Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Indigenous Partnerships and Forestry: A Q&A with JP Gladu

By Brenda Martin
Domtar Corporation
January 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Domtar’s Brenda Martin speaks with JP Gladu, an Indigenous economic development leader and member of Domtar’s External Sustainability Advisory Committee. Their conversation focuses on the importance of strong, respectful partnerships between forestry companies and Indigenous communities. Gladu shares how his upbringing and decades of experience shaped his commitment to collaboration and mutual opportunity. He highlights a landmark example at Lake Nipigon, where First Nations gained full forest management control and built a productive relationship with Domtar, evolving into shared problem-solving and market access. Gladu emphasizes that the future of Indigenous partnerships in forestry requires investing in Indigenous-owned business infrastructure—not just jobs—to build local capacity and strengthen the industry. He advises companies to truly understand community needs by spending time listening and learning, rather than making assumptions. His insights extend beyond forestry, applying to broader economic reconciliation and sustainable partnerships.

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Ducks Unlimited Canada presents the North American film premiere of Mission to Marsh in honour of World Wetlands Day

By Ducks Unlimited Canada
Cision Newswire
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

STONEWALL, Manitoba — German filmmakers Anni and Alex Kornelsen set out on a road trip from Canada all the way to Patagonia to showcase how the Americas were conserving and restoring wetlands. The result is the award-winning documentary Mission to Marsh, which is being brought to North America on World Wetlands Day, February 2, 2026. Ducks Unlimited Canada invites Canadians to get a candid view of some of the world’s most treasured wetlands, including sites where DUC has supported conservation and restoration like the Oromocto River in New Brunswick; la Grande plée Bleue in Quebec; and Oak Hammock Marsh in Manitoba. …The film focuses on peatlands, an ecological powerhouse. It is estimated that one square metre of peatland in Canada’s boreal region stores about five times more carbon than one square metre of tropical Amazon rainforest. When intact and healthy, peatlands play a vital role in mitigating floods, drought and wildfire.

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University of British Columbia lecturer plays a pivotal role Mozambique’s ability to tackle deforestation

By Meadhbh Monahan & Aditi Ghosh
University of British Columbia
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

Peter Wood

When Dr. Peter Wood, a lecturer in UBC’s faculty of forestry and environmental stewardship, joined the university, he never imagined that the curriculum of the Master of International Forestry (MIF) program could create a lasting impact thousands of miles away from home. When Global Affairs Canada partnered with the faculty to help build Mozambique’s capacity to address deforestation and achieve sustainable forest management objectives, he saw an opportunity to put his curriculum into practice—on the world stage. Dr. Wood and a delegation from UBC were appointed to deliver workshops to civil servants in the government of Mozambique’s National Directorate of Forestry to help them understand the nuances of proposal writing to convince donors to provide climate funding. This was part of Global Affairs Canada’s Technical Assistance Partnership program, implemented by Alinea International.

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Canada’s wildfire paradox: fewer fires, greater destruction highlighted in new analysis

By Colin Butler
CBC News
January 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Canada’s wildfire seasons are growing longer, larger and more destructive, according to a six-decade analysis of fire records by the federal government’s Canadian Forest Service. The study shows the trend isn’t being driven by more frequent fires but by a smaller number of increasingly large wildfires that are burning more land than in the past, reinforcing a trend federal scientists first identified years ago. In 2019, fire scientists with Natural Resources Canada published a study that suggested wildfire activity across the country had increased steadily since the mid-20th century, driven by rising temperatures and longer fire seasons. …The research found that the area burned from wildfires continues to rise across nearly all Canadian eco-zones, even in the Pacific Northwest and Atlantic Canada regions. Both were once considered lower risk because of wetter conditions but are now showing flat or increasing fire trends.

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A lifeline for anyone travelling through BC (or Ontario, or …)

By Rogers Satellite
Sannich News
January 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

[Tree Frog Editor: Rogers Satellite targets Canada’s foresters from coast to coast via sponsored content] On Vancouver Island’s logging roads – the ones stretching into Nahmint Lake, over into Nitinaht and through the region’s dense coastal woodlands – forestry worker Harry Brossault is used to watching his cell signal disappear long before his work is done. Vancouver Island’s old-growth forests are some of the most difficult to access in the province. For Brossault, who often heads out before sunrise, staying connected matters, whether he’s at work or spending his off time in the rugged backcountry.  …That sense of being unreachable – disconnected – adds a layer of stress and unease to his already demanding workload. “Working in forestry on Vancouver Island means I’m often in areas with no cell service,” Brossault says. “Rogers Satellite keeps me connected to my teenage daughters and serves as my main safety lifeline when working alone.”

