Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Insurers push Ottawa to federalize wildfire response as disaster costs surge

Western Standard
March 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Canada’s insurance industry is urging Ottawa to take direct control of wildfire management, warning that rising disaster costs and what critics describe as a reactive federal response demand a centralized national agency. Blacklock’s Reporter says in submissions to the House of Commons environment committee, the Insurance Bureau of Canada called on Parliament to create a federal emergency management body similar to the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency, arguing current systems are no longer adequate. “The trend is clear,” the Bureau wrote. “Canada has already entered an era of record-breaking natural disasters with no signs of slowing.” The proposal would mark a major shift from the current model, where provinces and territories lead wildfire response efforts through mutual aid agreements coordinated by the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, established in 1982.

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Certifications Endorse Our Responsible Forest Management and Fiber Sourcing Practices

By Colleen Marble
Domtar Corporation
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

At Domtar, environmental stewardship begins with responsible fiber procurement. This includes responsible forest management, careful tracking of wood fiber sources and a long‑running endorsement of third‑party certification. The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) and the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC) are independent, globally recognized certification frameworks. They provide our customers with the assurance that we adhere to rigorous responsible forest management and chain of custody standards. Today, Domtar is the world’s largest holder of FSC and SFI Forest Management certificates, a testament to our commitment to responsible forest management, with nature, wildlife and local communities at the heart of our approach. …“Our stakeholders and partners across all sectors are rightfully focused on environmental impact,” says Luc Thériault, Wood Products CEO & President Canada. “Our environmental performance must be exemplary, which is why this pillar is fundamental to our 2030 strategy.”

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Recovery of errant log bundles continues in Parksville area

Parksville Qualicum Beach News
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Recovery operations are ongoing after 19 log bundles ended up on beaches in the PQB area after rough weather caused a log boom to break open at Mosaic Forest Management’s Northwest Bay waterfront facility two weekends ago. Mosaic said more than half of the bundles have been retrieved, but crews need favourable tides and calm weather to safely recover the remaining logs. “We’re hoping to have suitable conditions in the next few days to complete the recovery as quickly and safely as possible,” Mosaic told the PQB News on March 24. Mosaic notified the provincial regulator and is in direct contact with Rathtrevor Provincial Park representatives about its plans and timeline. The province has declared the area where the logs went astray as a “closed area in so far as the marine salvage of logs is concerned”. END

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Salmon Arm council supports keeping focus on forest fuel mitigation

By Lachlan Labere
The Salmon Arm Observer
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Wildfire fuel mitigation will remain a priority for the city, despite the B.C. government’s plans to stem the flow of FireSmart funding. At its March 23 meeting, city council received a presentation by Assistant Fire Chief Carmen Guidos, who was seeking direction on a couple of matters. One had to do with the Community Wildfire Resiliency Plan (CWRP) currently under development. The other was in regard of fuel mitigation work already planned for Coyote Park, South Canoe, and a small treatment area on Mt. Ida. The connecting thread prompting Guidos’ presentation was recent changes by the BC government to how it funds community FireSmart initiatives. The province introduced the FireSmart Community Funding and Supports (FSCFS) programs in 2018, providing approximately $175 million since then for communities to hire coordinators, conduct education campaigns and pay for fuel management efforts.

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New website, film launched to highlight Logan Lake Community Forest

By Kristen Holliday
Castanet
March 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A new website and film showcasing wildfire mitigation efforts have been launched by the Logan Lake Community Forest. New branding has been launched alongside the release of a movie that delves into the community forest and its role in wildfire risk reduction and recreation. In a news release, Randy Spyksma, general manager for Logan Lake Community Forest, said the new, refreshed branding “better reflects who we are today and where we are going.” “It is a visual highlight of our commitment to responsible forest stewardship while supporting the long-term sustainability of our community.” …“Our film speaks to the heart of what we do as a community forest and allows us to share this work through storytelling,” Spyksma said.

