Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
PR Newswire
April 24, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

FREDERICTON, NB – [Federal ministers] highlighted the Government of Canada’s recent launch of A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature. Nature is foundational to Canadian identity and a key driver as we work to build our economy while integrating biodiversity considerations into infrastructure and resource development. On March 31, 2026, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced the federal government’s new strategy for nature, with an investment of $3.8 billion. A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature is based on three pillars for action to harmonize nature protection and economic growth: Protecting Nature in Canada, Building Canada Well, and Valuing Nature and Mobilizing Capital. Key components of the Strategy include increasing our protected areas network on land and water.

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Canfor releases 2025 Sustainability Report

Canfor Corporation
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Canfor released its 2025 Sustainability Report… providing an overview of the company’s sustainability strategy and its environmental, social and governance progress in 2025. Canfor CEO Susan Yurkovich said, “Our sustainability strategy is centered on sound resource stewardship, product and operational excellence, and commitment to our people and communities. Together, we are delivering the high-quality, renewable forest products our customers rely on, while advancing a more resilient, low-carbon future.” Highlights include:

  • Maintaining leading sustainability certifications: 100% of managed forests were certified to SFI® or FSC® Forest Management Standards in Canada, 29% of purchased fibre in the US was certified to SFI Forest Management or American Tree Farm System® standards and 100% of Swedish forestry operations were certified to the PEFC Forest Management Standard. In addition, 56 million seedlings were planted in 2025.
  • Pursuing climate & energy targets: Across global operations, nearly 80% of energy used came from renewable sources. In addition, Canfor Pulp was awarded an EcoVadis silver medal for sustainability.

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Subaru Canada Plants 10,000 Trees; Celebrates New Milestone with Leave No Trace Canada Pledge

By Subaru Canada Inc.
PR Newswire
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

MISSISSAUGA, ON – Subaru Canada Inc. (SCI), is celebrating this Earth Day 2026 with the completion of its initial goal of 10,000 trees planted as a result of the Leave No Trace Canada Pledge and conservational efforts surrounding the Adventure On Parks program. In 2023, Subaru Canada became an LNTC Supporting Partner with Leave No Trace and the Presenting Partner of the Leave No Trace Pledge in Canada, found at takethepledge.leavenotrace.ca. The Pledge is the organization’s invitation to Subaru owners and Canadians to be mindful as they adventure on in Canada’s natural playground. When a participant takes the Pledge, a tree will be planted in Canada. To date, over 10,000 pledges have been taken. The Pledge is one of the core elements of the Adventure On Parks program. …”The completion of our 10,000 tree goal is just the beginning,” said SCI Chairman, President and CEO Yoichi Hori. “We will continue encouraging Canadians to commit to exploring responsibly.”

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Sustainable Forestry Initiative Annual Conference – Last Chance to Register

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The 2026 SFI Annual Conference is less than two weeks away! Don’t miss your chance to learn from and connect with leaders from across the forest and sustainability sectors–representing manufacturers, landowners, Indigenous communities, CEOs, government agencies, universities, conservation organizations, and more from May 5-7, 2026 in Montréal, Quebec. Virtual Registration: If you can’t attend in person but still want to join the conversation, virtual registration is available for $250 CAD ($180 USD). Join us in Montréal to connect with sustainability leaders, gain valuable market insights, and discuss how responsible forest management, supply chain transparency, conservation, and climate solutions are shaping a more sustainable future. The conference will take place from Tuesday afternoon through Thursday, but we encourage attendees to come early or stay a little longer to enjoy all that Montréal has to offer.

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Category 2 & 3 open fire prohibitions in effect as of noon April 23

By Pat Matthews
My Cariboo Now
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Fire Information Officer Amanda Cullum said effective at noon tomorrow (April 23) all Category 2 and 3 open fires must be fully extinguished. “The prohibitions will remain in place until noon on October 31, 2026, or until the Orders are rescinded. These prohibitions apply to the entire Cariboo Fire Centre including the Tsilhqot’in (Xeni Gwet’in) Title area, the 100 Mile House Forest District and the Quesnel Forest District.” …Cullum said the prohibition does not include Category 1 campfires that are 0.5 metres high by 0.5 metres wide or smaller, and CSA-rated or ULC rated outdoor stoves for cooking, heat or ambiance that burns charcoal briquettes, liquid fuel or gaseous fuel, and has a flame height that is less that 15 cm tall.