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When Science Becomes a Target: Bruce Blackwell and the Stanley Park recovery project

By Forestnet
YouTube
January 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

This episode explains how wildfire risk in British Columbia is shaped by both climate trends and a century of fire suppression, and what that means for urban forests, hazard abatement and provincial policy. In conversation with Bruce Blackwell, M.Sc., R.P.F., R.P.Bio., Principal of Blackwell Consulting Ltd., we cover frontline experience from the Stanley Park hemlock looper response to municipal wildfire mitigation and watershed risk work. Bruce draws on more than 36 years of applied forestry and fire‑and‑fuels practice to explain why he frames today’s wildfire challenge as roughly “50% climate” and “50% legacy fuel buildup,” how risk should be prioritized (probability × consequence), and why urban and high‑use sites demand different operational standards—examples include ISA TRAC risk assessments, helicopter removals in Stanley Park, and integrated backburning tactics.

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Indigenous Economic Pathways and PEFC Canada Sign MOU to Advance Indigenous-Led Forest Certification in Canada

The Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC)
January 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Vancouver, BC  — Indigenous Economic Pathways (IEP) and PEFC Canada are pleased to announce the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to collaborate on advancing Indigenous-led group forest management certification in Canada. This partnership supports First Nations leadership in forestry by co-developing certification pathways that reflect Indigenous stewardship, governance, and values, while strengthening access to markets, capacity, and long-term economic opportunity. The collaboration represents a practical step forward in advancing Indigenous economic reconciliation within Canada’s forest sector. Through this MOU, IEP and PEFC Canada will work together to support Indigenous Nations and organizations interested in forest certification models that are locally appropriate, scalable, and aligned with Indigenous priorities, while remaining nationally and internationally recognized.

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Lack of funds drive changes to BC’s FireSmart program

Union of BC Municipalities
January 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The FireSmart Community Funding and Supports (FCFS) program will be closing its current intake for applications on January 30 due to a lack of funding. The program will reopen on February 2 with a competitive adjudicated grant process. This intake will receive applications until April 30. The FCFS program provides provincial funding to First Nations and local governments in BC to increase community resiliency by undertaking community-based FireSmart planning and activities that reduce the community’s risk from wildfire. …Councillor Cori Ramsay, UBCM president said “As the province prepares its 2026 Budget, I have asked the Premier to prioritize renewing this funding. …Details on the specific changes to program delivery are now available. …In addition, several other changes are being introduced, including: fuel management and impacts from wildfire will no longer be funded; eligible FireSmart activities were modified; and all funding requests will now also be limited to one-year projects.

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Support for the North Island College Forestry Program in Campbell River

BC Truck Loggers Association
January 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The BC Truck Loggers Association sent a letter to the North Island College regarding the potential discontinuation of two forestry programs. This would mean a significant loss of forestry education for the forest industry, and we’re asking for your support by copying and pasting our letter into an email and sending it to the college Board of Governors at bog@nic.bc.ca …The North Island College forestry programs are an essential contributor to education and economic opportunity for students in Campbell River and the north Island and provides an important stream of new graduates for forestry businesses. The program has strong backing from local industry, government and First Nations, and it would be regrettable to see the program discontinued at a time when sustained investment in forestry education is vital to British Columbia’s future.

Related coverage in the Comox Valley Record: Writer wishes community was consulted on NIC course suspensions

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Complaint Investigation: Range Practices on the Coutlee Range Unit

BC Forest Practices Board
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

MERRITT, BC – A Forest Practices Board investigation has found that grassland and open forest areas within the Mine pasture of the Coutlee Range Unit near Merritt are not functioning, with long-term overgrazing contributing to accelerated soil loss and reduced area stability. The investigation was initiated after the board received a complaint from two of six range agreement holders who share grazing rights in the Coutlee Range Unit under a single range-use plan. The complaint related to livestock grazing practices, fence maintenance and compliance with the grazing schedule. The board found that actions in the range-use plan were written in ways that were not measurable or verifiable. As a result, the board could not determine whether required actions were being followed, making compliance with the plan unenforceable. The board also found that an amended 2023 grazing schedule was not legally valid because it was not signed by all agreement holders, as required.

