Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Researchers recognized for innovation in the Canadian forest value chain

By Rebecca Rogers, Director, Communications
Forest Products Association of Canada
May 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Christopher Gagnon

Armel Zambou Kenfack

Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC) is proud to announce the recipients of the 2026 Chisholm Awards for Innovation in Forestry, recognizing emerging leaders whose research is advancing innovation across Canada’s forest sector. The award theme—promoting the use and adoption of Canadian forest products through value chain innovation—highlights the importance of strengthening performance, efficiency, and competitiveness across the sector. “The work of these young innovators reflects the practical innovation the sector needs right now,” said Derek Nighbor, FPAC President and CEO. …Christopher Gagnon is pursuing his Masters in Wood Engineering and Bio-based Materials at Université Laval. Gagnon is working on the reinforcement of dowel-type connections in solid wood structures using self-tapping screws. His research addresses one of the key technical barriers limiting the broader adoption of wood in construction: the performance and reliability of structural connections. …Armel Zambou Kenfack is a PhD candidate in Wood Engineering and Bio-based Materials at Université Laval. Kenfack is working on a project that reduces energy consumption associated with fiber refining in Medium-Density Fibreboard (MDF) panel production.

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

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
PR Newswire
May 8, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

BROMONT, QC – Today, the Honourable Nathalie Provost, Secretary of State (Nature), highlighted the Government of Canada’s recent launch of A Force of Nature: Canada’s Strategy to Protect Nature. …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. …Indigenous leadership is at the heart of protecting nature, anchored in traditional knowledge and stewardship, and is critical to achieving our national and international commitments on nature. This new strategy will accelerate Canada’s progress toward protecting 30% of our lands and waters by 2030, restore critical habitats, strengthen ocean resilience, and mobilize new investments in nature while ensuring that conservation and economic development go hand in hand.

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SFI Tribute to Kathy Abusow: A Forestry Community Says Thank You

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

The opening event of day two of the SFI Annual Conference was a tribute to outgoing President and CEO Kathy Abusow, who has led the organization since 2007. Colleagues and board members gathered to mark the end of a tenure that has shaped sustainable forestry certification in North America — and the ceremony clearly caught Kathy off guard, with the surprise guest turning out to be her own daughter, Nina Andrascik, a forester and biologist early in her career. Speakers included SFI Board Chair Dan Lamb, who presented Kathy with a gift on behalf of the board; Lennard Joe, CEO of the BC First Nations Forestry Council; SFI President Jason Metnick; and Christine Leduc, SFI VP Canadian Operations and President of PLT Canada.

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SFI Panel Puts Disclosure Pressure in Focus: Certification Necessary but Not Sufficient

By Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

A panel at the 2026 SFI Annual Conference — Leveraging SFI Certification for Global Reporting Frameworks and Market Assurances — took on one of the more pressing questions facing the forest sector: as global disclosure frameworks multiply and investors demand quantifiable outcomes, does forest certification still do the job? Shenandoah Johns, Chief Environment and Sustainability Officer at West Fraser, walked through five major disclosure frameworks that have arrived in the last five years and identified the gap between what certification was designed to demonstrate and what regulators are now asking for. Paige Goff, VP Sustainability at Domtar, made the case for not overcomplicating what is already working. Kirsten Vice, Senior VP Sustainability and Canadian Operations at NCASI, framed 2026 as a year of influence — with key nature-related frameworks being finalized — and called on the sector to shape its own targets before others do it for them. Jason Metnick, President of SFI, moderated.

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Quebec SFI Implementation Committee recognized for advancing sustainable forestry practices and awareness across the province

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Montréal, QCThe Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) is pleased to announce the Quebec SFI Implementation Committee (SIC) as the winner of the 2026 SFI Implementation Committee Achievement Award at the 2026 SFI Annual Conference. The committee is being recognized for its wide-ranging engagement across the SFI Conservation, Standards, Community, and Education pillars, demonstrating a longstanding commitment to advancing sustainable forestry in Quebec. “This recognition from SFI reflects the collaborative leadership of the Quebec Implementation Committee across key SFI initiatives,” said Samuel Bourque, Domtar Certification Manager. “Together, we are advancing solutions for sustainable forestry while strengthening our ties with the public through outreach and education initiatives that make forests accessible to everyone.”

