Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Trump’s Canadian tariffs include lumber. He is pushing to cut down American trees instead.

By Laura Paddison
CNN Climate
March 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

President Trump is promising to unleash the US timber industry by allowing companies to raze swaths of federally protected national forests. …His order — which calls for the ramping up of the domestic timber production to avoid reliance on “foreign producers” — was followed by sweeping 25% tariffs on Canadian products, including lumber. …However, it’s more complex than simply swapping out Canadian imports for homegrown timber, said industry experts. …Meanwhile, environmental groups say clearcutting national forests will pollute the air and water and exacerbate climate change. Anna Kelly, White House deputy press secretary, referred to multiple organizations that have released statements of support about opening up federal land for logging, including the American Loggers Council, the American Forest Resource Council and the Forest Landowners Association. Increasing logging on federal lands would increase the supply of logs for US industry, said FEA’s Rocky Goodnow… but it won’t replace Canadian imports in the near term.

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Sustainability is Not Stupid

By Alice Palmer
Sustainable Forests, Resilient Industry
February 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Alice Palmer

President Trump believes Americans should make their own stuff instead [of importing it]. For example, consider his comments on softwood lumber: “We don’t need their lumber. We have massive fields of lumber. We don’t need their lumber; we have to unrestrict them because stupid people put, you know, restrictions on, but I can do that with an executive order, we don’t need anything they have,” said Donald Trump at a recent press conference. … The overwhelming evidence is that the US actually does need Canadian lumber. …Realistically, it’s crazy to be discussing a return to historic logging patterns, simply out of a desire to avoid imports. Yes, the US has more trees than it presently logs. But just because a county has trees doesn’t mean it should log them all. …forests must be managed sustainably. Sustainability is not a left-wing “woke” conspiracy; it’s a practical, necessary, and real-world approach. You can’t harvest trees faster than they grow.

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Countries reach a $200-billion deal to protect nature. The US was not involved

By Inayat Singh
Thomson Reuters in CBC News
February 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

Steven Guilbeault

A gathering of countries in Rome this week agreed on a plan to generate $200 billion US in finance a year by 2030 to halt and begin to reverse the destruction of the natural world. The United Nations’ COP16 talks on biodiversity began last October in Colombia but failed to reach an agreement on who would contribute, how the money would be gathered and who would oversee it. …Led by negotiators from the so-called BRICS countries — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. …The finance deal is a result of a landmark agreement in Montreal in 2022, when countries agreed to protect 30 per cent of the world’s lands and oceans. Canadian negotiators, led by federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault, got that deal through complex and fraught negotiations involving 196 countries. Since then, the Canadian government has pushed funding into conservation efforts, including $200 million for Inuit-led conservation in the Arctic.

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Evans Lake Forest Education Society Online Auction

By Brad Techy
Evans Lake Forest Education Society
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Evans Lake Forest Education Society’s online silent auction starts Wednesday, March 5th at 12:00 pm and runs until Sunday, March 9th at 7:00pm.  We are raising money for our Campership Program to send underprivileged children and youth to our camp!  This gives them a positive experience in their lives that they will carry into adulthood. There are 65 great items to bid on from our fantastic donors.  The items represent one for every year that the society has existed starting back in 1960! You can view all of the great items on our auction link. If you would like to bid on any of them, please register as a participant.  All we need is your name and an email address to get a hold of you should you be the successful bidder!

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Ministry of Forests allocates $2.85M for Kootenay wildfire prevention

The Rossland News
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s Ministry of Forests will pump $28 million into 74 wildfire-prevention projects across all eight of the province’s natural resource regions, an investment applauded by NDP MLAs given its nearly $3-million investment in Kootenay communities. Through the Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC), 43 new and expanded fibre-recovery projects and 31 new and expanded wildfire-mitigation projects will receive the funding, with all 74 projects expected to be complete by end of March. …In the Kootenay natural resource region, some $2,854,000 is supporting seven projects. These include $1.6 million for Nk’Mip Forestry in Castlegar; $593,000 for the Slocan Integral Foresty Cooperative; $396,000 and $46,500 for the Nakusp and Area Community Forest in Nakusp and New Denver, respectively; $101,000 for the Harrop-Procter Community Co-operative; $96,500 for the West Kootenay Woodlot Association in Nelson; and $21,000 for the Creston Valley Forest Corporation.