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Islands Trust has lost sight of its original purpose

By Priya Puri, Shauna Doll and Chris Genovali
Victoria Times Colonist
March 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A commentary by two forest ecologists who lead Raincoast Conservation Foundation’s ­Forest Conservation Program, and Raincoast’s executive director, who is a Southern Gulf Islands resident. The Islands Trust recently invited public input to help update its Trust Policy Statement, a document that guides how land-use decisions are made across the Trust Area in the Salish Sea. While the draft includes some overdue updates, it drifts from its mandate of environmental protection and fails to connect words in a policy document to decisions on the ground. To work properly, the Trust Policy Statement must clearly show how the Islands Trust will carry out its environmental protection mandate. The Islands Trust is a unique form of government. When it was established 50 years ago, its role was clear: to prevent unrestrained growth and development in the Trust Area of the Gulf Islands. The legislation recognized that the islands’ natural environment and rural character were fragile and irreplaceable.

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Wildfire roundtable convenes in Clearwater ahead of fire season

By Josh Fischlin
The Clearwater Times
March 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Clearwater recently hosted a roundtable discussion on wildfire risk reduction, training and preparation in advance of the approaching fire season. The Clearwater and Area Community Wildfire Roundtable was held on March 16. Chance Breckenridge, Clearwater FireSmart coordinator, said the meeting brought together 25 people representing a “broad cross-section of agencies and organizations with a shared stake in wildfire preparedness and community safety.” He said community wildfire roundtables are meant to support coordination and communication among the organizations responsible for different aspects of wildfire preparedness and risk reduction across B.C. interior communities. …Breckenridge explained that the roundtables were originally established with support from the Fraser Basin Council, and that the Clearwater and Area Roundtable “has been a key part of that effort locally and is now being coordinated directly by the District of Clearwater’s FireSmart program.”

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New University of British Columbia tool may help stop a destructive insect in its tracks

By Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
University of British Columbia
March 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Richard Hamelin

UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship (FES) researchers has developed a new genomic test that can trace the Asian spongy moth—one of the biggest threats to North America’s forests—back to its source, giving officials a better chance of stopping infestations before they spread. SpongySeq is a DNA analysis tool designed to detect the Asian spongy moth, an invasive insect capable of defoliating entire forests within weeks. Unlike the European spongy moth, which has been established in North America for more than a century and spreads slowly because its females cannot fly, the Asian variety can travel long distances, feeds on a far wider range of trees—including conifers—and remains a high-risk invader with no strong natural controls. …Dr. Richard Hamelin’s team created a tool that works like a “genomic passport,” analyzing 283 specific DNA markers at once to identify a moth’s geographic origin with 97-per-cent accuracy.

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Film screening in Victoria sparks conversation around old-growth logging

Victoria News
March 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A packed theatre in Victoria brought together residents, experts and advocates on March 19 for a film screening and panel discussion focused on the future of British Columbia’s old-growth forests. …The 50 minute screening examined forestry practices in B.C. and raised concerns about what speakers described as outdated policies and unsustainable logging. A panel discussion followed, featuring Suzanne Simard, Casey Macaulay, Teresa Ryan, Rachel Holt and Garry Merkel who addressed questions from the audience. Dr. Rachel Holt, an ecologist working in forest policy, said current approaches to forest management are too focused on timber production. …Gary Merkel, a forester and policy adviser, said the issue is complex and involves balancing environmental protection with economic realities. “We’ve had a forest sector that’s existed the same way for a long time, and it’s going through a major transformation,” Merkel said. …While public concern over old-growth logging has grown, Merkel noted that the path forward remains unclear.

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Log bundles end up on Parksville Qualicum Beach beaches after rough weather conditions

Parksville Qualicum Beach News
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Several log bundles ended up on beaches in the Parksville and Nanoose Bay area after rough weather caused a log boom to break open at Mosaic Forest Management’s Northwest Bay waterfront facility last weekend. … “Shifting high winds pushed the logs into shallow water before crews could safely reach them,” Mosaic told the PQB News. “We responded as soon as we were alerted early Sunday morning, recovering 10 of the 19 bundles.” Mosaic says salvage crews are standing by to recover the remaining nine bundles, but the current weather system has hampered access to the shallow beach areas where they came ashore.

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Wildfire money in Saskatchewan budget isn’t enough: Candle Lake fire chief

By Gillian Massie
News Talk 650 CKOM
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

SaskLakes_Facebook

A fire chief who helped battle last year’s devastating wildfires says he doesn’t feel the funding in the Saskatchewan budget is enough to prepare communities for the upcoming fire season. Jim Arnold, chief of the Candle Lake fire department, helped defend the resort village from the flames as it was placed under a state of emergency last year. He said he’s expecting more of the same this summer. “I think this year is going to be another year that we’re going to have some forest fires, because we’ve got drought in the northern forest,” he said. The Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency will get $140 million in this year’s budget, an increase of $20 million over the year before. Finance Minister Jim Reiter defended the funding, saying the provincial government will respond if the flames becoming overwhelming this year.