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The Silviculture Innovation Program and the Forest Enhancement Society of BC Launch New Extension Specialist Role

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

British Columbia: The Silviculture Innovation Program (SIP) and the Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC) are pleased to announce a newly formalized partnership focused on funding projects that develop new practices and information to help benefit future practitioners of forestry in B.C. Through this collaboration, SIP and FESBC will be hiring an Extension Specialist who will focus on translating technical, research-based, and field-tested knowledge gathered from around the province into practical, accessible resources that support learning, innovation, and on-the-ground application. …Through this partnership, SIP and FESBC are committing shared resources to evaluate project outcomes and communicate key learnings, ensuring that the benefits of this work are broadly understood and usable by practitioners. …Both SIP and FESBC will be attending the Forest Professionals of BC Conference in Vancouver from February 4-6, 2026. Conference attendees are encouraged to stop by and learn more about the position and the partnership.

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Forest Professionals BC Conference & AGM kick off next week in Vancouver

Forest Professionals BC
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

We are pleased to announce the upcoming Forest Professionals BC Forestry Conference & AGM, taking place February 4–6, 2026 at the Sheraton Vancouver Wall Centre. Offered in both in-person and online formats, the conference invites forest professionals and their teams to engage in three days of learning, discussion, and connection. The program features professional development sessions exploring the latest trends and challenges in forest management, including climate-ready reforestation, forest health, wildfire recovery, Indigenous stewardship, and emerging technologies such as LiDAR. Highlights also include plenary sessions on forestry policy and ethics, the FPBC Annual General Meeting, technical breakouts, and multiple networking and trade show events. Set in the heart of one of Canada’s most dynamic cities, the Sheraton Vancouver Wall Centre offers an ideal backdrop for collaboration. The iconic One Wall Centre North Tower is a landmark of downtown Vancouver’s skyline, placing attendees steps away from the city’s culture, dining, and waterfront—an inspiring setting for learning and professional exchange.

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B.C.’s commitment to biodiversity put on hold

By Cori Lausen, Wildlife Conservation Society Canada
The Vancouver Sun
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government’s Look West strategy is to get four new mines, three new natural gas projects and eight new renewable energy projects built in the next six years. The same sense of urgency hasn’t been applied to protecting BC’s ever-increasing number of species at risk. Hundreds of species have been identified as threatened or endangered since 2006, yet it has been two full decades since the provincial government last updated BC’s Species at Risk list, often referred to as the Identified Wildlife list. Few protections exist for wildlife in BC that aren’t on this “Noah’s Ark” list. …While such short-sightedness may be baked into our political system, we can’t let it dictate the fate of our ecosystems and the biodiversity upon which they (and we) depend. If we throw species and their habitats overboard, we will impoverish not just our province, but our world.

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Frank Varga to depart Burns Lake Community Forest after nearly a decade of leadership

By Quinn Bender
Burns Lake Lakes District News
January 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Frank Varga

After serving nine years and six months as general manager of Burns Lake Community Forest and COMFOR Management Services Ltd., Frank Varga will step down from the role next month. …Since taking the helm, Varga has led a wide range of initiatives focused on expanding sustainable forestry, boosting wildfire resilience, and strengthening community engagement. Under his leadership, the organization secured more than $4 million in funding for wildfire mitigation, habitat restoration, and public access projects. …He credited the achievements to those around him. “The team that I have built accomplished so much together,” he wrote, highlighting projects such as the firewood program, youth education efforts, and the annual Burns Lake Forest Open House and BBQ. …He described the forest as “not just a managed resource, but a true community treasure,” made possible by the passion of staff, the guidance of board members, the generosity of volunteers, and broad community support.

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Thompson-Nicola Regional District renews five-year contract for invasive plant management

By Michael Potestio
Castanet
January 25, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

KAMLOOPS, BC — The Thompson-Nicola Regional District board of directors handed out a new, five-year contract for invasive plant management throughout the TNRD. At its regular meeting last Thursday, the board voted unanimously in favour of handing the contract to Spectrum Resource Group at an estimated contract value of $1,750,000 over the term. The previous five-year pact expired at the end of 2025 and a request for quote was issued last fall, yielding a number of proposals for the five invasive plants management regions the TNRD is responsible for — Cache Creek, Clearwater, Clinton, Kamloops and Merritt. …The regional district’s invasive plant program has been receiving annual grants and funding from the Ministry of Forests, Ministry of Transportation and Transit, Ministry of Environment and BC Parks, FortisBC, and BC Hydro to carry out management of invasive plants on their respective jurisdictions.