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Faculty of Forestry at the University of British Columbia: Outstanding Research Award

By the Faculty of Forestry
The University of British Columbia
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

William Nikolakis

UBC Forestry wishes to congratulate Dr. William Nikolakis, winner of the Faculty of Forestry Outstanding Research Award! William researches Indigenous land and natural resource governance, focusing on Indigenous rights and natural resources law. He collaborates with Indigenous communities to support self-governance, economic empowerment, and environmental stewardship. His work includes studying cultural burning practices and improving wildfire and forest management strategies. This award recognizes the outstanding research accomplishments of a faculty member (Assistant or Associate) early in their career, based on the quality, quantity, and impact of their research in the previous two years.

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Evans Lake Forest Education Society Online Auction

By Brad Techy
Evans Lake Forest Education Society
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Evans Lake Forest Education Society’s online silent auction starts Wednesday, March 5th at 12:00 pm and runs until Sunday, March 9th at 7:00pm.  We are raising money for our Campership Program to send underprivileged children and youth to our camp!  This gives them a positive experience in their lives that they will carry into adulthood. There are 65 great items to bid on from our fantastic donors.  The items represent one for every year that the society has existed starting back in 1960! You can view all of the great items on our auction link. If you would like to bid on any of them, please register as a participant.  All we need is your name and an email address to get a hold of you should you be the successful bidder!

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Clearcut logging and climate change: Problems and solutions

By Eli Pivnick
Castanet
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…For the last 15 years, due to the increasingly unhealthy state of our forests, forest greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have been approximately equal to all other reported GHGs in B.C. …In the past, B.C. forests stored carbon, on balance. Something needs to change and that something is clearcut logging. …Afterward logging, the amount of carbon sequestration is severely reduced for decades. …Clearcut logging also dries out the land. There are no old, decaying logs left. …There is also no shade, so the ground temperature is much higher, which increases evaporation, and dries out the land causing droughts and fire vulnerability. …If clearcut logging is so detrimental, why is it used so extensively? In a word, profit. ..Instead of clear cutting, we can selectively log, where individual trees are cut but the forest is left intact.

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Subalpine Whitebark Pine harvest detrimental to water conservation

Letter by Ray Hanson
Grand Forks Gazette
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In response to the Whitebark Pine Harvesting complaint response from the Forest Practices Board (FPB). Having been aware of and having followed the complaint over the last couple of years, it is interesting to read the FPB’s response summarized by Gazette staff in the Feb. 19, 2025 edition. The gravity of harvesting the Cut Block in question has more potential consequences than what meets the eye….We as local inhabitants of the Boundary have not yet convinced the Government to take these high elevation forests out of the Timber Harvesting Land Base (THLB) within the Boundary Timber Supply Area (TSA) or TFL 8. Doing so would help aid in preventing droughts and floods. Subalpine forests are harsh environments where tree establishment and growth is very difficult and slow. Will the Whitebark Pine seedlings survive in sufficient numbers to reestablish a new forest?…What are we doing?

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Bella Coola Wildfire Project to Boost Safety and Jobs

By Kobie Smith
Canada’s First Nations Radio (CFNR) Network
March 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A new wildfire risk reduction project in Bella Coola is set to benefit the community by improving forest safety and supporting local jobs. North Coast-Haida Gwaii MLA Tamara Davidson says the initiative will help reduce wildfire threats while increasing the fibre supply for the forestry industry, which continues to face challenges from U.S. tariffs on softwood lumber. The Bella Coola Community Forest is a cherished part of the region for both locals and visitors, said Davidson. Projects like this not only help protect against wildfires but also provide valuable community education and create good-paying jobs—critical as we deal with climate change and rising wildfire risks. The Bella Coola Community Forest organization is receiving nearly $149,000 to complete wildfire mitigation work in an area south of Hagensborg and the Bella Coola airport.