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Chiefs and Councillors of Miisun Board awarded inaugural SFI Indigenous Forest Leadership Award

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Montréal, QC — The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) is proud to announce the first-ever recipients of the SFI Indigenous Forest Leadership Award, in honour of Chief Lorraine Cobiness who passed in 2025. This inaugural award recognizes the Chiefs and Councilors of the Miisun Integrated Resource Management Company for leadership in land stewardship. “Chief Cobiness was an inspiring leader, an advocate for positive change, and a friend I learned so much from. She enriched our work at SFI through her passion, vision, and thoughtfulness, and she demonstrated how forestry can be done in a way that respects the land while strengthening communities,” said Kathy Abusow, CEO of SFI. “She will remain an inspiration to many in the forest sector, and this award was created to recognize her incredible legacy and the leaders who continue the work.”

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Domtar receives the 2026 SFI Leadership in Conservation Award for advancing climate smart forestry

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
May 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Montréal, QC – The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) is pleased to announce Domtar as the recipient of the 2026 SFI Leadership in Conservation Award. Certified to the SFI 2022 Forest Management, Fiber Sourcing, and Chain of Custody Standards, Domtar is being recognized for sustained engagement with the SFI Climate Smart Forestry Initiative and leadership in meaningful conservation efforts. Holding SFI certification for more than 20 years, and as the largest holder of SFI Forest Management certificates, Domtar brings substantial scale to responsible forest management. …“Domtar exemplifies the type of leadership that is helping shape the future of conservation in North American forests,” saidLauren T. Cooper, Chief Conservation Officer at SFI. 

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SFI 2026 Conference Kicks Off in Montreal with Growth Theme and Call to Action

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Kathy Abusow

The Sustainable Forestry Initiative opened its 2026 annual conference in Montréal —titled The Next Ring of Growth—featuring a traditional welcome from Chief Stephen Angus McComber, Ratsénhaienhs of the Mohawk Council of Kahnawà:ke, followed by opening remarks from CEO Kathy Abusow, who reviewed three decades of organizational milestones including growth in certified forest area, Indigenous partnership, and youth education programs. SFI Board Chair and Arbor Day Foundation CEO Dan Lambe spoke to the theme of legacy in the sector, while Catherine Grenier, President and CEO of the Nature Conservancy of Canada and SFI board member, outlined concrete pathways — including Other Effective Conservation Measures, carbon revenue models, and spatial data tools — for the forestry sector to gain formal recognition and financial return for conservation outcomes already being delivered on certified lands.

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SFI Panel: Challenging Times and New Opportunities in Forest Sector Markets

Kelly McCloskey, Editor
Tree Frog Forestry News
May 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The opening panel at the 2026 SFI Annual Conference in Montréal brought three senior executives to the stage under the moderation of outgoing SFI CEO Kathy Abusow. The conversation covered trade policy and tariffs, forest sector transformation, investment, and the role of certification in a period of structural change. Derek Nighbor is President and CEO of the Forest Products Association of Canada. Pete Madden is President and CEO of the US Endowment for Forestry and Communities. Lenny Joe is CEO of the BC First Nations Forestry Council. Abusow opened by noting that sector decline predates the current trade dispute, placing the scale of the problem on the table before the first question: 43 pulp and paper mill closures in the US — a figure she attributed to Madden — with 20 more expected, and 27 mill closures in Canada alongside 22 permanent sawmill shutdowns.

Abusow then turned to tariffs, asking Joe how trade policy and softwood lumber disputes uniquely affect First Nations. Joe said most First Nations operate as market loggers, with fibre moving through relationships with major licensees — meaning tariff-driven slowdowns hit rural communities, where most First Nations are located, directly and quickly. Nighbor noted that Canadian lumber volumes to the US dropped roughly 12% in 2025, with about eight percentage points of that loss being filled by European supply. He said he did not think it needed to be this way, and that the opportunity lies in growing the pie for the continent. Madden pointed to unintended consequences in rural communities, where mills trying to reinvest in their own infrastructure are finding imported machinery too expensive under the new tariff environment, causing capital projects to stall.

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Arbor Day Foundation receives 2026 SFI CEO Award for outstanding partnership and leadership in forestry

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
May 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Dan Lambe and Kathy Abusow

Montréal, QC — Kathy Abusow, CEO of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI), recently announced the Arbor Day Foundation as the recipient of the 2026 SFI CEO Award. Arbor Day Foundation CEO Dan Lambe accepted the award on behalf of the organization during the 2026 Annual SFI Conference. The SFI CEO Award is presented annually to individuals or organizations demonstrating outstanding partnership and leadership in forestry. The Arbor Day Foundation has strengthened corporate engagement in sustainable forestry and large-scale reforestation by helping businesses and brands create positive, measurable impact through trees. Additionally, the Foundation has championed SFI’s urban forestry, nature-based education, and Indigenous lands initiatives.

