable products both avoids substantial waste disposal fees and can be a foundation of profitable businesses and markets. 

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Tribal Nations Gain More Time to Assume Forestry Management Authority Under Extended BIA Program

By Levi Rickert
Native News Online
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) announced Monday a 10-year extension of the Indian Trust Asset Reform Act (ITARA) Demonstration Project, a program that allows participating tribes to exercise greater authority over the management of forest trust lands and surface leasing activities. The extension … continues a federal initiative designed to give tribes more control over the management of their trust assets while reducing federal oversight and bureaucracy. Under the program, tribes engaged in forest land management or surface leasing on trust lands may develop an Indian Trust Asset Management Plan. Approved plans allow tribes to establish their own forestry and surface leasing regulations and assume certain approval authorities that would otherwise remain with the Department of the Interior. …Officials said the extension reflects the department’s continued support for tribal self-governance and recognition of tribal expertise in managing forest trust assets.

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House Agriculture sets hearings on conservation, forests

By Marc Heller
E&E News by Politico
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Glenn Thompson

The House Agriculture Committee will hold a pair of hearings this week to delve into conservation, forestry and the safety net that cushions farms from economic and weather-related disasters. In a full committee hearing, lawmakers are expected to dig into how parts of the last farm bill — enacted in 2018 — are playing out more than two years after it was set to expire, as well as aspects of the Big, Beautiful Bill Act that addressed some farm programs last year. Farm groups and others warn that headwinds facing farmers are outpacing the 2018 law’s ability to help them. Bankruptcies are at a decadeslong high, according to the Department of Agriculture. Congress has extended the 2018 farm bill. The House passed a new farm bill at the end of April, and Senate Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Chair John Boozman (R-Ark.) plans to release a draft this week. [to access the full story an E&ENews subscription is required]

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The latest ‘sustained yield’ scam will devastate Montana’s national forests

By George Ochenski
The Daily Montanan
June 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Way back in 1995 Bob Brown, the Republican president of the Montana Senate, called me into his office. He had co-sponsored a bill with a pro-logging Missoula Democrat to establish a “sustained yield” level of logging on Montana’s state trust lands – and he was worried it wasn’t working out the way he hoped. Bob was right to be worried then and Montanans are right to be worried now because Trump’s Forest Service Chief and former timber industry lobbyist Tom Schultz, has just unleashed the “sustained yield” scam on Montana’s National Forests. …My advice to Bob was to let the bill die because he didn’t have the votes to remove the amendments the timber industry lobbyists stuck on the bill. But he didn’t take that advice. …Two years later, Tom Schultz went to work for Montana’s Department of Natural Resources and Conservation, earning the sobriquet “Chainsaw Tom” for his pro-logging zeal.

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High-severity fires burn 30 times more acreage than 40 years ago, researchers find

By Alison Hewitt
University of California, Los Angeles
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Forest fires now burn ten times more acreage annually than in 1985, while wildfire severity has gotten even worse. In California, 30 times more acreage burned from high-severity, forest-killing fires, according to new UCLA research. In the 1980s and 1990s, California’s forest fires burned mostly at low or moderate severity, generally benefiting ecosystems. But as fires have grown in size, severe fires causing widespread tree death have overtaken beneficial fire as the most common fire type in California’s forests. Changes are tied to the increasingly warm and arid environment. These aridity-driven changes were also stronger in more densely forested areas, said senior author Park Williams. …The two main causes for the increase in fire severity are fuel density [and] environmental dryness. …The researcher’s conclusions show that the state can make some headway in protecting California’s forests with changes in forest management, such as doing more manual clearing of underbrush and conducting more prescribed burns.