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Touring the future of forestry at the Alex Fraser Research Forest

By Andie Mollins
The Williams Lake Tribune
March 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Rick Walters

At a tour of the Knife Creek Forest south of Williams Lake, visitors got to glimpse research aimed at finding sustainable alternatives for the forestry industry. The University of British Columbia’s Alex Fraser Research Forest team has been testing a new approach to harvesting since January to determine its viability for the forest industry in British Columbia. “It’s a different style and scale of harvesting,” said Rick Walters, the interim manager of the research forest. The highlight of this research is the Malwa 560C, a high performing machine used to harvest and transport wood.  Originating from Sweden, it offers a more European approach to forestry, allowing teams to use a more selective method when harvesting. “Smaller equipment gives you an opportunity to pick and choose,” Walters said, explaining how the Malwa allows the team to leave trees expected to strengthen the forest’s ecosystem untouched, and removing those which hinder their growth.  

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Okanagan men spark wildfire crisis film creation

By Roger Knox
The Kelowna Capital News
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Rick Maddison, who lost his home in the 2003 Okanagan Mountain wildfire, and Murray Wilson, a retired forester of Vernon have teamed up to create the film B.C. Is Burning, a documentary that focuses on solutions, rather than devastation. “I’m hoping if these ideas in the film are adopted, more communities can be protected from this ongoing threat,” said Maddison. The project began in 2024, and the team is looking to raise funds to help finish the project and distribute the film. …“We’ve spoken with some of the leading people in the field,” said Wilson. “Their insights could change how we manage our forests — and how we protect our communities.” The team is hoping to raise $45,000. Recognizing the film’s importance for B.C.’s future, Kelowna-based Homestead Foods, a local hydroponics and sustainable farming operation, has agreed to match donations up to $22,500 to fund the final stages and the launch of the documentary. To watch the trailer and donate, visit BCisBurning.ca

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‘Sawmill turncoats’ handing industry over to the US

By James Steidle, Stop the Spray
The Prince George Citizen
February 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

When the BC Liberals ushered in the era of consolidation and mega-corporatization of our forest industry, I bet they didn’t think their creation would turn on them. But that’s exactly what’s happening. Analysts say that 2025 could be the year the American South produces more softwood lumber than all of Canada. …We can debate all day about how “investment” has every right to leave, especially if we don’t give it everything it demands, like massive profits for billionaires. …Our past governments, in all their glorious wisdom, decided that an “efficient” industry of consolidated monopoly and monopsony players, with immense market power, would create a globally competitive Canadian forest industry. …We created a monster that turned its back on us the moment it could make a higher profit elsewhere.

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Trade Provocations Dim Hopes for BC’s 300-Million Seedlings Promise

By John Betts
Western Forestry Contractors’ Association
February 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Experience and good judgement should warn us from taking any election promise literally. But many nursery operators and planting contractors did place some hopes on the NDP 2024 campaign platform to restore the province’s declining reforestation program to 300-million seedlings annually. Admittedly, there were few specifics described in the commitment; particularly by when and how we would make up the current 70-million seedlings drop in demand owing to our shrinking harvest. As we head into the 2025 planting season the annual program has declined to 230-million the lowest in a decade. Speaking at last January’s WFCA annual conference BC Chief Forester Shane Berg laid out some estimates—of what definitely looks like a best-case scenario—that could get us back to 280-million seedlings annually. But, the how of that recovery would depend on our government’s success in restoring the annual harvest to 45-million cubic metres. Currently it’s languishing at 36-million cubic metres. 

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More than 70 projects will strengthen wildfire prevention, support forestry

By the Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
February 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA – Workers and communities throughout B.C. are benefiting from Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC) supported projects that reduce wildfire risk and increase fibre supply, keeping local mills and energy plants running in the face of U.S. tariff threats and unjustified softwood lumber duties. With $28 million from the Province, FESBC is supporting 43 new and expanded fibre-recovery projects and 31 new and expanded wildfire-mitigation projects. “In tough times, I want workers in our forest sector to know I’ve got their back,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “Whether it’s better utilizing existing sources of fibre or helping protect communities from wildfire, the projects are supporting workers and companies as they develop new and innovative forest practices.” Projects are taking place in all eight of the Province’s natural resource regions, helping create jobs, reducing wildfire risk and supporting B.C.’s pulp and biomass sector. They will be complete by the end of March 2025, in advance of wildfire season.