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Conservation groups fundraising in hopes of purchasing Vancouver Island marsh

By Claire Palmer
CBC News
January 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©HamiltonMarshFB

The deadline for the Regional District of Nanaimo to complete a major land acquisition to create a conservation site just north of the city is quickly approaching, with a massive fundraising effort underway to facilitate the purchase. The Hamilton Marsh is a 360-acre parcel of land, located along Highway 4, just north of Nanaimo, B.C., near the Town of Qualicum Beach. The wetlands are a major part of the French Creek watershed and is home to over 120 species of birds. Owned by Island Timberlands and managed by Mosaic Forest Management, the regional district struck a conditional agreement to purchase the full marsh site for $30 million in September 2025, with a requirement to secure $7.5 million of external funding by the end of January this year.

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BC’s forestry industry and the myth of momentum

By James Steidle
Prince George Citizen
January 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

It’s pretty bold to make the theme of this year’s BC Natural Resources Forum “momentum for continued growth.” What growth are we continuing? We’ve lost a bunch more mills here in the north and the industry is on the ropes with Donald Trump’s tariffs. If anything the momentum has been in the opposite direction. The momentum is heading towards catastrophic decline. At least with forestry. And we can’t let that happen. We need the pulp mills in Prince George and we need our forest industry. …We need to rethink what we are doing and find a way to do things better — and cheaper. …One direction we can move in is we start thinning the plantations close to town. …Unfortunately, BC Timber Sales is not committed to this idea. …As far as anyone can tell, they believe thinning will reduce the Annual Allowable Cut.

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A walk in the woods with Revelstoke Community Forest Corporation

By Evert Lindquist
The Revelstoke Review
January 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Kevin Bollefer

Kevin Bollefer [has worked] for the Revelstoke Community Forest Corporation (RCFC) since 2007, and general manager since 2023. He and his staff oversee 120,000 hectares of land, including 69,000 ha of forest. This tenure, known as Tree Farm Licence (TFL) 56, was bought by the City of Revelstoke in 1993, when RCFC was formed. The aim was for the Revelstoke community to regain control of local timber resources, not just for its economy, but also for the improvement of forest management and environmental protection. In October, Black Press Media joined Bollefer for a walk in the woods to learn about the range of forest management practices RCFC uses to keep these ecosystems, resource extraction and the future of Revelstoke’s sawmills all sustainable. …Bollefer’s goal is to help keep Downie Timber’s mills operating, while balancing the environmental needs and values of forestry, old-growth and threatened species such as caribou.

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Reporting on Sustainability in the Resource Sector

By Lori Mathison, president and CEO of CPABC
Chartered Professional Accountants of British Columbia (CPABC)
January 15, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Naomi Thomas

Ivy Wan

Why companies are focused on transparent communication, multidisciplinary collaboration, and embedding sustainability in corporate strategy. In 2025, we saw the emergence of a new geopolitical climate that resulted in real disruption around—and some would say a noticeable pullback on—sustainability initiatives and commitments. On October 31, 2025, I spoke with two industry experts about this very topic for our Coffee Chats with CPABC podcast: Naomi Thomas, CPA, and Ivy Wan, CPA. Naomi is a partner at PWC specializing in sustainability and climate change and an expert on sustainability in the mining sector. Ivy is the senior manager of sustainability reporting and risk at Canfor and an expert on sustainability in the forestry sector. Here are some insights from our conversation. [This article was originally published in the January/February 2026 issue of CPABC in Focus and can be found in the Newsroom]

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Corner Brook is one of three places in Canada taking part in pilot project on a wildfire resiliency template

By Tonya Organ
Bay FM 100.1
January 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

It’s called the “Community Wildfire Resiliency Plan” and is funded by the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre or the CIFFC. Corner Brook is one of three places in Canada taking part in a project that will lead to the creation of a national template to follow during wildfires. It’s called the “Community Wildfire Resiliency Plan” and is funded by the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre or the CIFFC. At this week’s public council meeting, the Supervisor of Fire Management Coordination, Jeff Motty was on hand to talk about work the team has done since starting during the end of September. This included an assessment and analysis which will be used in a template for groups across the nation.