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Merritt is gearing up for wildfire season, mayor says

By David Nadalini and Emma Crawford
City News Everywhere
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

Another year, another wildfire season, and some B.C. communities are looking to get a head start before any major blazes. Merritt Mayor Mike Goetz says preparations in his community never really stop. “We are one of the very few communities that have a full-time Emergency Management Coordinator,” he said. “We also have a full-time EOC [Emergency Operations Centre] that is always ready to go, and we have a full-time training session for our ESS [Emergency Support Services] members.” The city communicates regularly with the local fire department, BC Wildfire Service (BCWS), BC Forestry, and the River Forecasting Centre, Goetz says. He says they have been working to streamline operations at their local airport to make sure fire resources are able to make their way to the area.

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New $21M wildfire equipment depot opens in Prince George ahead of 2026 wildfire season

By Dave Branco
CKPG News Prince George
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Ravi Parmar

PRINCE GEORGE – British Columbia’s wildfire service is getting a major boost ahead of the 2026 fire season. A new, larger equipment depot in Prince George is now operational, and officials say it could make a critical difference when the next big fire breaks out in the north. The BC Wildfire Service (BCWS) has received $21 million in capital funding for this new depot. The facility, located on the Old Cariboo Highway, near the Prince George Airport, gives crews in northern B.C. a much bigger home base to work from. …The depot is stocked with trucks, pumps, hoses, structure-protection units and camp infrastructure, all pre-positioned so crews can move gear faster when fires ignite. It’s not just equipment. This year, the wildfire service hit a record of roughly 24-hundred applications for seasonal firefighter positions. That’s the second straight year for record applications to the BCWS.

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Vancouver Island First Nations gain control of three Clayoquot Sound forestry areas

By Brenna Owen
Canadian Press in the Victoria Times Colonist
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©TourismTofino

Tyson Atleo, a hereditary leader of the Ahousaht First Nation, says the creation of three new forestry areas to be managed by his community and two others on the west coast of Vancouver Island marks the realization of a long-standing promise. Atleo recalls assuring the community more than 15 years ago that “we would find a pathway forward to regaining control over some of our forest resources.” The vision is to manage the forests of Clayoquot Sound, a globally recognized biosphere that includes Tofino, B.C., in a way that reflects the nation’s interest in ecological integrity and balance it with access to economic opportunity, he said. The total combined area of the three new tree farm licenses is about 52,000 hectares, with Ahousaht set to manage about 33,000 hectares, Atleo said. The areas were previously part of a single, larger licence with harvesting rights belonging to forest company MaMook Natural Resources. 

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Invasive Grasses May Be Turning B.C.’s Burn Scars Into the Next Wildfire

By the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A UBC FES study with St’át’imc Nation communities finds invasive grasses are the sleeper threat on B.C.’s post-fire landscape—and the window to stop them is narrow. After a wildfire, the flames may fade, but the danger does not. A new study by UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship researchers reveals that burned landscapes remain vulnerable for years, with large areas still bare and at risk of invasion by fast-growing, fire-prone grasses. The research, one of the largest vegetation trajectory studies in the world, monitored landscapes two years after major wildfires in interior B.C. While some native plants returned, recovery was slower and more fragile than expected. One of the most pressing concerns is invasive grasses, which germinate early in spring, dry out during the hottest months, and act as dry runways that spread flames at highway speed—a dynamic that contributed to the 2023 Lahaina fire in Maui and is increasingly likely in B.C.’s Interior.

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Sooke resident urges support from community to protect old growth forests

Victoria News
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Daria Mykhailovych, a Sooke resident, has been raising awareness across Greater Victoria about a petition calling on the provincial government to strengthen protections for British Columbia’s remaining old-growth forests in hopes of encouraging more people to support it. …Originally from Ukraine, she said landscapes like those on Vancouver Island are rare elsewhere in the world. …The petition was launched in fall 2025 by two B.C. forest ecologists, Dr. Suzanne Simard, a professor at University of British Columbia, and independent ecologist Dr. Rachel Holt. Originally, the petition was started with a goal of getting 10,000 signatures. As of March, 16, the petition has received support from about 4,070 people. …“Our concern is that we’ve been cutting these forests at an unsustainable rate,” Simard said. “We wanted to raise awareness and encourage people to question whether the path we’re on is good for the people of British Columbia and for the forests themselves.”