 

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BC Automobile Association Supports Post-Wildfire Strength & Recovery with New Fireweed Pin

British Columbia Automobile Association
Cision Newswire
March 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BURNABY, BC – The British Columbia Automobile Association (BCAA) is launching a new campaign to highlight strength and recovery after wildfires in BC. The fireweed plant—a sign of ecosystem recovery—is featured on the new limited-edition Fireweed Pin available now. …Featuring artwork by Charlene Johnny, a Quw’utsun artist, the pin is available for $5 at all BCAA locations, with 100% of the proceeds going to non-profit partner organizations working to support wildfire relief and recovery in BC. These include United Way BC’s Wildfire Recovery Fund; and the Canadian Mental Health Association Vancouver-Fraser Branch’s Resilient Minds program which helps first responders build their mental resilience and recover from the psychological effects of protecting their communities. Funds will ensure more BC volunteer firefighters who have limited access to resilience training opportunities get the support that they need.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

By Jason Fisher
The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
February 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jason Fisher

In addition to my day job here at FESBC, I am privileged to get to teach future foresters and resource stewards a 4th-year forest policy course at the University of Northern British Columbia. …These kids are, as a rule, remarkable.  …They come from diverse backgrounds and have varied life experiences and perspectives… They are concerned about the state of the forests and the sector, but they are hopeful about the future. They ask hard questions, give good answers, make room for dialogue, collaborate and are interested in trying something new. …It is easy to be pessimistic right now, but young foresters need us to find our optimism, even if we sometimes have to “fake-it-till-we-make-it”. …So, if tariffs have you down, find a young forester in your office and go for lunch or a walk in the woods and ask them what gets them excited about their future. It might just rekindle your excitement too.

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Vancouver Island community puts beavers to work on climate risks

By Rochelle Baker
National Observer
February 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Willow Creek watershed project will restore wetlands and watercourses in the Homalco First Nation’s territory to reduce flooding and other climate disaster risks, but also boost cultural values and sustainable economic development, said Xwémalhkwu (Homalco) Chief Darren Blaney. Wetlands and riparian areas are critical because they slow and store water moving across the landscape during heavy rains to prevent floods and reduce the wildfire risk created when forests dry out. The Xwémalhkwu, whose territory is in the Campbell River area, recently secured $1.5 million in provincial funding for watershed mapping to identify flood risks and environmentally important areas, Blaney said. The project will focus on balancing the community’s climate resiliency with ecological needs. …Collaborating with partners like Strathcona Regional District will create a holistic approach to flooding that will also protect downstream neighbours, like Campbell River’s Willow Point community, David Carson, Homalco’s emergency planning and land use consultant noted. 

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Documentary on Okanagan’s extreme wildfires to hit the big screen

By Jordy Cunningham
Vernon Morning Star
February 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The extremes between the hot summers and bone-chilling winters can have an affect on the Okanagan and its ecosystems. Over the last several years, B.C. filmmakers Nova Ami and Velcrow Ripper have explored and created a documentary titled Incandescencewhich is an inside look at how wildfires impact the ecosystem and how communities that have both forest and civilization can protect themselves. One of the factors related in the documentary is the extreme differences between dry and wet conditions. This is called hydroclimate whiplash. Ami and Ripper talk with Indigenous elders, first responders, and local residents, getting their reaction to the ever-changing ecosystem.

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Federal Investment Contributes to the Planting of 500,000 Trees in Montreal

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTREAL – Montrealers will see a significant increase in their urban tree canopy, thanks to tree-planting efforts that will result in over 500,000 trees on the island by 2030. At an event in Montreal today, the Honourable Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change announced that la Société de verdissement du Montréal métropolitain (Soverdi) will re-launch its Un arbre pour mon quartier initiative in partnership with the Regroupement des éco-quartiers. This flagship initiative enables Montreal residents to acquire at low cost a variety of trees …the initiative is part of a broader project aiming to plant 200,000 trees on private and institutional properties in the city, including residences, schools, hospitals, industrial areas and businesses. Minister Guilbeault also announced almost $49 million in federal funding to support the City of Montreal’s goal of planting over 300,000 trees on the city’s public lands.