See all Fire Prohibitions and Restrictions on the BC Wildfire Service website

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Regional District of Central Kootenay asks province to protect two West Kootenay watersheds

By Bill Metcalfe
The Nelson Star
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The board of the Regional District of Central Kootenay voted on April 16 to write a letter to the provincial government in support of a group of rural water users near Nelway. The Rosebud Community Watershed Protection Group wants two adjacent watersheds preserved as a provincially protected area or as ecological reserve. The Lomond Creek and Rosebud Creek watersheds provide water for about 25 households… Rosebud Creek drains into the Salmo River and Lomond Creek into the Pend Oreille River. The total area of the two small adjacent watersheds is 2,250 hectares. “We’re trying to get the province of B.C. to declare this area a protected area to protect the wildlife corridor and to also protect our watershed from logging by B.C. Timber Sales,” said group spokesperson Dave Lang. B.C. Timber Sales is building roads, he said, preparing to log in the area, and residents are worried about … their water supply. 

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Early-season wildfires in B.C. prompt warnings

By Akshay Kulkarni
CBC News
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Officials are asking British Columbians to be watchful if they’re outdoors this weekend as they respond to a number of early-season wildfires. As of 5 p.m. PT Thursday, there were 19 fires burning throughout the province, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS). Most were human-caused, which is how any wildfire not sparked by lightning is categorized, and five were classified as out of control. BCWS officials had said that the warm and dry winter experienced by most of the province could lead to heightened risk in some areas this summer. …Fire information officer Julia Caranci said it comes amid what are called outflow conditions — when warm, drier air flows from the Interior to the ocean through the coastal valleys. …As of Thursday at noon, most of the province sat at a moderate fire danger rating — with some small pockets reporting high and extreme fire danger.

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Mosaic Forest Management presents at Ladysmith council meeting

By Morgan Brayton
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Council heard from Mosaic Forest Management representatives Jimmie Hodgson and Francis Guyver, who provided an overview of the company’s role in the coastal forestry sector, including timber markets, sustainability initiatives and wildfire preparedness. The presentation also highlighted watershed management work in the Ladysmith area and ongoing partnerships with Indigenous communities. Representatives invited council to participate in a field tour of Mosaic-managed lands.

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Capital Regional District could allocate $75K for forest plan including ‘wildfire risk reduction’

By Christine van Reeuwyk
Victoria News
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

In October 2025, the Regional Parks Committee tasked staff with looking at a potential Strategic Forest Management and FireSmart Plan, including budget. With a report in hand, the committee agreed to embark on a phased approach to develop a forest management plan for regional parks with key considerations including wildfire risk reduction, ecological values, cultural considerations and FireSmart principles in 2027. The first step would include a request for proposal process, with a price tag of up to $75,000 from the 2027 budget, to retain a qualified consultant to assist in developing a Strategic Forest Management Plan framework guiding future wildfire risk reduction and forest resilience efforts, the parks committee agreed during its April 22 meeting.

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160 Tonnes Removed and Counting: Vancouver Island Communities Double Down on Illegal Dumping for Earth Day

Mosaic Forest Management
April 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

On May 2, volunteers will converge on the Bush Creek hatchery in Ladysmith to haul illegally dumped waste out of the surrounding forest and watershed. Over the past three years, the community cleanup has removed nearly 160 tonnes of garbage, the equivalent of 23 fully loaded dump trucks. “Illegal dumping is a serious offence – one that harms our forests and puts communities at risk,” remarked Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. Mosaic Forest Management will once again supply staff volunteers, donated materials and disposal support …This summer, Mosaic is expanding its response beyond cleanups. The company is launching See Something, Snap Something, a public reporting pilot that will invite anyone recreating on Mosaic lands to photograph and report online illegal dumping they encounter. The data will help identify hot spots and trends and build an evidence base for working with local authorities on enforcement. …More information on Mosaic’s reporting pilot will be available at MosaicForests.com this summer. 

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Evans Lake Forestry Camp needs your donations!