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Newfoundland’s 5th water bomber is ‘destined for Labrador’ — as soon as it’s fixed

By Elizabeth Whitten
CBC News
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Newfoundland and Labrador’s fifth water bomber will soon be back in service, says the forestry minister Pleaman Forsey — but where it will be stationed has yet to be determined. The water bomber was previously stationed in Wabush. Forsey said it is again “destined for Labrador,” but he could not confirm an exact location. The CL-415 water bomber was damaged in 2018. It hit a rock in a lake on the Burin Peninsula, causing significant structural damage. It’s been out of service ever since. Last April, the previous Liberal administration committed to repairing the water bomber, announcing a $17-million contract with aircraft manufacturer De Havilland Aircraft of Canada. On Monday, Progressive Conservative Forestry Minister Pleaman Forsey told CBC Radio’s Labrador Morning the aircraft is on target to be ready for the upcoming wildfire season.

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Intertribal Timber Council Leaders Travel to Brussels to Educate EU Officials on Indigenous Forest Management and the EUDR

By Intertribal Timber Council
PR Newswire
January 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

BRUSSELS — Leaders of the Intertribal Timber Council (ITC) are in Brussels this week to meet with European Union officials to explain how the EU Regulation on Deforestation-free Products (EUDR) is affecting Indigenous forest managers in the United States. President Cody Desautel, Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, and Vice President Phil Rigdon, Yakama Nation, are meeting with representatives of several European countries to discuss Tribal sovereignty, Indigenous forest governance, and the impacts of EUDR implementation on Tribal Nations that manage millions of acres of forestland under long-standing, legally protected stewardship systems. The EUDR… aims to prevent global deforestation by requiring traceability and geolocation data… Tribal leaders say these requirements do not distinguish between high-risk deforestation contexts and low-risk forests sustainably managed under Tribal law, U.S. federal law, and treaty obligations. Detailed geolocation and traceability requirements raise concerns about Indigenous data sovereignty and protection of culturally and ecologically sensitive areas.

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Conservationists sue Trump admin over rule cutting public comments on forest projects

By Monique Merrill
Courthouse News Service
January 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Two conservation groups are suing the Trump administration, challenging a U.S. Department of Agriculture rule that strips public comment requirements from most national forest projects. In a federal lawsuit, the Center for Biological Diversity and the Sierra Club accuse the Trump administration of violating environmental law by approving an interim final rule that eliminates the requirement for federal agencies to solicit public comments during project reviews. “It’s illegal and unjust for Trump to shut out the American public while wrecking our national forests so mining, logging and oil companies can make a quick buck,” said Wendy Park, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “We’re suing to make sure people have a say in what happens on their public lands, as they have for 50 years.” The conservation groups named the Department of Agriculture, U.S. Forest Service, the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service — along with their administrators — as defendants.

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Democrat or Republican, Americans want their National Forests kept intact

By Mike Dombeck, Dale Bosworth, Tom Tidwell & Vicki Christiansen
The Hill
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Together, we have served as US Forest Service chiefs for both Republican and Democratic administrations. We know that forest management decisions never come without debate, opinions and — more often than not — disagreement. Each of us has had to strike the difficult balance between leaving some forests intact, while sustainably using others to benefit communities and economies. But regardless of who is in the White House, one thing has always remained true: Americans value their national forests, and they want to see them protected for the benefits they provide us, like clean air, water, abundant recreation opportunities and sustainable economies. …The current administration needs to know: Repealing the Roadless Area Conservation Rule would not be in the long-term interest of the American people, the National Forests or the communities they serve. Each of us has been faced with tough decisions. Keeping backcountry and healthy forests free of unnecessary roads was never one of them.

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2025 Forest Service Accomplishments

The USDA Forest Service
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The U.S. Forest Service released its latest accomplishments report highlighting a year of intensified activity focused on wildfire resilience, forest restoration, and community support across national forests and grasslands. The agency reports treating millions of acres to reduce hazardous fuels and improve forest health, alongside expanded reforestation efforts at levels not seen in decades. Timber offerings increased as part of a broader strategy to support rural economies while advancing sustainable forest management. Significant investments were also directed toward community wildfire preparedness, including funding for local and volunteer fire departments, equipment, and training. Infrastructure improvements—such as road, bridge, recreation site, and watershed restoration projects—addressed long-standing maintenance backlogs and storm damage. The report further notes progress in streamlining permitting for rural broadband and energy projects, helping improve connectivity and access in forest-dependent communities. [The Tree Frog News cannot access the US Forest Service website, this summary was created using AI

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Drax launches new Biomass Tracker to boost transparency across biomass supply chain

Drax Group Inc.
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Drax launched its Biomass Tracker, a new digital tool that provides greater visibility into the journey our woody biomass takes through the company’s global supply chain. The interactive tool shows the countries and states where Drax sources its biomass, the types of fibre used in Drax’s own woody biomass, how it is transported, and the carbon associated with each stage of its journey to Drax Power Station or to third-party customers. It also includes data on independent sustainability certifications, helping to strengthen accountability across the sector. The Biomass Tracker uses quarterly real-world data presented through an interactive Sankey diagram, allowing users to explore each stage of the supply chain from fibre origin (for Drax-own pellets), pelletising to transport, storage and use. …The tool is available to access on the Drax website.