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A New Look for Community Forestry in Logan Lake

Logan Lake Community Forest
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Logan Lake, B.C. – The Logan Lake Community Forest (LLCF) has unveiled a refreshed brand, website, and film that highlight its commitment to the stewardship of local forests, through indigenous collaboration, supporting what makes the communities of the Logan Lake area strong: the people, the land, and our future. …[The] redesigned website that provides clear information about forest management activities, current projects, and the local benefits of community forestry in the Logan Lake area. … The film, launched in collaboration with the BC Community Forest Association provides a look at the planning and treatment activities of the LLCF specific to wildfire risk reduction, and the enhancement of trails and wildlife habitat, and is part of a broader provincial-wide storytelling initiative showcasing community forests across British Columbia.

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One minute for the future of BC forestry

Forestry is a Solution
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC’s forest sector is at a crossroads. While the industry faces significant challenges, we know that when given the right conditions to thrive, forestry is a solution for the biggest issues facing our province today:

  • A Solution for Housing: Providing the renewable, low-carbon wood products needed to build affordable homes and infrastructure.
  • A Solution for Wildfire Risk: Reducing fuel loads that drive catastrophic wildfires through active forest management.
  • A Solution for Communities: Supporting family-sustaining jobs and resilient local economies across the province.

Your Voice Matters — The Forestry is a Solution website gives you a direct line to Victoria. Add your name to the petition and send an automated letter to your local MLA, urging them to take practical steps to stabilize and strengthen our sector. Help Us Reach 5,000 Signatures — More than 1,300 British Columbians have already stepped up. We are working to reach 5,000 signatures by April to ensure the voice of the forest sector cannot be ignored.

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BC Timber Sales wants to create 500 hectares for logging east of Penticton

By Brennan Phillips
The Penticton Western News
March 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

BC Timber Sales is bringing forward an application to establish 17 new cut blocks on Crown land east of Okanagan Falls and Penticton. The application is being brought to the Regional District of Okanagan Similkameen on March 19 for support, as the proposed cut blocks are located within the boundaries of the Okanagan Falls electoral area. The 17 cut blocks total 494.7 hectares, and the proposal would also see road construction and road deactivation. The rehabilitation process for the roads would include tree replanting. The land is in an RDOS-designated resource area, and a staff report says the proposed cutblocks fall within watercourse development permit areas and “important ecosystem areas.” The advisory planning committee for Okanagan Falls gave its support to the application at its March 9 meeting, while requesting that any approval be subject to a full environmental assessment.

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As public blasts ‘weakened’ land protection laws, Nova Scotia government says tweaks coming

By Taryn Grant
CBC News
March 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

NOVA SCOTIA — Last month, Finance Minister John Lohr tabled the Financial Measures Act, an omnibus bill that amends 20 pieces of legislation. Among them are amendments to the Community Easements Act and Conservation Easements Act, creating two ways for property owners to undo easements on their land. Two weeks after tabling the bill, Lohr told reporters the government is working on adjustments to the easements clauses. …After criticism that new legislation weakens land protection laws, the provincial government says it will make revisions, but it’s not detailing what the changes will look like. …Woodlot owner Ron Melchiore called the bill’s amendments “an abomination” that would destroy his vision for his land. Melchiore also took issue with changes to the Forests Act that would remove a tax break for woodlands if they’re being used as a registered carbon sink and not for active forestry.