Evans Lake Forest Education Society
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

On Saturday, March 28, 2026, a fire at Evans Lake resulted in the loss of two buildings, including four cabins. We are deeply grateful that no campers were on site and all staff are safe—but the loss to our community is significant. We want to sincerely thank Squamish Fire & Rescue, Britannia Beach Volunteer Fire Department, RCMP, Conservation Officers, our team, and a member of our community for their quick and compassionate response. Right now, our focus is on recovery. While we are insured, there are always substantial costs that aren’t fully covered. As we begin to rebuild, many have asked how they can help. Donations made here will directly support urgent recovery needs, replacement of essential spaces, and ongoing operations—helping ensure we can continue to provide meaningful outdoor experiences for thousands of children and families.

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BC Must Stop Blaming First Nations for Old-Growth Logging

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Ben Parfitt

You would be forgiven for thinking that British Columba’s Ministry of Forests is really the Ministry of Logging. A recent ministry news release boasts of a 30 per cent increase in timber auctioned, legislative amendments that will result in 17,700 more truckloads of logs coming out of the province’s forests each year, and a new streamlined permitting process that will add another 11,100 truckloads of logs to the mix. Ravi Parmar, the man overseeing all of this as forests minister, is certainly working hard to meet the mandate given to him by Premier David Eby, one that instructs him to increase logging rates and that sets a numerical target. But what of old-growth forest conservation, which is also part of Parmar’s mandate? There, Parmar has acted with decidedly less zeal. …Parmar and his predecessors have clearly encouraged more logging by First Nations on the grounds that it fosters a long-overdue new relationship with Indigenous Peoples and governments in the province.

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Sunshine Coast Regional District prepares response to BC Timber Sales’ five year operating plan

By Connie Jordison
The Sunshine Coast Reporter
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Sunshine Coast Regional District Board is set to weigh in on 15 new or modified cutblocks BC Timber Sales is proposing over the next five years — and may withhold support for eight of those. On April 30, the SCRD board is slated to consider a large package of local comments responding to BC Timber Sales’ 2026-2030 operating plan. According to BCTS’s website, its Chinook region (which includes the lower Sunshine Coast) led this initiative, “to provide more detailed information on planned activities over a longer time period to our identified stakeholders.” At the April 16 electoral services committee meeting, rural area directors supported forwarding comments from the five area advisory planning commissions to BCTS. That would be in addition to recommendations from regional staff reviewed by committee of the whole on April 9.

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How shifting weather cycles are fuelling North America’s wildfire surge

By Michael Brown
University of Alberta
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Weather constraints that once helped to suppress wildfires are weakening at a dizzying pace, according to new University of Alberta research that reveals increasingly erratic hour-to-hour burning and a collapse of the reprieve cooling nighttime temperatures once afforded firefighters. Kaiwei Luo, a postdoctoral researcher in the Faculty of Agricultural, Life, and Environmental Sciences, builds on a 2024 study that first sounded the alarm on nighttime burning. …With this new research published this week in Science Advances, Luo shows that climate change is weakening the day-night weather rhythm that once helped restrain wildfires, not only extending burning hours but increasingly amplifying fire behaviour hour by hour — a shift that explains the fast-escalating dynamics behind recent extreme fires and fire seasons. …In a paper, Luo and his colleagues combined seven years of satellite fire observations with 50 years of climate data to reconstruct historical fire potential.

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The Forest Quietly Removed from BC’s Old-Growth Deferral List

By Sarah Cox
The Tyee
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A new old-growth logging controversy is unfolding in British Columbia, dividing Indigenous leaders and pitting the provincial government against scientists and conservation groups. The Tsitika River watershed …was deemed to be at such high risk of biodiversity loss that the B.C. government placed it in an old-growth deferral area, off limits to logging. But last year, the government quietly removed a large tract of the forest from its old-growth deferral list. And then in March, the government agency BC Timber Sales auctioned off 24 hectares for clearcutting. …The B.C. Forests Ministry told The Tyee it approved the Tsitika cutblock following consultation with Tlowitsis Nation, We Wai Kai Nation, Wei Wai Kum First Nation and Kwakiutl First Nation, “on whose territory this cutblock overlaps.” But other Indigenous leaders, including Ma’a̱mtagila Hereditary Chief Rande Cook, whose ancestors stewarded the Tsitika area, strongly object to logging.