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COFI Forest Education Program Receives Support from Forestry Innovation Investment

By Travis Joern, Director of Communications & Events
Council of Forest Industries
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

VANCOUVER, BCAs BC’s forest sector continues to evolve, helping students understand career opportunities in modern forestry remains important. The BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) welcomes new support from Forestry Innovation Investment (FII) for COFI’s Forest Education Program, helping expand career awareness and workforce initiatives focused on modern forestry and wood products manufacturing. The program will connect students and job seekers with opportunities in the modern, high-tech forest sector through sawmill and manufacturing awareness events, Indigenous career events, career fairs, and trade and technology awareness initiatives. Delivered in partnership with COFI member companies, Indigenous organizations, school districts, training providers, and community partners, these initiatives are designed to increase awareness of the many career opportunities available in today’s forest sector. Through guided mill tours, classroom presentations, field tours, and career fairs, participants will gain direct exposure to local forestry operations and the technologies driving the industry, including advanced manufacturing, automation, and digital systems. 

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Alberta to Become Testbed for Autonomous Trucking Tech Targeting Forestry Sector

By Knowlton Thomas
Calgary.tech
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Kodiak AI is slated is conduct pilot operations for autonomous driving technology in Alberta. The Silicon Valley upstart, founded in 2018 in Mountain View by Don Burnette and Paz Eshel, has developed purpose-built, AI-powered ground autonomy solutions. Kodiak’s solutions specifically targeting the commercial trucking industry, which is where Alberta comes in; the region serves as a practical testing ground for explore the deployment of trucks equipped with the Kodiak Driver, the firm’s AI-powered autonomous log-hauling operations system. Logging truck routes often involve challenging roads with rough terrain and limited resources. The Mountain View innovator is partnering with Vancouver-based West Fraser Timber Co. to explore deployment of trucks equipped with Kodiak’s flagship Driver technology, which aims to address an industry-wide shortage of drivers and increase consistency of raw material supply to mills. “Innovation that improves safety and sustainability has long been central to how West Fraser operates,” says Mark Cookson, Woods Operations Manager for West Fraser.

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Public input wanted on Nicola and Similkameen ‘OCP for forests’

Penticton Western News
May 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Similkameen residents are being asked to weigh in on the government’s plan that sets how local forests are managed for the next decade. …The FLP is developed based on consultation with land tenure holders, the public, and First Nations, and is used to guide forest management in an area as well as to provide the legal requirements for activities such as timber harvesting. …The area that is covered by the tmixʷ naqscn FLP includes the Nicola and Similkameen watersheds. This will be the first FLP for the area, and will replace any forest stewardship plans that had previously been in place, with the goal of bring all different tenures and plans under a single, unified umbrella. …The plan will be in place for 10 years, with reporting every five years on to what extent it is meeting its objectives.

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Alberta Forest Week: Forests are about more than trees

By Aspen Dudzic and Tina Kennedy
Alberta Daily Herald Tribune
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Alberta Forest Week is just behind us – one of those natural moments throughout the year where I take time to pause and reflect on the challenges behind us, the opportunities that lie ahead, and all of the people who make that work possible. This year, I find myself thinking about what it truly means to be part of a forest community. Because at its core, this sector isn’t just about trees — it’s about people. The ones who show up early, stay late, and take pride in work that often goes unseen. The ones who build their lives around the forests, who care deeply about the land, and who understand that what they do today matters for generations to come. …So however you choose to celebrate Alberta Forest Week — whether it’s a walk in the woods, taking a closer look at the products we rely on every day, or simply learning something new — please take a moment to recognize the people behind it all.

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Supporting B.C. tech to help reduce lightning-ignited wildfires

By Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth
The Province of BC
May 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

With support from the B.C. government, a Vancouver business is conducting a field trial of its technology to assess whether it can reduce the frequency of wildfires ignited by lightning. Through the Province’s Integrated Marketplace program, delivered by Innovate BC, Vancouver-based Skyward Wildfire Technologies is receiving as much as $1 million to assess the effectiveness of its lightning-caused wildfire prediction and reduction technology in reducing wildfires ignited by lightning. Lightning is the leading cause of wildfires in B.C. In 2024, lightning was responsible for 70% of wildfire ignitions and 97% of all area burned in BC. …Skyward’s technology uses proprietary AI-enabled forecasting to identify areas of elevated lightning-caused wildfire risk and a targeted intervention designed to reduce cloud-to-ground lightning strikes. This technology has the potential to support wildfire-prevention efforts in fire-prone regions in BC.