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New soil sensors launched in Tonto National Forest for flooding, wildfire prevention

By Brian Webb
Fox 10 Phoenix
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

PHOENIX — New technology is coming to Arizona to predict flooding and prevent wildfires. Moisture sensors are going in the ground to gauge just how dry the land is. Soil that is too dry cannot absorb water, which creates a higher risk for flooding and wildfires. This advancement should help predict wildfires and flooding across Arizona. Salt River Project (SRP) officials say plant moisture, in both dead and alive plants, is one of the most important indicators of wildfire danger. However, taking field samples by hand is tough, so this new technology will do the heavy lifting. SRP crews in the Tonto National Forest are planting tiny pieces of technology in the ground to provide data. …These moisture measurements should provide important clues, like the risk of a wildfire at a given location, how likely it is to spread, how big it might get, and predicting floods.

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Tree-killing emerald ash borer beetle confirmed in 3 more towns in the Willamette Valley

By Riley Martinez
Oregon Public Broadcasting
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

©InvasiveSpeciesCouncilBC

The emerald ash borer, an invasive tree-killing beetle, was confirmed in three more Willamette Valley cities this month, the Oregon Department of Forestry announced Tuesday. …The infestations were all found within an emerald ash borer quarantine zone spanning Clackamas, Marion, Multnomah, Washington and Yamhill counties. The state agriculture department has ordered tree material from ash, olive and white fringe trees — including firewood from any hardwood tree — to stay within that quarantine zone to prevent spreading the invasive beetle. …Kat Bethea, an emerald ash borer support specialist with ODF, said the spread of the infestation across the region isn’t a question of “if” but of “when.” …Bethea said not transporting firewood long distances “is actually one of the largest things that everyone in Oregon can do” to help manage the spread of the invasive beetle.

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Forest Service unveils massive salvage logging project

By Eric Barker
Moscow-Pullman Daily News
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The U.S. Forest Service will hold a single public comment period with a Monday deadline on a huge project to salvage wind-toppled timber across vast sections of six national forests in northern Idaho and western Montana. Calling it an emergency that poses imminent threats to “life, property, and important natural, cultural, or historic resources,” the federal land management agency intends to use emergency authorities and new rules governing environmental analysis and endangered species consultation to expedite what is otherwise a deliberative process that can take years to complete. “The expediency with which this is being handled is in response to that emergency being declared by the president and the Forest Service response to that declaration,” said agency spokesperson Sara Rouse. …Mike Reggear, agency resource manager for the Idaho Forest Group, said the Forest Service isn’t set up to respond with the speed needed to salvage timber killed by events like windstorms and fire. 

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Memo Reveals Forest Service Could Open Recommended Wilderness to Off-road Vehicles

By Maggie Dresser
The Flathead Beacon
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

MONTANA — More than 190,000 acres of recommended wilderness in the Flathead National Forest could be opened up to off-road vehicles (ORVs), according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture secretarial memorandum that leaked earlier this month. The memo, which laid out federal officials’ plans to unwind protections that have been in place in northwest Montana since 2018, prompted local and national advocacy groups to rush to action. Following four years of interagency collaboration, environmental analysis and an extensive public participation process, the Flathead National Forest’s Revised Land Management Plan was officially adopted in 2018, designating 193,403 acres of land as recommended wilderness… The New York Times earlier this month reported that a leaked memo directed the use of ORVs on 5 million acres in Montana and Idaho, 193,403 acres of which are within recommended wilderness areas on the Flathead National Forest. Local stakeholders say the directive would unwind years of collaborative work if it comes to fruition.

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Nonprofit takes aim at Colorado’s growing mountain pine beetle problem one tree at a time

By Spencer Wilson
CBS News
June 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Colorado nonprofit, the Mountain Pine Beetle Foundation, is working to help landowners fight back against growing infestations of mountain pine beetles and protect their properties from wildfires. Founder Wesley Manney said the organization’s goal is simple: stop beetle infestations before they grow and reduce wildfire risk at the same time. What started as a handful of infested trees in Evergreen, Colorado, has turned into hundreds for landowner Jon Hager. …Now, crews are cutting down and chipping dozens of beetle-killed and infested trees on his property as part of an effort to slow the spread of mountain pine beetles, which experts warn could become a bigger problem during Colorado’s dry summer conditions. “It’s our responsibility as landowners,” Hager said. “We should take care of the beetle problem so it doesn’t spread to our neighbours.”