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Edmonton releases Wildfire Risk Strategy

City News Everywhere Edomonton
April 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©CityofEdmonton

The City of Edmonton has released its Wildfire Risk Strategy, as Canada has seen an increase in wildfires over the last few years. The City says it is developing a roadmap for a coordinated approach to protecting people, property, and natural areas. “This strategy flows from our commitment to building a resilient city where we are aware of the risks associated with climate change, including wildfires, and protect our ecosystems and communities through proactive planning,” said Kent Snyder, Branch Manager of Planning and Environment Services. …Through the strategy, the City will look to minimize ignition risk through vegetation management and updated development regulations, increase community awareness and support initiatives such as the FireSmart™ Neighbourhood Recognition Program, strengthen integrated emergency response and specialized wildfire training across City departments, and Collaborate with regional partners and Indigenous communities to build landscape-level resilience.

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Fort Nelson wildfire technician wins award at 2026 BC Wildland Firefighter Award

By Ruth Prarthana and Stephen Albert
Energetic City
April 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Rena Dehne

FORT NELSON, B.C. — A wildfire technician from the Fort Nelson fire zone has won an award at the recent BC Wildland Firefighter Award. Rena Dehne, a wildfire technician for BC Wildfire Service, was given the Vanguard Award at the recent 2026 Wildfire Resiliency and Training Summit that was held from April 8th to April 12th. As a wildfire technician, Dehne’s job supports both wildfire response and fire management within her respective zone, including contributing to fire preparedness and prevention work. According to Dehen, the Vanguard Award is a “specific honor” within the BC Wildland Firefighters Award “This award recognizes an early career wildland firefighter with 10 years or less of experience who demonstrates excellence, dedication and leadership within their role,” Dehne explained. Dehne was humbled and surprised when she won this award.

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A Decade of Impact and Reasons for a Hopeful Future in Forestry

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
April 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Doug Donaldson

A special feature interview with Doug Donaldson, former Minister of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development. As the Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC) marks its 10th anniversary, it is a chance to look back on a decade of investments and work that has quietly but meaningfully contributed to the health and resiliency of forests and communities throughout British Columbia (B.C). Established in 2016, FESBC emerged at a time when B.C.’s forests were facing growing pressures from the risk of catastrophic wildfires and the mountain pine beetle epidemic to ever changing economic conditions in the forestry sector and growing concerns specific to climate change. For Doug Donaldson, who served as Minister of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development (now the Ministry of Forests) for a few years shortly after FESBC’s creation, the Society quickly proved its value in ways that were not initially expected.

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Creston Community Forest Featured in Film Highlighting Wildfire Resilience and Local Forest Management

BC Community Forest Association
April 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Creston, BC — The Creston Community Forest (CCF) is featured in a new film as part of a province-wide project led by the BC Community Forest Association, showcasing the work and impact of community forests across British Columbia. The film highlights how the CCF is managing its forests to support local priorities, including wildfire risk reduction, recreation, and long-term sustainability. “We’re excited to share this film as a way to show the work that happens on the ground and what this community forest means to the community of Creston,” said Daniel Gratton, Registered Professional Forester and Forest Manager at the CCF. Unlike traditional forestry models focused primarily on timber, the CCF has been taking a broader approach. Its work reflects the needs and values of the residents first, balancing ecological health, economic activity, and public use of the land.

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Nk’Mip Forestry Leads SFI-Supported Wildfire Recovery Project

Nk’Mip Forestry
April 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Oliver, BC — Nk’Mip Forestry, the professional forestry branch of the Osoyoos Indian Band (OIB), is leading a wildfire restoration project within the OIB traditional territory following the 2021 Nk’Mip Creek wildfire. The work, which will include forest recovery, wildfire risk mitigation, and community involvement, is supported by Environment and Climate Change Canada through the Climate-Smart Forestry grant, administered by the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI). This project reflects a long-term approach to caring for the land by bringing back diversity to the forest and supporting a healthier landscape over time.

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Court says Nova Scotia woods ban was unreasonable, but premier says he would do it again

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

Premier Tim Houston says he would institute a ban on entering the woods again, if the circumstances called for it, in spite of a judge saying last year’s province-wide decree was unreasonable. Houston was reacting to a Nova Scotia Supreme Court ruling that says the province failed to consider individual mobility rights — enshrined under Section 6 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms — when it told people to stay out of the woods on Aug. 5, 2025. The ban was imposed during an extended period of drought when wildfire risks were high to extreme. It remained in place across the province for several weeks. The court decision, released last week, suggested that Charter rights should be considered in a more meaningful way before the next emergency. Houston said he respects the decision but he stood by last year’s ban. He disputed the judge’s conclusion that the province did not consider Charter rights. 