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Treaty chiefs call for moratorium on aerial glyphosate use across their territory

North Bay Today
March 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©Facebook

Leaders representing the 21 First Nations of the Robinson Huron Treaty of 1850 are publicly warning that forestry companies do not have permission to conduct aerial or ground-based herbicide spraying within their treaty territory. Robinson Huron Waawiindamaagewin (RHW) says jurisdiction over the lands and forests remains with the treaty nations. Gimaa Dean Sayers, spokesperson for RHW and member of the RHW Waawiindamaagewin Political Working Group on behalf of the Robinson Huron Treaty Chiefs, stated that jurisdiction over the forests and lands within the Treaty territory remains with the Robinson Huron Treaty Nations. …On March 2, RHW leadership sent a formal letter to Interfor’s CEO reiterating the Nations’ position regarding herbicide use and forestry operations in the Treaty territory. The letter acknowledged Interfor’s recent public statement confirming that the company will not proceed with aerial herbicide spraying this year.

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Nova Scotia better positioned for wildfire season with lots of snow and new resources

By Evan Taylor
Surge 105.1
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©NovaScotiaGovnt

Nova Scotia is heading into wildfire season with improved moisture levels compared to last fall — but officials say the weeks ahead remain a critical period for fire risk. Scott Tingley, manager of Forest Protection with the Department of Natural Resources, says winter snow and rain helped offset dry conditions that developed late last year. “The snow and rain were certainly welcome over the winter — we needed it,” Tingley said. “We went through the fall in a significant rainfall deficit.” However, he says that benefit begins to fade as temperatures rise and snow cover disappears. “As that snow starts to disappear, the risk does start to increase,” he said. “One of our biggest risk periods is this time of year before things green up.” That “spring risk period” typically lasts until late May or early June, when vegetation begins to green up and moisture levels improve.

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Canadian working group plans to look at ways to improve recovery of forests after wildfires

CBC News
March 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A national organization is seeking people with experience in Canada’s forestry sector as they put together a working group that will examine ways to improve forest recovery following wildfires. Jessica Kaknevicius is the CEO of Forests Canada. She said last year the group reached out to tree planting organizations, to ask them how they are changing their planting practices after forest fires. “We got a lot of insight in terms of this kind of gap of knowledge with how should we be planting differently?” “That’s everywhere from looking at species selection, to looking at how densely are we planting, health and safety of planters, where are we planting, all those things,” she said. “From that dialogue last year, what really came about was the need to bring together a national working group to share best practices, identify gaps, to get better trees in the ground, and really focus on survivability.”

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Cutting red tape: A new era of simpler, smarter Forest Service policy

By Tom Schultz
US Department of Agriculture
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Tom Schultz

For too long, the Forest Service has been bogged down by excessive processes that hamper innovation. I want every employee to focus on actions that roll back this red tape. Doing so ensures critical projects are easier and faster to accomplish. I believe that the people closest to the ground know the forest best, and we should listen to what they have to say. As I stated in my FY26 priorities, deregulation is a top priority for our agency. Most would agree that our directives are overly complicated, lengthy and outdated. At my direction, the Forest Service Policy Office has developed and begun implementing a “Directives Modernization” strategy. This strategy will streamline and simplify our directives and return discretion to decision-makers in the field. This effort involves restructuring the Directives System and clarifying the purposes of its two components, the Forest Service Manual and Handbooks. 

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Amid Trump logging push, will Oregon enter new timber era?

By Zack Urness
The Statesman Journal
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

In Oregon… fights over how much to cut defined the 1980s and ’90s. Steep declines in timber harvest, meant to save Oregon’s last ancient forests, ripped an urban-rural divide that still festers. Today, Oregon still produces the most softwood lumber in the US. But the state’s timber harvest has hovered near historic lows, at least seven mills have closed since 2024 and logging on federal lands has been limited. President Trump’s administration wants to change that. …The moves have been met with cautious optimism in Oregon’s timber industry. …Environmental and outdoors groups, meanwhile, are gearing up to fight. …Battles between timber and environmental groups are quieter now than during the pitched height of the Forest Wars, but they never went away. A lot else has changed, however. Wildfires have become the state’s biggest issue, there have been historic agreements between the two sides and there’s a new industry, mass timber.

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Colorado Congressman wants answers about U.S. Forest Service seasonal hiring after last year’s staffing cuts, hiring freeze

By Ryan Spencer
Sky-Hi News
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

After firing about 3,400 employees nationwide and instituting a seasonal hiring freeze last year, the U.S. Forest Service is planning to hire 2,000 seasonal workers this year. A Colorado lawmaker wants more information about the U.S. Forest Service’s plans to hire seasonal staff again this summer, after the agency cut thousands of positions and did not employ seasonal help last year. U.S. Rep. Joe Neguse, whose district includes Eagle, Grand, Jackson, Routt and Summit counties, penned a letter to Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz earlier this month describing the impact that massive cuts to staffing have had on the agency and the importance of seasonal workers. Rep. Jared Huffman, D-California, also joined the letter. “As you know, seasonal employees play a critical role in the maintenance and stewardship of some of our most treasured public lands and national forests,” Neguse wrote, noting that more than 130 million people visit the country’s national forests annually.