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Idaho National Forests Receive Collaborative Restoration Funding

By Mike Williamson
The US Department of Agriculture
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The US Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service is funding two landscapes within the Boise and Payette national forests for inclusion in the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program (CFLRP). The congressionally funded program provides long-term support for partnership-driven projects that improve watershed health, reduce wildfire risk and strengthen local economies. The West Central Idaho Initiative covers 2.3 million acres of public and private lands stretching from Boise to New Meadows, Idaho. The initiative focuses on reducing wildfire risk to communities through logging, thinning and prescribed fire. The area was chosen for a 10-year funding commitment based on its strong history of collaboration. …The Weiser-Little Salmon Headwaters landscape continues CFLRP involvement dating back to 2012. In the first 10 years of funding, projects there treated nearly 170,000 acres of hazardous vegetation, resulting in the equivalent of about 36,000 logging trucks of timber sold. 

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Heat waves increase wildfire risk – a new study explains how much, and it’s not a small number

By Dmitri Kalashnikov, Cong Yin, Madhulika Gurazada and Mukesh Kumar
University of California
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©Mukesh_Kumar

When heat waves hit the Western United States, the risk of wildfires quickly rises. The prolonged heat dries out vegetation, but that’s only part of the cause – heat waves also play other roles in spreading wildfires. In a new study, our team of fire and climate scientists looked at two decades of wildfire activity in the West, from 2001 to 2024, and for the first time quantified the effect of heat waves on those fires. We expected a big impact, but the numbers still surprised us: While heat waves, which we defined as three or more consecutive days with temperatures in the top tenth of hottest days, accounted for only 12% to 15% of warm-season days, we found that 42% of all the area burned by fires had occurred during or right after a heat wave. Moreover, the amount of the area that burned each day was more than 50% larger during heat waves than during the cooler days right before the heat wave began in many parts of the West. In some regions, the difference was much larger – up to 300%.

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Before the Flame: How Washington state is reshaping its forests to survive the next wildfire

By Bridget Chavez
King 5 News
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

RONALD, Wash. — The sound of wildfire prevention isn’t a fire engine siren. It’s chainsaws, wood chippers and heavy machinery chewing through brush. Across Kittitas County, crews are removing smaller trees, trimming limbs and clearing brush in an effort to reshape forests before the next wildfire season arrives. But the work underway here is also challenging one of the most deeply held ideas many people have about forests: That more trees always means a healthier forest. “Green is good,” said Katie Zander, the North Service Forestry coordinator for the Washington Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Southeast Region. “But out here historically we did not have this dense of forest stands.” According to Zander, eastern Washington forests evolved with regular low-intensity fires that naturally cleared out brush and smaller trees. But decades of aggressive wildfire suppression changed that pattern.

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Michigan State University uses 3D mapping technology and AI simulations for forest management

By Zoe Scarsella
WDET and Wayne State University
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

David Carter

Researchers are using digital technology to improve forest management strategies. Michigan State University scientists have employed a 3-D mapping technology called LIDAR—which stands for light detection and ranging—to make a digital model of a pine plantation. Dave Carter is an assistant professor of Silviculture at MSU. He says LIDAR can survey areas faster than foresters. “In terms of area, that person may only cover like 1% to 5% of the total stand, whereas a LIDAR measurement would conceivably cover like the whole stand aerially, and maybe accurately count and measure 90% to 95% of the trees in some cases.” After LIDAR scans are uploaded, an AI model simulates different management strategies and finds the most effective ways to remove or apply treatments to trees, or even predict the effects of tree thinning.