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High-octane logger sports returns to 135th Cloverdale Country Fair

My Malin Jordan
The North Delta Reporter
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The West Coast Lumberjack Show returns to the 2026 Cloverdale Rodeo and Fair May 14 – 18. …As every year, fair-goers can expect high energy, fast action, and hilarious antics at the lumberjack shows over the course of the weekend. This year, the show is being presented by S&R Sawmills. …The event features some of the best professional lumberjacks in Canada. The competitors will showcase their strength, speed, and skill. Cloverdale is usually the first stop on the calendar for the logger-sports season. As such, the lumberjacks are always excited to come to Cloverdale, ensuring some high-octane enthusiasm is added to the weekend events. The West Coast Lumberjack Show performs 50 to 60 “show days” per year at between 12 to 15 different events spread across, mostly Western Canada, some back east, and a few south of the 49th….The lumberjack show has been entertaining fair-goers for more than 40 years. The event was first showcased at the 1982 Cloverdale Rodeo and Country Fair.

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It’s time to learn to live alongside grizzlies on Vancouver Island, expert says

By Claire Palmer
CBC News
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

In a public alert, the Village of Sayward — located just over 300 kilometres north of Victoria, B.C. — issued a warning to its residents after the grizzly was spotted within the village on May 4. Residents had been seeing the bear in the area around the village in the days leading up to it officially entering the village’s boundary. …While it’s the first sighting of a grizzly on the Island for the year, sightings are becoming more common. …Historically, the Island has not been considered a year-round habitat for grizzlies, says Nick Scapillati, executive director with the Grizzly Bear Foundation. But sightings of the mom and her cubs goes back to 2024 and Scapillati says that due to the small size of the cubs, they wouldn’t have been able to swim over. He believes it could be evidence of the first ever grizzly cubs to be born on Vancouver Island — a sign that grizzlies could be wintering on the Island. 

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Jasper wildfire fallout sparks Parks Canada reforms after deadwood buildup blamed

The Western Standard
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Parks Canada is scrambling to overhaul its wildfire prevention strategy after internal and federal records tied massive fuel loads of dead timber to the devastation that tore through Jasper in 2024. Appearing before the Senate national finance committee, interim CEO Andrew Campbell said the agency is now shifting toward more aggressive fire mitigation, including controlled burns and clearing dead trees near vulnerable communities. Blacklock’s Reporter said the move comes after widespread criticism that previous management allowed dangerous conditions to persist inside Jasper National Park. …The Canadian Forest Service report, titled Jasper Wildfire Complex 2024 Fire Behaviour Documentation, Reconstruction And Analysis, linked the conditions to a severe mountain pine beetle infestation that peaked years before the blaze. Researchers found the widespread deadwood significantly altered forest conditions, increasing sunlight and wind exposure at ground level, which accelerated drying and made fuels more combustible.

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Central Okanagan under ‘extreme’ wildfire danger as fire chief warns of ‘very real risk’

By Madison Reeve
Castanet
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A large part of the Central Okanagan is under an extreme fire danger rating, as prolonged dry conditions and wind continue to elevate wildfire risk across the region. Forest fuels are extremely dry, allowing fires to ignite easily, spread rapidly, and become difficult to control. West Kelowna fire chief Jason Brolund says the current conditions are unusually persistent for this time of year and should be taken seriously. “This should be a very strong reminder to people that wildfire is a reality now,” Brolund said. He stressed that while conditions are concerning, officials are not expecting a large-scale disaster at this stage. “We’re not going to see a catastrophic wildfire that causes community to be evacuated,” he said, “But it is a reminder that wildfire is a very real risk, and we could see a fire that spreads quickly.”

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UBC researchers find Indigenous lands can outperform protected areas on conservation

By Charlotte Fisher
University of British Columbia
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A new UBC study has found that lands managed by Indigenous Peoples consistently protect forests, biodiversity and carbon stores at levels equal to or greater than government-designated protected areas—yet most of these lands remain inadequately recognized or resourced. The paper analyzed 111 peer-reviewed papers… Three-quarters of those studies found a positive relationship between Indigenous lands and conservation. …The study also highlights a major gap in the research itself: only seven per cent of the 111 papers included Indigenous authors. “This is a significant disconnect,” said Garry Merkel, co-author and director of UBC’s Centre of Indigenous Land Stewardship and a member of Tahltan Nation. “Scientists often find it difficult to accept Indigenous science as legitimate, resulting in academic research that does not fully reflect Indigenous knowledge systems or perspectives. This work will help future research to be more inclusive and respectful in its acknowledgement of Indigenous communities.”