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Oregon Department of Forestry Scores Futuristic Wildfire Detection Airplane

By Peter Madsen
The Bend Source
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Oregon Department of Forestry will be stationing a new, multi-mission airplane, equipped with technology out of a sci-fi movie, in Prineville — just in time for fire season. The Twin Otter, which some appreciators refer to as a “Twotter,” will relieve ODF’s Partenavia P.68 Observer airplane, which will be retired after more than three decades of use. Manufactured by de Havilland Canada, the Twin Otter was originally introduced in 1966 and is valued for its short takeoff and landing abilities and stable flight at slow speeds, which make the plane ideal for low-level surveys and data collection, according to the manufacturer. The Twin Otter comes with a $7.8 million price tag, yet its state-of-the-art sensing technology, which tacked on an extra $5.4 million, is what makes the plane a multi-mission aircraft. The plane will be kitted with AI-enabled, wide-area and augmented-reality mapping abilities, along with high-definition thermal imaging and night vision capabilities. 

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Idaho forest land near Mount Spokane protected from development

By Michael Wright
The Spokesman-Review
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A large chunk of private forest land near Mount Spokane is now permanently protected from development. The Idaho Department of Lands announced Wednesday that more than 22,000 acres of Inland Empire Paper Co. is now protected under a conservation easement. Inland Empire is owned by the Cowles Co., which also owns The Spokesman-Review. The property is between Mount Spokane and Spirit Lake in Bonner and Kootenai counties. …It includes habitat for a variety of wildlife, such as elk, deer and westslope cutthroat trout, according to a Department of Lands news release. It also covers part of the Spokane Valley-Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer, which provides drinking water for people in Spokane and Kootenai counties. The deal locks in public access for the property, which has long been used by hunters, hikers, berry pickers and other recreationists.

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Forest Service closes large sections of Sandias for two-year wildfire prevention projects

By Pat Davis
Route 66 Independent
March 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©USFS

New Mexico — The Cibola National Forest will begin work on two major projects restricting visitor use and public access to the over 140 acres along the Sandia Crest area through fall of 2027. USFS officials will work to remove hazard fuels and hazard tree removal in conjunction with vegetation thinning treatments around the Sandia Crest and New Mexico Highway 536 to promote forest health and resilience, as well as to limit threats to the vast antenna arrays on top of the Crest which are essential to local television and emergency communications, according to plan details reviewed by the Route 66 Independent. Repeated outbreaks of insects and disease on the Sandia Mountains have contributed to a high number of dead trees on the mountain, officials shared. “High fuel-loading around the Crest presents significant risks to critical infrastructure that could be damaged or destroyed in the event of a high-severity wildfire,” they said in a statement.

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USDA Says It Needs Roads to Fight Remote Wildfires, but a New Study Says Roads Bring More Fire

By Zoë Rom
Inside Climate News
March 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

When the US announced plans to rescind a rule limiting roadbuilding and timber harvests on national forests, officials called the repeal necessary to prevent and manage wildfires. But as the USDA prepares to release its draft environmental impact statement for the rescission, that justification is unraveling. And many critics of the move see the claim that roads are needed to fight fires in remote forests as cover for a giveaway to the timber industry. …Wildfires on federal lands average about five times the size of those in the rest of the country, leading some land managers to argue that national forests are a front line for fighting the nation’s steep increase in wildland blazes. Yet a new study has fire scientists, frontline firefighters, legal experts and the agency’s own historical record saying that roads don’t reduce wildfire risk; they multiply it. [see Three-decade record of contiguous-U.S. national forest wildfires indicates increased density of ignitions near roads]

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Lawsuit: Beartooth Forest Project to Help Whitebark Pines, Fire Safety Hurts Both

By Robert Chaney
The Mountain Journal
March 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©ParksCanada