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Sollum Technologies and Leaficient introduce the first plant-responsive dynamic LED lighting solution

By Sollum Technologies
Cision Newswire
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONTRÉAL — Sollum TechnologiesanLeaficient are pioneering a breakthrough technology that redefines how LED lighting adapts to plant growth. Today’s traditional lighting strategies rely on Daily Light Integral (DLI) as the primary metric for optimizing plant growth, based on the premise that plants absorb and use light with the same efficiency throughout the day and at all growth stages. However, recent research has shown that plant productivity can change significantly based on a myriad of factors relating to the environment, resources provided and internal biological processes. In response, Sollum and Leaficient are collaborating to develop the first closed-loop, plant-adaptive dynamic lighting system, which adjusts lighting in real time based on plant productivity and growth rates.

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Domtar Joins Research Partnership Focusing on Quebec’s Boreal Forest

By Nathalie Guilbault
Domtar
February 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Domtar is joining forces with Boisaco and the Centre de recherche sur la boréalie (CREB) of the Université du Québec à Chicoutimi (UQAC) to support leading-edge research projects that will address the challenge of managing Quebec’s forests sustainably. The research partnership will allocate $430,000 annually over five years, totaling $2.15 million, with Domtar, owned by investor Jackson Wijaya, providing $350,000. UQAC’s research projects focus on a number of critical themes, such as climate change adaptation, biodiversity, carbon management and forest ecosystem regeneration. These initiatives aim to advance Quebec’s scientific knowledge and improve sustainable forest management practices.

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Trump administration ordered to reinstate thousands of fired USDA workers

By Josh Gerstein
Politico
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Thousands of fired workers at the Department of Agriculture must get their jobs back for at least the next month and a half, the chair of a federal civil service board ruled Wednesday. The ruling said the recent dismissals of more than 5,600 probationary employees may have violated federal laws and procedures for carrying out layoffs. The decision from Cathy Harris, the chair of the Merit Systems Protection Board, is a blow to the Trump administration’s effort to drastically and quickly shrink the federal bureaucracy. Though it applies only to the USDA, it could lay the groundwork for further rulings reinstating tens of thousands of other probationary workers whom the Trump administration has fired en masse across the government. But it’s far from a final resolution of the legality of the mass terminations. 

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Trump orders more logging in national forests, but impacts on Alaska’s Tongass are unclear after firings

By Sean Maguire
Anchorage Daily News
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

JUNEAU — President Donald Trump has issued several executive orders in recent weeks to expand logging in the nation’s forests, but stakeholders say the recent mass firings of U.S. Forest Service employees could hinder the administration’s plans in Alaska. …But both sides of the conservation-development debate are waiting to see the precise impacts of the president’s plans in the Tongass. Robert Venables, executive director of Southeast Conference, welcomed Trump’s recent order to expand logging, which mentions mitigating wildfire risks. …Maggie Rabb, executive director of the Southeast Alaska Conservation Council, said Trump’s orders do not reflect the wishes of Southeast Alaska communities….Both suggested that sacking dozens of Forest Service employees in Alaska, including those serving in the Tongass, would hinder the agency’s ability to enact the president’s plans.

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Expansion of US Timber Production — Impact on the Forest Products Industry

ResourceWise Forest Products Blog
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

President Trump signed an executive order titled “Immediate Expansion of American Timber Production. The impact on the forest products industry include:

  • Improved forest management practices could reduce the risk of wildfires—a critical concern for many regions. Thinning overgrown forests can improve overall ecosystem health and resilience.
  • Potential Timber Price Pressure: Industry experts caution that flooding the market with additional timber could drive prices even lower. 
  • Economic Viability of Forest Management: Thinning for the sake of forest health can often be uneconomical. The Forest Service and BLM must implement strategies that make these operations financially feasible.
  • Bioenergy Considerations: The order does reference bioenergy, which could play a role in utilizing lower-grade timber and forest residues. 
  • Uncertainty about Industry Investments: Another concern is the temporary nature of this directive. The lack of long-term policy stability makes it difficult for industry players to justify significant capital investments in new mills or processing capacity. 

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Trump’s ‘God Squad’ Timber Logging Mandate Is Legally Murky

By Bobby Magill
Bloomberg Law
March 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

President Donald Trump’s plans to use the “God Squad” and emergency provisions of the Endangered Species Act to promote widespread logging on public lands are likely illegal and little more than rhetoric without the force of law, legal experts say. …The timber order’s directives say they must comply with existing law and do not create any enforceable law, making them little more than “a lot of hot air,” said John Leshy, a former Interior solicitor in the Clinton administration in San Francisco. “It’s core could be summed up as ‘study, consider, recommend,’” Leshy said. The caveats that end the order “deprive even those exhortations of any enforceability or effect.” Murray Feldman, a partner at Holland & Hart LLP in Boise, Idaho, said the executive order is an “aspirational statement.” The order doesn’t satisfy the qualifications for an emergency under ESA regulations, the use of which is generally limited to human health risks, he said.