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Sustainable Forestry Initiative announces National Fish & Wildlife Foundation funding on SFI-Certified forests

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
June 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) welcomes new funding support from the National Fish & Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) to launch a new pilot project aimed at improving aquatic habitat quality and connectivity across SFI-certified forestlands in coastal Mississippi. “With this additional funding from NFWF, SFI is strengthening its portfolio of biodiversity-related projects aimed at quantifying and improving the biodiversity and ecosystem service benefits of sustainably managed forests,” said Healy Hamilton, Ph.D., Chief Scientist at SFI, and the project lead. SFI-certified organizations manage more than 22 million acres of forestland across the southeastern United States, creating a significant opportunity to improve aquatic ecosystem health at scale. This effort will help forest managers identify where targeted actions can deliver the greatest benefit for aquatic connectivity, sediment management, and biodiversity. The project, Improving Aquatic Habitat Quality on SFI-certified Forestlands: Piloting process and practice in coastal Mississippi, will launch in Mississippi…

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Supplying the National Forests

By R. R. Branstrom
The Michigan Daily Press
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

©USFS

WATERSMEET — The last remaining United States Forest Service (USFS) nursery in the Eastern Region is located in Ottawa National Forest in the western Upper Peninsula. Tree seedlings grown there are shipped to destinations throughout nearly the northeastern quarter of the country. J.W. Toumey Nursery, named in honor of professor and botanist James W. Toumey, was established in 1935 in response to a growing need for tree seedlings, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Toumey, born in Lawrence, Mich. in 1865, earned his graduate and master’s degree from Michigan State Agricultural College. With an interest in cacti, the botanist worked for eight years at the University of Arizona, eventually becoming a professor of botany. Toumey also worked as a botanist at the State Agricultural Experiment Station. Toumey also had a “strong interest in forestry,” according to the Smithsonian Institution Archives, and he left Arizona to become superintendent of tree planting in the Division of Forestry for the USDA in 1899.

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Overhauling conservation in Minnesota should be Job 1 for next governor

By Dennis Anderson
The Minnesota Star Tribune
June 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Amy Klobuchar

At Game Fair in August, a debate is planned for gubernatorial candidates, and the hope among those concerned about Minnesota’s woods, waters, fields and wild critters. That’s been the case sometimes previously, as past candidates for the state’s highest office have either shown ignorance about the importance of conservation, or worse, they’ve promised a lot but ultimately, delivered very little. …Results of a recent statewide poll have Klobuchar as the favored gubernatorial candidate among those who seek the office. Many hunters and anglers see this as a win, citing her support in the U.S. Senate on important issues, wetland and prairie conservation among them. Environmentalists, whose Minnesota agendas at times differ from those of hunters and anglers, are even more firmly entrenched in Klobuchar’s camp. Already those factions are jockeying in an attempt to influence Klobuchar on her naming of a Department of Natural Resources commissioner.

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UK government plans new rules to tackle illegal deforestation

By Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs
UK Government
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

LONDON — The world’s rainforests are to be better protected from deforestation as the government will confirm during London Climate Action Week, that plans to take forward new rules in Great Britain including using powers in the Environment Act alongside legislation strengthening the UK Timber Regulation. Under the proposals UK businesses who trade in commodities sourced from rainforests… will need to check that their supply chains are not contributing to illegal deforestation. …UK companies have been at the forefront of global efforts to tackle deforestation within their supply chains, but voluntary action alone cannot tackle this global challenge, and several major supermarkets have been calling for stronger regulation. Rainforests and other forests are vital for storing carbon and sustaining biodiversity, yet they are increasingly threatened by deforestation. … Rules ​will be enforced using powers in the Environment Act, alongside ‌legislation ⁠strengthening existing timber rules.

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Sustainable Timber Tasmania gives new answer to parliament over logs sent to Victoria

By Adam Holmes
ABC News, Australia
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — Tasmania’s public native forestry company has corrected the record in a parliamentary committee after earlier stating that all logs from public native forests were processed in Tasmania. Tasmanian sawmill operator James Neville-Smith confirmed that some logs had been sent to Victoria, where processors had received compensation from the Victorian government as part of its industry shutdown. Mr Neville-Smith said the decision was due to retooling a sawmill to be plantation-only, meaning that hardwood logs needed to be processed elsewhere. Logs displaying stickers from Tasmanian state forests were also spotted at a mill in Powelltown, in the Yarra Valley, that was also a recipient of millions in Victorian compensation payments. Victoria phased out native forest logging in 2024. Since then, environmental groups have raised concerns about large quantities of logs being transported to Victoria on the Spirit of Tasmania, but were told that all were from private forests.