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Idaho Forest Products Commission launches new timber “Forests Forever” license plate celebrating sustainable forestry

Clearwater Tribune
January 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The Idaho Forest Products Commission (IFPC) is excited to announce the launch of a new design for the existing Timber specialty license plate. The new plate reads: “Forests Forever: Manage. Harvest. Plant. Repeat.” Featuring a stunning landscape of Idaho forests, the plate allows Idahoans to show their love for the outdoors while directly supporting reforestation and environmental education for youth across the state. “The new plate highlights a simple, powerful message: With care, Idaho’s forests can and will be forever,” said Jennifer Okerlund, IFPC Director. “Supporting thoughtful management, responsible harvest, and replanting ensures this.” Forest management is vital to healthy, sustainable forests in Idaho and for every one tree harvested, seven are growing for the future. Proceeds from each Timber “Forest Forever” plate help fund replanting projects and environmental public education about sustainable forestry, wildfire prevention and programs that connect Idaho youth with the outdoors.

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Washington timber industry sees ‘ecosystem services’ as another cut

By Don Jenkins
Capital Press
January 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The Washington wood-products industry says timber harvests will spiral downward if lawmakers pass a bill championed by Lands Commissioner Dave Upthegrove. At Upthegrove’s request, legislators are considering authorizing the Department of Natural Resources to sell “ecosystem services,” possibly by delaying or canceling timber harvests. DNR officials say ecosystem services could be a new source of revenue as businesses buy carbon credits to “offset” their emissions. Carbon credits could add to the money rural counties and schools receive from timber sales, according to DNR. The timber industry, backed by the Washington State Association of Counties, argues its more likely ecosystem services would replace timber sales. Rural public services would get less money, Paul Jewell, the counties’ policy director, said. More importantly, rural counties will lose timber jobs, he said. “Sales of ecosystem services can’t replace those economic benefits,” he told the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee on Jan. 28.

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Alaska’s public lands are a political battleground

By Victoria Petersen
90.3 fm KNBA
January 26, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Over the past year, a wave of high-profile development proposals — from oil fields and mining roads to timber projects — has reshaped a fast-moving debate, propelling Alaska into the center of the national conversation over how to balance energy production with conservation. These projects have revived long-running tensions over what the state’s public lands are for, and who they ultimately benefit. The federal government has long viewed Alaska as resource-rich, a posture that’s intensified under the Trump administration. After meeting Trump in 2018, Gov. Mike Dunleavy called Alaska “America’s natural resource warehouse.” But the last time Alaska figured this prominently in national energy and conservation debates was in the late 1970s, said Philip Wight, at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. What makes today’s landscape different, Wight said, is a unified federal government pushing multiple contentious development proposals at once, with fewer moderate Republicans willing to oppose them ….

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North Bay old-growth redwood preserve set for expansion

By Martin Espinoza
Marin Independent Journal
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CALIFORNIA — A San Francisco conservation group has reached an agreement to purchase 200 acres in northwest Sonoma County that will expand its existing old-growth redwood reserve. The Save the Redwoods League will buy the property for $4 million from the family of the late Harold Richardson. The land will be added to the group’s Harold Richardson Redwoods Reserve, a 730-acre forest that was acquired from the family in 2018, bringing the combined reserve to nearly 1,000 acres. The reserve… is one of the oldest known coast redwoods south of Mendocino County and the widest south of Humboldt County, according to Save the Redwoods. …The old-growth forest provides habitat for a number of rare wildlife species, including the northern spotted owl and marbled murrelet as well as the California giant salamander, Skilton’s skink lizard and tree-dwelling bats.