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American Forest Resource Council Responds to President Trump’s Executive Orders on U.S. Timber and Lumber Production

American Forest Resource Council
March 3, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The American Forest Resource Council (AFRC) today voiced its strong support for two Executive Orders signed by President Trump on March 1, aimed at expanding U.S. timber production and strengthening the domestic lumber industry. The Executive Orders address key challenges facing federal forest management, wildfire prevention, and the economic sustainability of the nation’s wood products sector. …AFRC President Travis Joseph praised the Executive Orders as long-overdue steps toward responsible federal forest management and economic revitalization. “These are common sense directives Americans support and want from their Federal government…  Our federal forests have been mismanaged for decades.  Americans have paid the price in almost every way.  Lost jobs, lost manufacturing, and infrastructure.  Lost recreational opportunities like hunting and fishing…  Degraded wildlife populations, water, and air.  Landscapes and communities devastated by wildfire.  Our federal forests are facing an emergency. It’s time to start treating it like one by taking immediate action,” Joseph said.

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Trump Moves to Increase Logging in National Forests

By Lisa Friedman
The New York Times
March 2, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

President Trump has promised to “drill, baby, drill.” Now, he also wants to log. Mr. Trump directed federal agencies to examine ways to bypass endangered species protections and other environmental regulations to ramp up timber production across 280 million acres of national forests. …Randi Spivak for the Center for Biological Diversity, said “Clearcutting these beautiful places will increase fire risk, drive species to extinction, pollute our rivers and streams, and destroy world-class recreation sites”. …Mr. Trump called for the convening of a committee of high-level officials nicknamed the God Squad because it can override the landmark Endangered Species Act. The committee has rarely been convened since it was created, in 1978, through an amendment to the endangered species law to allow for action during emergencies like hurricanes and wildfires. Mr. Trump also directed official  to look for ways to streamline regulations and reduce costs for timber production. [to access the full story a NY Times subscription is required]

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Climate Forests Campaign Responds to Anti-Forests Executive Order

By Randi Spivak, Becca Bowe, Steve Pedery, Gabby Kientzle & Adam Rissien
WildEarth Guardians
March 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

WASHINGTON – President Trump issued an executive order that seeks to ramp up logging across federal forests. …In response to the executive order, members of the Climate Forests Coalition, including Center for Biological Diversity, Sierra Club, Earthjustice, Oregon Wild, and WildEarth Guardians issued the following statement: “This executive order will decimate our federal forests. It will use tax dollars to line the pockets of corporate logging interests, undermine environmental laws, and take public forests out of public hands. This directive is part of a pattern to undermine science, gut the federal workforce, and privatize our public lands. Clearcutting our public lands for private profit will destroy mature and old-growth forests, pollute our air and water, and in bypassing the Endangered Species Act, actively drive vulnerable wildlife to extinction.” The order is being introduced just after a timber industry executive was appointed as the new Forest Service Chief.

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Trump orders call to expand timber production. What does it mean for Oregon?

By Zach Urness
The Salem Statesman Journal
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Trump administration’s executive orders calling for the “immediate expansion” of timber production on federal lands appear poised to kick off a new chapter in how Oregon’s vast forests are managed — but what that will actually look like remains to be seen. Trump issued two executive orders last Saturday: the first to boost timber production and the second to address wood product imports. …The order gives public lands agencies 30 days to issue guidance on ways to increase timber production, reduce delivery times and “decrease timber supply uncertainty.” Timber groups back Trump’s plan, environmental groups call it ‘reckless’. …Timber groups and rural lawmakers said that in addition to increased harvests of board feet, the orders could help manage overstocked forests and reduce the threat of wildfire. …The threat of lawsuits, and how the orders will be implemented, weighted heavy on the mind of Oregon’s sole Republican member of Congress.