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Don’t celebrate Nova Scotia court’s takedown of the forest ban

By Jamie Sarkonak
National Post
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Months after Premier Tim Houston of Nova Scotia locked down the province’s forests, instituting a $25,000 fine on anyone who dared to enter a wooded or boggy area that they did not personally own, he’s received his first review from the courts. It’s poor: the ban on human travel through the “woods,” the Nova Scotia Supreme Court said last Friday, was unreasonable and therefore illegal. The result is a win for common sense. The actual reasoning of the court, less so. …Justice Jamie Campbell declared the ban was unreasonable — because the natural resources minister, back before he banned walks in the woods, didn’t adequately consider how his decision might interact with the Charter rights of those affected. While it wasn’t a constitutional case, the Charter ended up being the deciding factor in a backdoor sort of way.

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Nova Scotia’s provincewide ban on entering the woods was unreasonable, court rules

Canadian Pressin Global News
April 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge says the provincial government made an unreasonable decision last year when it banned most people from entering the woods to prevent wildfires during an extreme drought. In a decision released Friday, Justice Jamie Campbell said the provincewide ban imposed on Aug. 5, 2025, did not meet the standard for reasonableness because the province failed to consider the impact on Charter rights. …“The record shows no consideration having been given to that issue,” Campbell wrote. “The issue here is not the balancing of community safety and individual rights. It is about the decision-making process.” While the government had considered the rights of commercial users by establishing a permit system for them, the judge found no consideration was given to the potential impact on the mobility rights of those who use the woods for purposes other than commercial gain.

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Chestnut Carbon Doubles Footprint in Southeast U.S. to Nearly 70,000 Acres of Restored Forests

By Chestnut Carbon
PR Newswire
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

NEW YORK — Chestnut Carbon, a leading U.S. developer of nature‑based carbon removal projects, today announced the completion of its fourth planting season for its afforestation project, doubling its footprint in the Southeast U.S. since last year to roughly 70,000 acres of land restored to native forests. This is the company’s largest planting efforts to date, and one of the largest conducted in the U.S. this year. With the close of this most recent planting season, Chestnut has now planted over 46.7 million trees since 2022, 24 million of which were planted between November 5, 2025, and April 4, 2026. The Chestnut Sustainable Restoration Project remains the largest U.S.-based afforestation project on the Gold Standard® registry, spanning an area 1.5 times the size of Acadia National Park and five times the size of the island of Manhattan. With its first-of-its-kind debt financing secured in 2025, Chestnut was able to accelerate land acquisition and planting operations to achieve this year’s record‑setting scale. 

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America’s Largest Landowner Is Using AI to Digitize the Forest

By Ryan Dezember
The Wall Street Journal
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Autonomous skidders that drag felled trees around logging sites. A database detailing each tree in the forest. A screen that shows loggers which trees to cut and which to leave standing to maximize financial returns decades down the line. Weyerhaeuser, the country’s top logger and one of its oldest companies, is betting artificial intelligence can deliver these and other big changes to American forestry, which has come a long way from oxen and axes. Many applications envisioned by Weyerhaeuser executives are unique to a company that manages timberlands in the US and Canada that together cover an area roughly the size of Indiana. …Among the initiatives is the creation of a digital twin of Weyerhaeuser’s timberlands using satellite imagery, drone photography and lidar. …Weyerhaeuser is also studying semiautonomous logging equipment. At a meeting with investors, executives showed video of a driverless skidder, dragging freshly downed timber around a Southern logging site. [to access the full story a WSJ subscription is required]

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Forest Service plan to close research stations stokes fear as wildfire season approaches

By Alex Brown
Stateline
April 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The U.S. Forest Service’s plan to close scores of research stations could threaten the nation’s wildfire readiness, many foresters fear, and erode decades of work to understand timber production, soil health, pests and diseases, watersheds and wildlife. …It’s unclear how many scientists will be affected by the transition, but it comes as part of a larger agency reorganization that is expected to move roughly 5,000 employees to new outposts. …The Forest Service has not said how much money it expects to save by closing the research stations. Many Western leaders are skeptical that the consolidated operation will be able to replicate the work of the existing research stations.  …Forest Service veterans say its research program is valued by loggers and tree-huggers alike. “Nobody was asking for this,” said Robert Bonnie, undersecretary of agriculture for natural resources and environment during the Obama administration. “There was no call to do anything like this.”