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Federal judge ends oft-used exemption to environmental review for logging on federal land

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Capital Chronicle
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A 34-year-old rule exempting some commercial logging projects on federal lands from environmental review is unlawful, a federal judge recently ruled. Judge Michael McShane in the U.S. District Court in Medford earlier this month struck down the exemption, and with it, reversed recent approvals for three commercial logging projects covering tens of thousands of acres in Fremont-Winema National Forest in southern Oregon. The decision is the result of a 2022 lawsuit brought against the U.S. Forest Service by regional conservation groups Oregon Wild, WildEarth Guardians and GO Alliance. Since 1992, the U.S. Forest Service has been able to bypass environmental reviews required by federal law for logging projects on federal land, if the logging is meant to “improve forest stand conditions,” habitat or prevent wildfires, without “significant effect” on the human environment.

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Delegation wants Trump administration to exempt New Mexico from proposed rollback of Roadless Rule

Senator Martin Heinrich
January 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Martin Heinrich

All five members of New Mexico’s all-Democratic Congressional delegation have signed on to a letter to U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins that requests the state be excluded from the Trump administration’s proposed repeal of the so-called Roadless Rule. The 24-year-old Roadless Area Conservation Rule … includes about 1.6 million acres of land in New Mexico, which impacts all five of the state’s national forests. However, the Gila National Forest has the most protected acreage. Rollins … contends the rule change will give state and local experts the freedom to make decisions about forest management and allow the logging industry to grow. New Mexico’s Congressional delegation sent a letter to Rollins on Sept. 19, after three weeks of public comment ended. The delegation asked the secretary to exclude New Mexico from the rollback, citing negative impacts to the state’s vulnerability to wildfires, public safety and the outdoor recreation economy.

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Gov. Tina Kotek picks Nevada state forester as first woman to lead Oregon Forestry Department

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Capital Chronicle
January 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Casey KC

After a year-long search, Gov. Tina Kotek has chosen Nevada’s state forester to take the helm of the Oregon Department of Forestry. Kacey KC would be the first woman to permanently hold the director’s position in the 115-year-old agency’s history. The Oregon State Senate would need to confirm her appointment during the upcoming legislative session before she could take office on March 1. KC, from Nevada, most recently spent eight years as Nevada’s State Forester Firewarden and three years as president of the National Association of State Foresters. …The Oregon state forester reports to the governor and the forestry board, and oversees the management and protection of 745,000 acres of forestland owned by the state of Oregon, as well as wildfire protection for 16 million acres of forestland in the state. All of this requires negotiating the desires of environmentalists, logging companies, tribes and private property owners.

Additional coverage in Oregon Public Broadcasting: Gov. Tina Kotek taps Oregon’s next forest boss

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Environmentalists sue to stop Oregon logging project in spotted owl habitat

By Monique Merrill
Courthouse News Service
January 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

EUGENE, Oregon — A trio of conservation groups is accusing the US Bureau of Land Management in federal court of failing to adhere to its own management plans in a new lawsuit aimed at blocking a massive logging project slated for old-growth forests in Oregon. Cascadia Wildlands, Oregon Wild and Umpqua Watersheds claim in a lawsuit filed Wednesday that the agency violated multiple federal environmental laws through the authorization of the 42 Divide Forest Management Plan. The 42 Divide plan is a multi-decade series of logging projects set for nearly 7,000 acres of public lands in Camas Valley. The project area spans forests and waterways that are home to the federally protected northern spotted owl, Oregon Coast coho salmon, marbled murrelet and western pond turtles. …”[Bureau of Land Management] continues to wrap large logging projects targeting mature and old-growth forests in a veneer of ‘restoration’ and ‘resilience,” Brenna Bell at Crag Law Center, said.

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U.S. Forest Service seeking public input on plan for Leicester, Middlebury and Salisbury

By Keith Whitcomb Jr.
The Barre Montpelier Times Argus
January 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

BRANDON, Vermont — The public has until Feb. 11 to comment on the U.S. Forest Service’s management plan for the Green Mountain National Forest around Leicester, Middlebury and Salisbury. The forest service held an open house at the Town Hall Wednesday for the project with drew about 40 people. The plan involves controlled burning and tree removal with the goal being to create a more diverse forest and promote the growth of fire-adapted plants, according to Chris Mattrick, district ranger for the Rochester and Middlebury district. Mattrick is the official who will make the final decision on what the project entails should it move forward. People at the open house had questions about the controlled burns and potential use of herbicides for tree removal. Mattrick said there are no plans in this project or any that are pending to use herbicides in Silver Lake.