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$5 Million Available to Promote Forest-Sector Business & Workforce Development

By Cal Fire
YubaNet
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Sacramento – The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) is soliciting applications for California business and workforce development projects that support healthy, resilient forests and the people and ecosystems that depend on them. Competitive projects will also sequester carbon and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.   Applications will be accepted until midnight on April 25, 2025, via the Wood Products and Bioenergy webpage. A total of $5 million in grant funding is available. CAL FIRE’s Wood Products & Bioenergy Program supports the creation of a robust and diversified wood products industry to facilitate the economic and sustainable management of California’s forests. These grants help make California a more competitive place to conduct forest-sector business and create financial incentives for industries to invest in clean technologies, develop innovative ways to process wood products, and support the growth of a strong forest-sector workforce.

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How I’m setting Washington state forests on a better management path

By Dave Upthegrove, Washington State Commissioner of Public Lands
The Seattle Times
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Dave Upthegrove

Last month, in my first act as commissioner of public lands, I paused the sale of certain structurally complex, mature forests on state lands. These are older, second-growth forests that have spent almost a century regrowing naturally into diverse stands. …At the Department of Natural Resources, our existing plans and policies envision restoring and maintaining 10% to 15% of the forest landscape in Western Washington as structurally complex mature forests. My goal is to meet this important habitat objective sooner, ensuring the long-term sustainability of our forests and supporting our state’s forest products industry. I’m not setting our forests aside. I’m setting them on a better path. …My plan, once we have new criteria in place, will simply defer some sales while prioritizing others until we reach our habitat goals. In doing so, we will hit these habitat goals sooner — while enabling us to achieve the kind of long-term sustainability we all want.

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Round Star lawsuit a deterrence to forest management, logging companies say

By Kelsey Evans
Whitefish Pilot
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Four conservation groups filed suit in January over the Round Star logging project west of Whitefish on the Tally Lake Ranger District. In the suit against the Flathead National Forest, the Alliance for the Wild Rockies, Council on Wildlife and Fish, Yellowstone to Uintas Connection and Native Ecosystems Council argue that the project is ill-conceived and encroaches on lynx, grizzly and elk habitat. “Lynx critical habitat is the worst place for clearcuts,” said Mike Garrity, executive director of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies, in a Jan. 9 press release. “The surest way to drive lynx to extinction is to continue massive deforestation of the West.” However, local loggers say that the lawsuit is a deterrence to the bigger picture of forest management.  

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California Gov. Gavin Newsom proclaims state of emergency to speed up wildfire prevention projects

By Brandon Downs
CBS News
March 2, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Gavin Newsom

SACRAMENTO – California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced he has proclaimed a state of emergency to speed up wildfire prevention projects ahead of the peak wildfire season. Saturday’s announcement comes nearly two months after the Los Angeles area wildfires. Newsom says the emergency proclamation will suspend the California Environmental Quality Act and California Coastal Act, which he says has been slowing down forest management projects. This could allow for more projects like vegetation and tree removal, adding fuel breaks and prescribed burns. The proclamation will also allow nonstate entities to conduct approved fuel reduction work. Lastly, the proclamation calls for increasing the efficiency and utilization of the California Vegetation Treatment Program to promote a rapid environmental review of large wildfire risk reduction treatments. …In a letter to Congress, Newsom requested nearly $40 billion to help Los Angeles recover from the fires.

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Wildfire poses the biggest threat to old-growth forests

By Ty Williams, retired district operations coordinator, Oregon Department of Forestry
The Daily Astorian
February 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Ty Williams

Noah Greenwald’s Jan. 11 opinion piece demanding the governor set aside 9,500 acres of Oregon’s older forests in the name of wildlife habitat is a frustrating example of outdated, and frankly dangerous, anti-forestry rhetoric. This same hands-off approach to our forests is part of the reason we are losing millions of acres of forests to catastrophic wildfire at an increasingly alarming rate, harming local economies, wildlife habitat, air quality and forest health. The biggest threat to Oregon’s old growth forests is wildfire. In the last decade, wildfire has scorched over 6 million acres of land, including tens of thousands of acres of old and mature forests, far more than the 0.03% Greenwald is opining about. …Greenwald’s own employer, the Center for Biological Diversity, is one of many environmental groups that routinely sue to stop proposed forest management projects intended to increase wildfire resiliency and protect existing wildlife habitat.