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Record number of consumer drones are keeping firefighters grounded

By Andrew Avitt
US Department of Agriculture
April 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©Andrew Avitt

Drones, also referred to as uncrewed aerial systems or UAS, have been increasingly complicating airspace around wildfires since the first consumer models came to market in 2013. They are a nuisance to wildland firefighting when they are operating unauthorized in restricted airspace, putting pilots, their crews, and aircraft at risk. When unauthorized drones are sighted, the fire manager must shut down the airspace for all air operations supporting the wildland fire suppression for safety reasons. This means crucial aerial firefighting and lifesaving capabilities – like air medevac and fire suppression aircraft – can’t fly. …The potential damage done from a drone strike can vary. It could hit the tail of the plane making the aircraft difficult or impossible to control. It could go down an intake and disable an engine. It could go through the windscreen and hit the pilot or copilot and directly injure or even kill them.

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Firefighting rappel crews sharpen their skills in Central Oregon forests

By Kathryn Styer Martínez
KLCC Public Radio
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©USFS

“The beautiful thing about helicopters is we can get our folks next to a fire – very pinpoint accuracy, very close – so they can get on the fire quickly,” said Adam Kahler, national rappel specialist with the U.S. Forest Service. Firefighters Max Li and Owen Fortey were two of the 250 U.S. Forest Service wildland firefighters from across the country who traveled to Bend last week to attend the annual national rappel re-certification for the U.S. Forest Service Helicopter Rappel Program. It’s the main training for returning rappeller crew members this year and a requirement of the job. The training returned to Bend for the third year in a row. …Rappel crews are specially trained wildland firefighters who drop into active fires in hard-to-reach areas of the backcountry with all the needed gear and rations. They respond to all types of incidents but are typically deployed to small fires often started by lightning strikes, said Kahler.

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Nearly 120 current, former wildland firefighters issue letter to Congress opposing repeal of ‘Roadless Rule’

By Alex Jensen
KGW8
April 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

PORTLAND, Ore. — Nearly 120 current and former wildland firefighters — including 45 from Oregon — are urging Congress to oppose a Trump administration proposal to undo the “Roadless Rule” and open parts of the national forest system to commercial timber production. …The U.S. Department of Agriculture says repealing the rule would shift decisions about road building, reconstruction and timber harvesting back to local officials. The agency also argues the change could help reduce wildfire risk, according to its proposal. …But in an open letter sent to members of Congress on Tuesday, current and former wildland firefighters push back on that idea. They say adding roads would increase human access — and, in turn, the likelihood of human-caused wildfires. …Wildland firefighters say repealing the rule could shift resources away from communities that face higher risk and push crews into more remote, “high-exposure” areas.

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Idaho Forest Service employees told their positions may be affected by federal agency restructure

By Laura Guido
The Idaho Capital Sun
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The recently announced major restructure of the US Forest Service may disrupt a number of forestry positions in Idaho. But the details as to how those positions will be affected and what work will continue or be eliminated under the plan remain unclear. Anna Webb, an entomologist and federal employee union representative based in Boise, received a notice about two weeks ago that her position in the agency would be affected. …Leaders of the federal employee union that represents Forest Service employees for the Boise, Payette, Salmon-Challis and Sawtooth national forests are concerned about the disruption to local employees as well as the potential long-term consequences to forest health. …Although Idaho’s forests are overseen by two out-of-state regional offices, many regional and some national positions are based in Idaho — all of these may be affected by the proposed restructure.

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It’s a ‘Fir-mageddon!’ Why and where Douglas fir trees are declining in our region

By Sarah Bagby
KATU News
April 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

In southern Oregon they call it the “fir-mageddon” – the rapid decline of our largest and most prolific tree in the Pacific Northwest. The Douglas fir … is the most important tree species to the economy on the planet. Their ability to grow to a massive size and live for hundreds of years through all types of weather, makes it the best source for high-grade construction lumber… Douglas fir in Oregon and Washington alone make up one-quarter of the lumber industry in the United States. Since 2000, 635 acres of Douglas fir trees in our region have died — that’s roughly 175,000 trees, a trend that is only accelerating. The decline is not from the lumber industry. It’s global warming. A recent study proves is that Douglas fir trees are resilient to wildfires, but don’t fair well during a drought. During a drought they become vulnerable to a beetle that prays on distressed trees. 