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Governor Gordon, U.S. Forest Service Sign Updated Stewardship Agreement

Sheridan Media
January 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Governor Gordon (R-WY) and U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz have signed an updated Shared Stewardship Agreement, strengthening the long-standing partnership between Wyoming and the USDA Forest Service. “This is about more than trees. It’s about managing entire landscapes, across boundaries and jurisdictions, to ensure healthier forests, safer communities, and more resources for future generations,” Governor Gordon said. Wyoming and the USDA-FS have operated under a Shared Stewardship Agreement since 2020. Rather than replacing the current framework, the updated agreement formally recognizes the substantial progress already achieved and sets a clear path for future collaborative planning and implementation. “Under President Trump’s leadership, the Forest Service has made unprecedented investments in forest health, reducing wildfire risk, expanding active management, and maintaining access to national forests and grasslands — and shared stewardship is a cornerstone of that policy,” Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz said. 

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How fire, people and history shaped the South’s iconic longleaf pine forests

By Andrea De Stefano, Mississippi State University
The Conversation US
January 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

For thousands of years, one tree species defined the cultural and ecological identity of what is now the American South: the longleaf pine. The forest once stretched across 92 million acres from Virginia to Texas, but about 5% of that original forest remains. It was one of North America’s richest ecosystems, and it nearly disappeared. As part of my job with the Mississippi State University forestry extension, I help private landowners, public agencies and nonprofit conservation groups restore these ecosystems. The forests’ story begins before European settlement, when Native peoples shaped and sustained this vast landscape using one of nature’s oldest tools: fire. Longleaf pine trees depend on fire for survival and regeneration. Fire reduces competition from other plants, recycles nutrients into the soil and maintains the open structure of the landscape where longleaf pines grow best. 

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Minnesota Department of Natural Resources releases annual forest health report

By Andrew Weeks
Grand Forks Herald
January 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources aerially surveyed more than 13.5 million acres last year, checking for forest damage across the state’s forestland. Its findings are included in the recently released 2025 Forest Health Annual Report. Brian Schwingle, forest health program coordinator, said the annual survey and report is important because it tracks trends and reveals what is impacting trees, allowing the managers to make decisions for healthier, more resilient forests. “The two biggest tree health stories in 2025 in Minnesota were the derecho, the big blowdown in Bemidji, and the three big wildfires in northeast Minnesota in May,” he said, noting prior spruce budworm damage helped fuel the fires. In July, a derecho damaged 11,600 acres in and around Bemidji. Derecho, a Spanish word for straight, is a widespread, straight-line windstorm associated with a band of fast-moving thunderstorms. They can leave serious damage in their wake.

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Why Northern Wisconsin logging deserves a chance to be dominant again

By Paul Schecklman
Northwoods Policy Network
January 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

…Wisconsin’s woods are large, and they are healthy. Almost 40% of Wisconsin’s landscape is covered in forests, roughly 17 million acres. Further, our annual growth of forestland is double the volume we remove. This highlights the sustainability of forestry practices and the unrealized capacity to do more. Today, we cannot allow forests to renew themselves with fires. This requires active management to maintain productive forests. Forests that are growing are healthy while over-mature forests benefit no one. Our forests require management to remain healthy, reduce risk of forest fire, and continue providing exceptional habitat for wildlife. Wisconsin’s loggers and forestry industry have built and sustained whole communities and the families that inhabit them. Forestry, wood, and paper industries have deep roots in our rural economy and culture. A healthy forest industry is critical to our ability to sustain resilient forests, recreation, and wildlife habitat that underwrites our massive outdoor industry.

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Why Chile’s wildfires are spreading faster and burning hotter

By Steve Grattan
The Associated Press in ABC News
January 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

BOGOTA, Colombia — Chile is reeling from one of its most serious wildfire emergencies in years. Deadly flames sweeping across central and southern parts of the South American country have turned large swaths of forest and towns to ash. Fire scientists say the blazes are being driven not only by extreme heat, drought and wind, but also by how human-shaped landscapes interact with changing climates — a lethal mix that makes fires harder to control. …The fires have razed forests, farmland and hundreds of homes. …What distinguishes Chile’s current fire season isn’t an unusual surge in the number of fires, but the amount of land they are burning. …Miguel Castillo, at the University of Chile… “almost tripling the amount of affected area,” even though the number of fires so far is “within normal margins.” That means fewer ignitions are causing far greater damage — a pattern increasingly seen in extreme wildfire seasons around the world.

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