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The effects of overstory mortality on snow accumulation and ablation

Government of British Columbia
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mountain pine beetles have killed a large percentage of mature lodgepole pine trees over an area of more than 14 million hectares in the B.C. Interior. Research has shown that this can increase the magnitude of spring runoff. Forest licensees are also permitted to log beetle-attacked pine stands at an accelerated rate. The net effect is that most of B.C.’s mature pine stands will be changing rapidly over the next decades due to deterioration of the overstory, natural regeneration, clearcut harvesting, and managed reforestation. This project documents differences in structure between pine stands at different stages of growth and deterioration, changes within stands over time, and the effects of those differences on snow hydrology at the stand level. This will help watershed modellers predict possible changes in stream flow due to pine beetles and forest management. The map shows the locations of five study areas where this work is being done.

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It’s time to see the forests beyond the trees

By Sheila Harrington, founding executive director, Land Trust Alliance of B.C.
Victoria Times Colonist
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Sheila Harrington

The B.C. government, under Premier David Eby, is putting the future health and well-being of all British Columbians at risk. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar and the NDP government have approved logging of two old-growth areas on Vancouver Island, and are planning yet a third. On the Sunshine Coast, where recreation and tourism bring in more than logging, they are auctioning off another 100 areas. Despite receiving thousands of letters and submissions protesting the logging, one of these approvals was given to Teal Jones to log millennia-old yellow cedars near the ridge of Fairy Creek … on southern Vancouver Island. …If we are short-sighted and do not protect nature, we risk huge economic burdens and ecological consequences: The destruction of watersheds and clean water, erosion of land and roads, fires, loss of a tourism and recreational economy, and many lives. We must act now to protect B.C.’s forests, which are the foundation of our economy.

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Bureau Of Land Management Repeals Public Lands Rule

The National Parks Traveler
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The Bureau of Land Management has repealed the Conservation and Landscape Health Rule, commonly referred to as the Public Lands Rule, which put conservation on equal footing with mining, logging, and grazing of public lands. The rule required science-based decision-making, conservation considerations within multiple land uses and a focus on sustaining public lands for the long-term benefit of wildlife and the American people. “Today’s repeal of the Public Lands Rule abandons progress at the same moment climate change, chronic drought and accelerating habitat loss demand better stewardship from BLM,” said Maddy Munson, senior planning and policy specialist for federal lands at Defenders of Wildlife. …“This fits a pattern of brazen attempts to sell off and sell out our shared public lands at the expense of public access and conservation,” added Beau Kiklis, associate director of energy and landscape conservation at the National Parks Conservation Association.

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Intertribal Timber Council Responds to EUDR Review: “No Relief for Indigenous Forest Stewardship”

By Intertribal Timber Council (ITC)
PR Newswire
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

WASHINGTON — The Intertribal Timber Council (ITC) expressed deep disappointment following the European Commission’s release of its EUDR simplification review, saying the package offers no meaningful relief for Indigenous Tribal Nations and leaves major concerns raised by Tribal forest managers unresolved. Despite months of engagement from Tribal representatives and repeated warnings about unintended impacts on Indigenous communities, the Commission declined to reopen the regulation and instead proposed only limited technical adjustments through implementing acts, FAQs, and guidance documents. As a result, compliance obligations affecting Tribal Nations in low-risk countries remain fundamentally unchanged. …US Tribal Nations manage 7.8 million hectares of forestland under sovereign governance systems. …The ITC is calling on the European Commission to recognize Tribal forests in the United States as low-risk, legally protected systems.

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Smokey’s Last Stand: What We Lose When President Trump Guts the Forest Service

By Julian Reyes, Chief of Staff
Union of Concerned Scientists
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

…I recently wrote about how the Trump administration’s efforts to reorganize the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service and shutter 57 of its 77 research and development (R&D) facilities isn’t really about efficiency—it’s about hollowing out another science agency whose mission is to protect people, places, and livelihoods. The Forest Service has since updated its website to qualify that these R&D closures are “possible” but not a foregone conclusion. Yet, as details emerge, one thing is painfully clear: this plan would dismantle the world’s premier—and largest—wildfire research agency when wildfire risk, climate impacts, and economic losses are accelerating. Given increasing severity of wildfires, losing this research would diminish our understanding of managing forests under climate change. Trump’s plans to end climate studies, allowing forest fuel loads to build and diseases to spread, leaves our hands tied as we try to prevent wildfires without the benefit of evidence-based science.