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Strengthening stewardship: Volunteers power public lands across the Eastern Region

By the Forest Service
US Department of Agriculture
April 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Across the Forest Service’s Eastern Region, volunteers are a powerful force shaping national forests and grasslands. They serve alongside employees, contributing time, energy and expertise to public lands that belong to everyone. This National Volunteer Week, we thank our volunteers—thousands of individuals—and our partner organizations for their year-round commitment to the landscapes that connect our communities. In FY25, 7,464 volunteers contributed 245,647 hours of service across the Eastern Region, representing an appraised value of $8,546,059. These numbers only hint at the scope of their impact. Throughout the Eastern Region, volunteer contributions help ensure that national forests remain healthy and welcoming for future generations. Last year across the Eastern Region, volunteers supported nearly every part of the mission. They maintained recreation sites and trails, restored habitat, monitored resources, led education programs, improved visitor experiences and advanced projects that strengthened long-term ecosystem resilience. 

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Environmental advocates slam Forestry Service for moving forward on Western Upper Peninsula logging project

By Kyle Davidson
News From The States
April 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

©USFS

Michigan — Following the release of a preliminary decision to move forward with a logging project in Ottawa National Forest, members of a Chicago-based environmental advocacy group are arguing the U.S. Forest Service did not properly consider the project’s overall environmental impact. On April 16, the Forest Service released its draft decision for the Silver Branch Vegetation Management project. Covering roughly 177,772 acres in Baraga, Houghton and Iron counties, the project would clear cut just over 25,000 acres of forest, though it would leave some trees that provide seeds or habitats for wildlife. Ottawa National Forest District Ranger Trevor Hahka told the Detroit News the project is aimed at reducing wildfire risk and addressing forest health issues, such as aging aspen trees, overcrowded hardwoods and declining conifers. 

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Drought conditions raise risk of New Hampshire wildfires, officials say

By Paul Feely
New Hampshire Union Leader
April 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Despite several strong snowstorms across New Hampshire this winter and some rain in the past week, state officials warn that drought conditions persist statewide — along with an elevated risk of wildfires. The January-March period was the sixth-driest first quarter on record for the state, dating back to when measurements were first recorded in 1895, according to the New Hampshire Forest Protection Bureau. The data comes on the heels of an autumn with wildfire conditions so severe that a burn ban was declared statewide from Sept. 22 through Oct. 8. “Last year, New Hampshire experienced a 27.6% increase in the number of wildfires and a 16.8% increase in the number of acres burned,” said Chief Steven Sherman of the Forest Protection Bureau. “Many homes in New Hampshire are located in the wildland-urban interface — the area where homes and flammable wildland fuels intermix.” The U.S. Drought Monitor reports that 78% of the state is currently experiencing moderate to severe drought. 

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Lousiana’s timber industry has a future. But only if we act now to support it.

By Jeffrey Lasiter
NOLA.com
April 17, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Louisiana’s timber industry is at a critical turning point. For generations, forestry has been one of the economic backbones of our state, especially in north Louisiana. Families like mine have built their livelihoods around logging, trucking and land management. But today, that foundation is weakening — not because our forests are failing, but because our markets are. Over the past several decades, Louisiana has lost a significant portion of its wood-using infrastructure. Mill closures across north Louisiana have reduced demand for fiber, leaving a growing supply of timber without a market. While our forests continue to thrive and produce, the outlets that once supported them have steadily disappeared. …Expanding markets like pellet-to-power could help restore demand for low-grade timber, which is essential to keeping logging operations viable. These industries have the potential to sustain hundreds of jobs, increase fiber demand and bring new economic activity to rural parishes.

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Wildlife experts call for ‘misleading’ timber industry book to be removed from schools

By Caroline O’Doherty
The Irish Times
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

IRELAND — The Department of Education has distanced itself from a book distributed to primary schools that champions commercial Sitka spruce plantations despite their well-documented environmental downsides. The children’s book, Sitka Spruce – the Amazing Timber Tree, has a foreword written by Michael Healy-Rae, the recently resigned minister of state with responsibility for forestry, and depicts Sitka forests as being full of wildlife with trees removed individually while the rest of the woodland “flourishes”. In reality, such plantations, while critical for the timber industry, are regarded as ecological dead zones. The book was originally produced by the Morgan Sindall Construction company in Britain and distributed to schools there. The Irish version is almost identical and is funded by the Society of Irish Foresters, the Irish Timber Council and the Social, Economic, Environmental Forestry Association (SEEFA). The book is written from the perspective of a Sitka spruce tree that describes seeing abundant wildlife all around it.