A new lawsuit against the U.S. Forest Service starts with a straightforward claim: A proposed project to help whitebark pine trees near Yellowstone National Park will actually hurt them. But as the complaint unspools, nearly every major controversy involving the Forest Service comes up… The lawsuit pits the Gallatin Wildlife Association, Alliance for the Wild Rockies and Native Ecosystems Council against Gardiner District Ranger Clint Kolarich and the Custer Gallatin National Forest. On March 4, the plaintiffs sent a 60-day notice of intent to sue unless the Forest Service accepts their objections. The Cooke City Fuels and Forest Health Project would strengthen Cooke City and Silver Gate against wildfire, according to its Finding Of No Significant Impact, or FONSI notice. …Forest Service project manager Abigail Hauch listed multiple justifications in the FONSI for the activity, including… “improving the health and condition of the forest ecosystem, including whitebark pine.”

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California announces 300 wildfire projects fast-tracked in 300 days

By Gavin Newsom
Government of California
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SACRAMENTO – Following Governor Newsom’s emergency proclamation on wildfire-prone forests last March, state agencies have coordinated to cut red tape and fast-track critical wildfire safety projects across the state, all while maintaining vital environmental safeguards. Over 300 projects across nearly 57,000 acres have been approved in the state in just 300 days. Through this streamlined process, projects are now being approved in as little as 30 days, saving a year or more of review and red tape for more complicated projects. Following a Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force’s Sierra Nevada Regional meeting on March 19, the Task Force shared an update on California’s progress to streamline permitting for wildfire projects, which has enabled a diversity of agencies, tribes, and organizations to move faster than ever before to deliver real results.

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How to weigh in on BLM’s plans to quadruple logging in Oregon’s forests

By April Ehrlich
Oregon Public Broadcasting
March 18, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

You have until Monday to provide input on the Trump administration’s plan to dramatically increase logging in western Oregon forests. Last month, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management announced its plans to quadruple the amount of logging that could happen in the forests it manages. Specifically, the agency aims to revise management plans for areas designated as O&C Lands, named after the Oregon and California Railroad company that once owned them. BLM is eyeing 2.5 million acres of forests spanning 17 counties across Oregon. They include mature and old-growth forests treasured by recreationists, hunters, conservationists and tourism businesses who now worry about Oregon’s remaining old trees that are on the chopping block. Timber industry representatives welcomed the news, celebrating a potential return to 20th-century logging levels that once supported rural economies.

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‘It’s going to take 100 years’: Ice storm fallout reshapes Northern Michigan forests

By Sheri McWhirter
Michigan Live
March 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

MICHIGAN — A disastrous ice storm last spring gut-punched Michigan’s multi-billion-dollar forestry sector. One year later, experts say the damage from that storm – which coated and snapped trees with up to an inch of ice accumulation across millions of acres of Northern Michigan forests – will ripple through timber markets for decades. The March 28-30, 2025, storm wiped out years of future logging contracts and reshaped forestry plans across the heart of the state’s “wood basket.” “It’s going to take 100 years to get this sorted out,” said Dan Heckman, forestry planning and modeling specialist for the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. The storm was so disruptive to existing logging plans that the state had to recalibrate its latest 10-year forest management plan. Northern Michigan’s red pine plantations and aspen stands took the brunt of the damage. Public and private foresters have spent the past year trying to salvage what financial value they can. 

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‘Hybrid organ’: how a union of trees and fungi could revolutionise forest management

By Ben Martynoga
The Guardian
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

At a commercial tree nursery near Evans, western Louisiana, pine seedlings are sprayed with a liquid extract teeming with hundreds of species of wild soil fungi. Brad Ouseman, the nursery manager, is confident he will see results from this fungal inoculation, which is intended to improve yields and reduce the need for artificial fertilisers. Colin Averill, the founder of Funga, the startup company that supplied the spray, likens the treatment to a faecal microbiome transplant for young pine trees. Funga treats young pine trees with wild microbes derived from the soils of thriving pine forests. “We’re taking the whole soil community,” Averill says. “As a result, we get all the complexity and all the interactions that come with it.” The goal: trees that grow fast, drawing down more carbon dioxide, with less reliance on artificial fertilisers. …“Our next big target is Douglas fir in the Pacific north-west,” says Averill.