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Pulp and paper giant APRIL’s supplier choices put FSC remedy process to the test

By Hans Nicholas Jong
Mongabay.com
June 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

JAKARTA — Pulp and paper giant APRIL’s recent decision to lower its deforestation commitments and source wood from two companies associated with extensive recent forest loss has created a new challenge for its relationship with the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), with environmental groups urging the world’s leading forestry certifier to terminate the already suspended reassociation process. In late May, APRIL announced it was reviewing its decade-old Sustainable Forest Management Policy 2.0 and lowering its deforestation cutoff date from 2015 to Dec. 31, 2020. The move allows the pulp and paper producer to source wood from PT Industrial Forest Plantation and PT Mayawana Persada, two companies that have experienced some of the country’s largest recent forest losses. APRIL said the decision was necessary to address fibre shortages after the Indonesian government revoked the operating permits of four of its long-term suppliers earlier this year, affecting around 15% of its wood supply in Riau Province.

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Italy planted Norway spruce across the Alps in the 1930s, but 90 years on, plant diversity is 50% lower than in native forests

Economic Times India
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

During the 1930s, Italy’s government launched a sweeping reforestation effort in the Prealps region near Lake Como, planting fast-growing Norway spruce on land that had been pasture and meadow for centuries. It was a conscious decision, made mainly to answer the demand for timber, but it did not involve much ecological thinking. Now, 90 years later, a new study has gone back to measure what that decision actually did to the landscape, and the results are not flattering. According to the study, ‘Long-Term Ecological Impacts of Norway Spruce Plantations on Biodiversity and Microhabitat Conditions’ published in the journal Ecosystems by researchers at the University of Milan and the University of Lausanne, scientists compared century-old spruce plantations to nearby native deciduous forests. The study found that plant diversity in spruce plantations was 50.3% lower than in nearby native forests and 74.5% lower than in the grasslands.

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Victoria ended logging. Now it’s using Tasmania’s native forests

By Jessica Longbottom, Jonathan Miller and Jade Toomey
ABC News, Australia
June 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

It’s a freezing, foggy morning as the Searoad Mersey II docks at Melbourne Port. We’ve had a tip-off that the truck we’re looking for is on board. …Trees from Tasmania’s public forests are not meant to leave the island. But two years after Victoria banned logging in its own state forests, Four Corners has discovered there are Victorian sawmills now relying heavily on Tasmania for supply. In some cases, Victorian taxpayers are even subsidising the practice. …It’s clear this sawmill, in a state that’s banned native logging in public forests, has shifted its supply. …The state government told Four Corners no logs from public forests like these were leaving the island to be processed interstate. …The environmentalists reckon they’ve spent hundreds of hours at the Devonport ferry terminal, in the state’s north, watching logs leave the island.

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Pulp and paper giant APRIL adds major deforesters as suppliers after revising sustainability policy

By Hans Nicholas Jong
Mongabay
June 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

JAKARTA — Pulp and paper giant APRIL made recent changes that are concerning to environmental groups. These changes include suspending and reviewing its flagship sustainability policy, lowering its deforestation commitments, and sourcing wood from two companies responsible for some of Indonesia’s largest recent forest losses. The company, part of the Singapore-headquartered Royal Golden Eagle (RGE) group, the world’s largest manufacturer of viscose rayon, said the changes are needed to align its policies with international standards and secure fiber supplies following the loss of several long-term suppliers. Environmental groups, however, said the move weakens a key safeguard that APRIL has long cited as evidence of its no-deforestation commitments. The controversy centers on APRIL’s decision to add Indonesian concessions PT Industrial Forest Plantation (IFP) and PT Mayawana Persada (Mayawana) askey wood suppliers, integral to manufacturing viscose.

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