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Earth Day 2026 | Our Power, Our Planet

Earth Day
April 22, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Progress does not happen in silence. It happens when people show up. Environmental progress is built through everyday action—from communities protecting ecosystems to innovators advancing solutions. For Earth Day 2026, we’re mobilizing at scale. Every action counts. Every voice matters. With over 10,000 events including community cleanups, teach-ins, peaceful demonstrations, tree planting, voter registration, town hall meetings, community organizing — every action strengthens the movement. Our Power, Our Planet is Earth Day 2026’s theme reflecting a fundamental truth: environmental progress doesn’t depend on any single administration or election. It’s sustained by daily actions of communities, educators, workers, and families protecting where they live and work. Earth Day 2026 affirms that environmental progress is real, resilient, and ongoing despite policy uncertainty. Innovation, education, and community problem-solving remain durable. Local systems — cities, schools, Tribal nations — continue implementing solutions that strengthen energy reliability, conserve resources, and reduce risk because they’re grounded in economic sense and public safety. 

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Our efforts to halt global forest loss aren’t working: new research

By Chris Taylor, David Lindenmayer and Maldwyn John Evans (Aust. National University)
The Conversation AU
April 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The loss of our forests is one of the biggest environmental challenges of our time. Forests are key to curbing carbon emissions and protecting the plants, animals and humans that call Earth home. However, we’re losing our forests at an alarming rate. Our new study shows we’ve lost roughly 300 million hectares over the past 11 years. However, it’s unclear how much of this forest has since been restored. Either way, we’re losing a significant amount of forest despite efforts to protect it through certification, protection and other conservation schemes. The European Union has introduced policies aimed at eliminating products and supply chains that contribute to forest loss. …Halting forest loss is also a major focus of international declarations, such as the Glasgow Leaders’ Declaration on Forests and Land Use. …Protected areas may also help curb forest loss. …These two strategies should be reducing, or even stopping, forest loss. But they’re failing to do so at a global scale.

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Amazon Forests Can Recover From Fire — With Some Caveats

Yale School of the Environment
April 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Paulo Brando

In 2004, an international team of researchers began setting fire to three 50-hectare plots of Amazon forest in Mato Grosso, Brazil. They were investigating what happens to a tropical forest when it burns, again and again, during the worst droughts in living memory? Yale School of the Environment Associate Professor Paulo Brando and a team of scientists recently published in a study by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The forests did not collapse into savanna. Even after repeated burning, severe droughts, and destructive windstorms, they retained what the researchers call a “fundamental capacity to remain forests.” Once the experimental fires stopped in 2010, recovery began. Within roughly a decade, interior forests had regained much of their structural complexity and species richness. …That optimism, however, comes with significant caveats. The forests that grew back after the fires stopped were not the same forests that had stood before. 

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Chernobyl’s radioactive landscape is a testament to nature’s resilience and survival spirit

By Dmytro Zhyhinas and Vasilisa Stepanenko
The Associated Press in WTOP News
April 19, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

CHERNOBYL, Ukraine — On contaminated land that is too dangerous for human life, the world’s wildest horses roam free. Across the Chernobyl exclusion zone, Przewalski’s horses graze in a radioactive landscape larger than Luxembourg. …Four decades on, Chernobyl remains too dangerous for humans. But the wildlife has moved back in. Wolves now prowl the vast no-man’s-land spanning Ukraine and Belarus, and brown bears have returned after more than a century. Populations of lynx, moose, red deer and even free-roaming packs of dogs have rebounded. …With human pressure gone, parts of the exclusion zone now resemble European landscapes from centuries past, he said, adding: “Nature recovers relatively quickly and effectively.” Trees pierce abandoned buildings, roads dissolve into forest, and weathered Soviet-era signs stand beside leaning wooden crosses in overgrown cemeteries. …“Most forest fires are caused by downed drones,” said Oleksandr Polischuk, who leads a firefighting unit in the zone. 

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