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Oregon Senate Democrats call on federal government to restore US Forest Service workers

By Zach Urness
The Salem Statesman Journal
February 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Oregon Senate Democrats sent a letter Thursday calling on the federal government to restore recently dismissed fire-prevention workers and stabilize the operations of the U.S. Forest Service. Earlier this month U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said she supported the decision to release 2,000 probationary and non-firefighting employees from the Forest Service. Although the USDA said firefighters were exempt, current and former Forest Service employees said critical work such as prescribed burning and forest thinning had been slowed by the cuts. “We need Forest Service trail workers back on the job, thinning trees and removing combustible material, so we can save lives and property,” said Oregon Senate Majority Leader Kayse Jama, D–northeast Portland. “It’s not clear whether the personnel firings were legal to begin with.”

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New bill would cripple Alabama roads and bridges, endanger public safety

By Alabama Department of Transportation
Gulf Coast Media
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Legislation introduced by the Alabama Forestry Association would significantly worsen the condition of local and state roads and bridges, as well as hinder safety inspections of commercial vehicles. “The legislation is to allow significantly heavier axle weights to be hauled by large trucks — a move that is difficult to comprehend when the truckers already complain of sky-high liability insurance rates and serve as the primary target of advertising by personal injury law firms,” said Alabama Department of Transportation Deputy Director George Conner… “The math is simple: heavier truck axle weights are exceptionally dangerous and destroy roads and bridges; even heavier axle weights will be more dangerous and will destroy roads and bridges even more quickly.” …The Forestry Association’s proposal would increase the legal limit for a single axle from 20,000 pounds to 22,000 pounds while increasing the legal limit for two axles (tandem axles) from 34,000 pounds to 44,000 pounds.

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Lawmakers, loggers long for Trump-driven revival of Wyoming’s dying timber industry

By Mike Koshmrl
The Wyoming Tribune Eagle
March 5, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

CHEYENNE, Wyoming — Rep. John Eklund thought back a half century, to an era when commercial sawmills processing Wyoming timber abounded and logging was the Equality State’s third-largest industry. “We should be able to get back to that,” the Cheyenne Republican said Tuesday morning in the Wyoming Capitol. …Commercial logging in national forests around the country, including Wyoming, has fallen off dramatically from its heyday. Cut and sold timber has stagnated at a fraction of what it was from the 1950s through the 1980s for three decades running, U.S. Department of Agriculture data shows. …Trump’s order isn’t the only prospective policy change afoot that could revitalize commercially cutting American forests. The “Fix Our Forests Act,” has passed the U.S. House of Representatives and moved to the U.S. Senate. The bill, proving divisive in big commercial timber country, would further expedite environmental reviews — and could potentially have immediate impacts in Wyoming.

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Dakota College at Bottineau professor awarded for education impact

Minot Daily News
March 6, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Angela Bartholomay

BOTTINEAU – Angela Bartholomay, an associate professor of Science at Dakota College at Bottineau, is the recipient of the 2025 Project Learning Tree (PLT) Leadership in Education award. Bartholomay has been honored for her work promoting environmental stewardship through education for more than 30 years, according to a DCB news release. PLT, an initiative of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI), is an award-winning education program that advances environmental awareness, forest literacy and green career pathways, using trees and forests as windows on the world. The Leadership in Education award recognizes educators who make significant contributions in their state to PLT and youth environmental education. …Bartholomay, along with Butch Bailey, a forester and instructor for Mississippi State University Extension Service, and Susan Cox, Conservation Education coordinator for the USDA Forest Service, Eastern Region, will be honored at the 2025 PLT Annual Conference in Clemson, South Carolina, from March 10-14.

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Bob Brown Foundation activists scale front of Parliament House in Hobart

Pulse Tasmania
March 4, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Environmental activists from the Bob Brown Foundation have scaled the front of Parliament House in Hobart in protest of logging activities in Tasmania’s forests. The activists suspended themselves from the nearly 200-year-old sandstone building for the first official sitting day of the year. Speaker of the House Michelle O’Byrne condemned the actions, saying the protesters have put the right to safely allow protests at Parliament House In jeopardy. “The actions that were taken outside the parliament today caused potential damage to a heritage building that is already on the fragile side,” she said. …The Bob Brown Foundation said the action was necessary to send a “strong message” to parliamentarians.

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