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Lake Tahoe’s fire restoration plan includes controversial herbicide use across thousand of acres

By Petra Molina
Tahoe Daily Tribune
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

LAKE TAHOE BASIN, Calif. – A yearlong investigation by Mother Jones is casting new scrutiny on the use of glyphosate in California forests at the same time the U.S. Forest Service Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit plans to use the controversial herbicide across thousands of acres in the Lake Tahoe Basin. Glyphosate, commonly sold under the brand name Roundup, is widely used to kill shrubs and hardwood vegetation that compete with replanted conifers after fires and logging operations. However, the herbicide has long been controversial. In 2015, the cancer research arm of the World Health Organization classified glyphosate as a “probable carcinogen,” and manufacturer Bayer has paid more than $12 billion in settlements tied to lawsuits alleging the herbicide caused cancer.

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Forest restoration and spotted owl conservation can work together, study finds

By Sean Nealon
Oregon State University
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CORVALLIS, Oregon – Restoring dry forests in the Pacific Northwest, shaped by frequent low-intensity fire and widely spaced trees, often means thinning dense stands that accumulated after decades of fire suppression. This can make forests healthier and more resilient to wildfire, but it can raise concerns about protecting wildlife that depend on dense tree cover, including the northern spotted owl. A new study by researchers at Oregon State University and the US Forest Service and just published in Forest Ecology & Management, suggests that restoration of landscapes that historically burned frequently through planned, controlled fire does not have to conflict with spotted owl conservation. The study, led by Jeremy Rockweit, a postdoctoral student at Oregon State, identified forest areas used by the northern spotted owl for nesting and roosting that were more and less likely to persist through fire. 

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Southeast Alaskans largely critical of new direction on Tongass management plan, process

By Jasz Garrett
Juneau Independent
May 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A new direction in the Tongass management plan gathered more than 300 comments from Southeast Alaskans, who asked the U.S. Forest Service to manage timber and mining, along with recreation, in the forest they call home. The Coeur Alaska Kensington Mine said the revised plan should recognize the Tongass National Forest as a mining district, not solely as a timber or conservation reserve. …Others criticized the Trump administration and made a plea to protect old-growth forests and the wildlife that live there. Some criticized the Forest Service itself for a rushed process. …An online comment submitted by Kathy Hansen, executive director of the Southeast Alaska Fishermen’s Alliance, said the plan does not adequately address protections. …Residents at the workshop and in online comments said they felt the community use areas and high-use recreation area zones didn’t accurately reflect what Southeast Alaskans want.

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Washington public lands agency confronts operating cash crunch, as logging revenue lags

By Aspen Ford
The Washington Standard
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A regional timber industry group warns that Washington’s Department of Natural Resources is headed for deep budget trouble that will result in state worker layoffs and force taxpayers to foot more of the bill to keep the agency running. Counties that rely on logging revenue from land the agency manages could be at financial risk, too, argues the American Forest Resource Council. …Foresters inside the agency are pointing to Public Lands Commissioner Dave Upthegrove’s decision to pause some timber sales for eight months as a reason for the looming deficit in a key operating account, which covers many of the department’s expenses for managing timberland. …Upthegrove and other agency leadership say recent management decisions are not to blame for the low balance. …Timber harvesting hit a 22-year low last year, but it’s on the rise now, according to Heath Heikkila, director of government affairs with the American Forest Resource Council.

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University of California, Davis Study Finds Every $1 Spent on Wildfire Prevention Saves $3.75 as Forest Fuel Treatments Reduce Wildfire Spread

By Amy Quinton
Sierra Sun Times
May 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Every dollar spent on forest fuel treatments saves about $3.75 in wildfire damages, according to a new study, led by researchers at the University of California, Davis, of nearly 300 fires in the western United States. The study estimated that the treatments, such as forest thinning and prescribed burns, prevented $2.8 billion in losses, reduced wildfire spread and fire severity. …The study is the first to evaluate the economic value of Forest Service fuel treatments across the West at a large-scale using data from wildfires that encountered fuel treatments rather than relying on wildfire simulation models. It was published today in Science. …“Our results suggest that when fewer resources are available to agencies like the Forest Service, more of the economic burden of wildfires falls on the public” said lead author Frederik Strabo, a postdoctoral scholar. …Across the fires studied, fuel treatments reduced total burned area by 36%, or about 152,000 acres, relative to a scenario without treatments.