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Wood goes Europe – The new app of the domestic forestry and timber industry

Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, Austria
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

AUSTRIA — Why we all live from the forest is shown by the new app “Wood goes Europe.” The forestry associations of Upper Austria and Salzburg present this comprehensive app about the domestic forestry and timber industry, in which Torrent and Avalanche Control as well as the Protective Forest Center also participated as project partners. The app launches as a pilot project as part of the European Capital of Culture 2024 in Bad Ischl. It aims to bring the forest ecosystem closer to visitors of the Capital of Culture and the Salzkammergut region. The app is intended to make the services of the domestic forestry and timber industry and the forest accessible to everyone. …Through augmented reality (AR), some forest functions can even be brought into your living room. To activate the ARfunctions, you simply need to choose an avatar.

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Much more than wood

Forest Stewardship Council
March 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

©FSC Ecuador

When we look at a finished wood panel, an architectural surface, or a designed space, we see only the final result. Behind it lies a story that normally remains invisible: years of responsible forest management, technical expertise accumulated in the field, coordinated work with local communities and territories, and systems that ensure traceability, transparency and accountability. In 2026, that full story became visible. Novopan achieved the first FSC Project Certification in Ecuador, as well as FSC Verified Ecosystem Services Impact for restoration or enhancement of areas of importance for recreation and/or tourism, consolidating a certified chain that runs from the forest to the final product. It is one of the first experiences of its kind in the Andean region, demonstrating that FSC standards can be applied comprehensively — from the forest to the completed project. Since 2023, Novopan has held FSC Forest Management and FSC Chain of Custody certification. 

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Logging limits threaten Finland’s export industry

By Markku Björkman
PulpPaperNews.com
March 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Finland’s sawmill industry is warning of serious economic fallout if proposed restrictions on logging are implemented. According to industry representatives, between 3,000 and 4,000 jobs could be lost, while export revenues and overall economic activity may decline significantly. The debate follows calls from Finland’s climate and nature panels to reduce logging levels in order to meet climate and biodiversity targets. The proposal would cut annual harvest volumes by around 15 per cent by 2035. The industry group Sahateollisuus ry says the impact could be substantial. CEO Tino Aalto argues that limiting logging poses a direct threat to the sector. …He estimates that the total economic impact could reach around 3 billion euros, as both export revenues and income from timber sales decline. …At the same time, the sector is already under pressure. Rising raw material costs and weak demand have weighed on profitability. …The conflict between climate policy and industrial competitiveness is therefore set to continue.

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Australia’s forests are finally doing better — but ‘underwater bushfires’ hit oceans hard

By Albert Van Dijk, Shoshana Rapley and Tayla Lawrie
The Conversation AU
March 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Good rainfall across much of Australia in the past year has kept the vegetation green and rivers flowing. For the fifth year in a row, our national environment scorecard for Australia’s landscapes in 2025 rated them as “above average”. Queensland had an exceptionally wet year. The Channel Country river systems in southwest Queensland flooded spectacularly. …The biggest floods in at least 15 years, this flush of water triggered fish breeding and the arrival of waterbirds from across the continent. But underneath the ocean waves, it was a different story. Marine heatwaves and the algal bloom in South Australia were a disaster for Australia’s underwater ecosystems and their unique animals and plants. …But beyond the rainfall, there were real signs of progress. New detailed data on native forest loss and gain — a first in this year’s report — showed forest loss has declined for five consecutive years, with tree cover increasing nationally.

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A ‘shocking’ carbon discovery in Sweden’s forests

By Josie Garthwaite
Stanford School of Sustainability
March 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The boreal forest belt stretching across Scandinavia, Russia, Alaska, and Canada ranks among Earth’s largest carbon repositories. A first-of-its-kind study in Sweden finds wood harvesting and forest management are depleting carbon storage in these northern woodlands more than previously understood. Researchers found undisturbed primary forests store 83% more carbon per acre than the managed forests that are replacing them, with soil accounting for most of the difference. The world’s northern forests act as massive carbon vaults, locking away greenhouse gases in spruce, pines, and needle-covered soils. But industrial logging is quickly eroding their ability to mitigate climate change, according to a major new study led by scientists at Lund University and Stanford University. The biggest losses are happening in soils beneath the forest floor. …Major questions remain, including how much specific forest management practices may contribute to carbon storage capacity. Drainage ditches, plowing.

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