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Washington public lands agency confronts operating cash crunch, as logging revenue lags

By Aspen Ford
The Washington State Standard
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The American Forest Resource Council warns that Washington’s Department of Natural Resources is headed for deep budget trouble that will result in state worker layoffs and force taxpayers to foot more of the bill to keep the agency running. Counties that rely on logging revenue from land the agency manages could be at financial risk, too. While it’s become common for the group to clash with the department, they’re not the only ones complaining. Foresters inside the agency are pointing to Public Lands Commissioner Dave Upthegrove’s decision to pause some timber sales for eight months as a reason for the looming deficit in a key operating account, which covers many of the department’s expenses for managing timberland. …Upthegrove and other agency leadership say … it has less to do with recent timber sale activity on state land and more to do with the timing of when logging revenue reaches the agency.  

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Wildfire damages and the cost-effective role of forest fuel treatments

By Frederik Strabo, Calvin Bryan and Matthew Reimer
Science Magazine
May 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Wildfires are among the most pressing environmental challenges of the 21st century, intensified by the accumulation of forest fuels after a century of fire suppression policies. Although fuel-reduction treatments (“fuel treatments”) are a primary tool for reducing wildfire risk, they remain underutilized, partly owing to limited evidence of their economic value. In this study, we integrated high-resolution data on wildfires, fuel treatments, suppression effort, and damages across the Western United States to assess their cost-effectiveness. Using a quasi-experimental design, we found that fuel treatments reduced wildfire spread and severity, avoiding an estimated $2.8 billion in damages by limiting structure loss, cutting carbon dioxide emissions, and lowering fine particulate matter (PM2.5) exposure. Each dollar invested yielded $3.73 in expected benefits. Our findings demonstrate the value of fuel treatment investments and offer guidance for maximizing their effectiveness.

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Oregon’s congressional Democrats raise concerns about federal wildfire response in the Northwest

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Public Broadcasting
May 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Oregon’s congressional Democrats on Wednesday warned that federal agencies tasked with helping prevent and fight fires in the Northwest could be understaffed and underprepared going into the 2026 fire season. Oregon’s U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden, Jeff Merkley, and Portland and Willamette Valley-area U.S. Reps. Suzanne Bonamici and Andrea Salinas left a Wednesday wildfire season briefing at the Northwest Interagency Coordination Center in Portland with “deep concerns” about federal agencies’ capacity to respond to what’s expected to be a long and severe fire season in the region. The center is the headquarters for a wildfire prevention and response network that includes nine state and federal agencies across the West. The lawmakers said budget cuts and the loss of staff at federal science and land management agencies — especially at the U.S. Forest Service, tasked with the largest share of federal wildland fire prevention and response — have created needless uncertainty and chaos.

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Lack of funding significantly reduced 2025 aerial forest surveys

By Katelyn Welsh
Sierra Sun Times
May 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

LAKE TAHOE, Calif./Nev. – An annual aerial survey that monitors forest health was significantly reduced in 2025 due to a lack of funding, resulting in many portions of California forests, including the Tahoe area, not being included. Since 2006, the U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region’s Aerial Survey Program has flown over California forests every year to observe and document tree mortality, defoliation, and other damage. These annual estimates capture tree mortality patterns and trends, which researchers and foresters use to monitor ecosystem disturbances often caused by insects and disease. The information is also important for fire behavior forecasting. Typically covering large swaths of California landscape and a majority of national forests in California, including the Tahoe National Forest and the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit, 2025’s survey was limited to Southern California forests and the far southern Sierra Nevada. The report states surveys were conducted in areas where 2025 drought conditions were most severe.

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U.S. Forest Service drops large logging, thinning project near Yellowstone National Park

By Darrell Ehrlick
Daily Montanan
May 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A large logging project near Cooke City and an entrance to Yellowstone National Park has been scrubbed by the U. S. Forest Service after conservation groups challenged the federal government, saying it was using unproven methods at the risk of several endangered species. The Cooke City Fuels Project was withdrawn by the Forest Service and would have encompassed 19,921 acres. …The Forest Service would have removed other trees and brush around the endangered Whitebark Pine trees as a means to bolster their chances of survival. However, the conservation groups which challenged the project said that there was no scientific research validating the technique. …The lawsuit had also claimed that the Forest Service disregarded wide swaths of designated Canada lynx habitat. Also, the suit pointed out that increased logging activities and road building in the area would disrupt grizzly bear habitat.

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Falling tree nursery production illustrates sector’s confidence woes

By Jack Haugh, Deputy Editor
UK Forestry Journal
May 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

UK — The significant decline in the number of trees produced by Britain’s nurseries provides a “stark illustration” of the sector’s ‘falling’ confidence, an industry leader has said. Around 139 million trees were grown in the UK’s private and public nurseries across 2025/26, a sharp fall on previous years. In both 2024/25 and 2023/24, nurseries grew slightly over 160 million trees, with 2022/23 totalling slightly under 152 million. This means the total number of trees produced fell by around 14% between 2024/25 and 2025/26. …The findings were contained with the Forestry Commission’s new Tree Supply report – published in late April – which pointed to reduced planting expectations in Scotland as being a major cause of the decline. Stuart Goodall, chief executive at industry body Confor, said: “the report provides a stark illustration of the concerns that have been raised for a number of years – government targets for tree planting are not being met and this is affecting confidence and business activity in the sector.

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Wildfires are climbing Europe’s mountains as heat dries forests

By Jordan Joseph
Earth.com
May 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

For the last few decades, the working assumption in European fire management was geographic: the real threat lives at lower elevations. In countries like Greece, Portugal, and Spain, the threat was tied to parched lowlands, flammable scrub, and summer drought. The Alps, Pyrenees, and Carpathians sat above the areas at risk, written off as too cold and wet to carry serious fires. A 25-year satellite record now challenges that assumption. Tracking fires across eight European mountain ranges, researchers found flames climbing the slopes at a steady rate — and the pace has picked up sharply since 2015. A team led by Dr. Mirela Beloiu, an ecologist at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH Zurich), tracked wildfires across eight European mountain regions from 2000 to 2025. The pattern was hard to miss. Fires are climbing the slopes at roughly 236 feet per decade, finding fuel in stands that almost never burned before.

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New UN report urges accelerated forest action before 2030

By the Department of Economic and Social Affairs
United Nations
May 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

At the start of this year’s UN Forum on Forests, the United Nations will launch the Global Forest Goals Report 2026, the latest global assessment of progress towards the six Global Forest Goals and 26 targets of the United Nations Strategic Plan for Forests 2017–2030. With less than five years remaining to 2030, the report provides current evidence on progress, gaps and the urgent need to scale up action to halt deforestation, restore degraded lands and advance sustainable forest management. It underscores the critical role of forests in supporting climate stability, biodiversity, the livelihoods of over a billion people and the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Drawing on voluntary national reports and the latest forest-related global data, the report also identifies key gaps in finance, governance and data and sets out policy recommendations to accelerate action in the final years leading to 2030.

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NATO Intelligence Confirms Russian Timber Worst Hit by Sanctions

By Jason Ross
Wood Central Australia
May 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Russian timber and cellulose exports have collapsed by 50% between 2021 and 2025, the steepest fall of any sector tracked by NATO-frontline intelligence across four years of Western sanctions, with the same Latvian assessment revealing that sanctions have cost Moscow more than US$130 billion as it scrambled to source banned goods between 2022 and 2025. That is according to a new analysis published in April by the Constitution Protection Bureau (SAB), one of Latvia’s three security intelligence services, drawing on internal Russian institutional forecasts obtained through intelligence collection alongside SAB’s own assessment. Russia was the world’s largest softwood lumber exporter in 2021, ahead of its February 2022 invasion of Ukraine. …According to the analysis, Russia paid an additional US$32.5 billion each year to acquire sanctioned Western goods through intermediaries at inflated prices, excluding cases where no substitute was available. 

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Minecraft game launched to grow future forestry workforce

By HarvestTech
Innovatek
May 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Discover Forestry has launched a new Minecraft-based learning game that lets students grow and manage their own virtual forest, reflecting real New Zealand plantation forestry systems. The game takes players through the full forestry cycle, from establishing a crop, through tending and harvesting, to transport, processing and replanting, helping students understand how modern, sustainable production forestry operates as an integrated system. A key feature is the connection to downstream manufacturing through Buzz Zone World, where students process and transform logs, and Nailed It World, where players create finished wood products including using wood byproducts. Together, these elements help learners understand the full value chain from forest to product, and the range of real careers across forestry and wood processing. Alongside the game, Discover Forestry has released classroom resources that link gameplay to real-world knowledge and evidence informed teaching practices, making it easier for teachers and industry to engage rangatahi in a meaningful, hands-on way.

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