Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Powerful wildfires devastating Canada captured in satellite imagery

By Meredith Garfalo
Space.com
July 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Quick-moving wildfires continue to burn across Western Canada, keeping the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)’s GOES-R series satellites busy as they monitor hotspots and smoke plumes around the clock. On Wednesday evening in Jasper National Park, the largest national park in the Canadian Rockies, thousands of residents and tourists had to be evacuated as powerful fires scorched through the southern part of the community. According to the Associated Press, there were “significant losses” across the area as structures were burned to the ground. …Firefighters, weather forecasters and community leaders rely on satellites to provide a wider scope of fire and smoke movement; they use images taken by the Advanced Baseline Imager (ABI) instrument aboard each of the GOES-R satellites to aid with such monitoring needs. …This benefits firefighting efforts because it helps teams better understand each particular fire and also can help communities have more lead time to evacuate.

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Canada looks to centuries-old indigenous use of fire to combat out-of-control wildfires

By Keith Matheny
The Detroit Free Press
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

As Canada deals with the same wildfire problems plaguing the western U.S. — fires of increasing intensity burning larger areas as the climate and forests change — Canadian governments are spending hundreds of millions of dollars on more and better firefighting equipment, increased personnel, fire-tracking satellites and improving community readiness. But some experts believe part of the solution to reducing catastrophic megafires involves practices that go back thousands of years, to the land’s first inhabitants: fighting fire with fire. The indigenous people of Canada for centuries intentionally set fires on the landscape for a variety of cultural needs. “They burned for medicinal plants, for food plants, to produce firewood, to produce teepee poles, other technological uses — warmth, cooking, everything else. It was how you survived on this landscape,” said Robert Gray, a wildland fire ecologist who runs his own company, RW Gray Consulting based in Chilliwack, British Columbia.

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Forestry fire specialists answer the call in Canada

By Matt Deans
Forestry Corporation of New South Wales, Australia
July 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

Four fire specialists from Forestry Corporation will serve as part of a New South Wales deployment of firefighters assisting authorities in Canada to tackle the country’s wildfires. A contingent of 31 incident management, aviation and heavy machinery specialists will depart for Canada after receiving a request for assistance from the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. Canada is experiencing significant fire activity with 650 active fires burning. Forestry Corporation’s Bombala-based Silviculture and Fire Coordinator Tim Gillespie-Jones and South Coast Fire and Operations Team Leader Peter Carstairs, who also deployed to Canada last fire season, will fly to British Columbia. Forestry Corporation’s Senior Manager Environment and Sustainability Dean Kearney and Lead Forestry Officer Daniel Macaree will also deploy to Canada. Gillespie-Jones said, “I’m looking forward to repaying the favour to the Canadian firefighters who assisted our crews in 2019 and 2020″.

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Lake Cowichan receives $400,000 grant from UBCM to deal with wildfire threats

By Robert Barron
The Lake Cowichan Gazette
July 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER ISLAND — With the dry season in full swing, and the threat of wildfires ever present, Lake Cowichan’s mayor is pleased the town’s application for a $400,000 FireSmart grant from the Union of B.C. Municipalities has been successful. Tim McGonigle said Lake Cowichan is closely surrounded by forests so the town initiated a FireSmart program a few years ago. He said the $400,000 in funding for the town’s Community Resiliency Project – Phase 1 from the UBCM’s 2024 FireSmart Community Funding program will be used, in part, to hire a person to oversee Lake Cowichan’s ongoing FireSmart program on a two-year contract. …McGonigle said the town has been undertaking remediation projects in its neighbourhoods for several years, largely funded through grants from the UBCM’s FireSmart program, and the plan is to expand the town’s program with the latest grant.

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Jasper blaze exposes possible flaws in Parks Canada wildfire strategy

By Lorne Gunter
The Edmonton Sun
July 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Don’t blame the federal government for coming too slowly to Alberta’s aid in fighting the monster fire that has destroyed a significant portion of the Jasper townsite. The problem is the reverse: Blame the feds for being to slow to ask Alberta to become part of its integrated firefighting efforts inside Jasper National Park, where Parks Canada is in charge. Parks Canada lacks the technology and experience to fight a fire a night, meaning as two wildfires approached the resort town, efforts to control or at least divert them ceased in the dark. But Alberta has night-fighting capability. Alberta also has the equipment and expertise to throw up giant walls of water in front of giant walls of flame. Parks Canada doesn’t, and didn’t ask for Alberta’s help. Mostly, though, it’s fair to blame Parks Canada for ignoring years of warnings. 

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Forest Enhancement Society Newsletter

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
July 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West
In this newsletter:
  • Safety tip from the BC Forest Safety Council.
  • FESBC announces its new Executive Director, Jason Fisher.
  • City of Kimberley has made progress to mitigate wildfire risk.
  • Meet our newest team member, Operations Manager, Tyler Field.
  • Meet our Faces of Forestry featured person, Ben Klassen.

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Shuswap student’s Dream comes true with forestry internship

By Heather Black
Eagle Valley News
July 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Chase’s Keegan Ashley will be living the dream this summer as one of five students to win a 2024 Green Dream Internship in forestry from the Forest Products Association of Canada. The program highlights the perspectives and experiences of students working in the forest sector for six weeks. Winners also receive a $1,000 scholarship for further education. Ashley, who is with the Interfor Adams Lake Division, will use social media to share his insights and create content that provides a unique look at his summer experiences. …”Keegan’s passion for the forest industry is rooted in his family history, which spans more than 100 years in the sector,” the company said on Instagram. “He plans to pursue a career in either manufacturing or the woodlands sector. Through the Green Dream Internship, Keegan hopes to share his journey and promote the opportunities the industry holds for young workers and students like himself.”

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How does Canada’s 2024 wildfire season so far compare to historic 2023?

The Weather Network in Yahoo! News
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

With hundreds of wildfires burning across Canada amid a period of extreme heat for multiple regions, how does the season in 2024 rank when looking at the historical and destructive 2023? …To date, Canada has had nearly 3,700 blazes burn approximately 2.2 million hectares of land so far this year, with about 1,000 active wildfires across the country as of July 24. The good news is that it is considerably less than what was burned countrywide around this time last year. Approximately 11.9 million hectares of land had been scorched through July 2023. …Around the same time last year, BC had seen roughly 1.46 million hectares of land burned, thanks to a surge in fire activity. For 2024, the total is noticeably less, with wildfires burning a total of more than 790,000 hectares. …For Alberta, by July 22, 2023, there was 1.75 million hectares burned while there has been roughly 540,000 hectares burned so far this year.

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Jasper’s wildfire preparedness work put to the test as out-of-control fires threaten townsite

By Janet French
CBC News
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

For years, Parks Canada and the Municipality of Jasper have removed trees and branches, logged a firebreak, ignited controlled burns and asked residents to clear yard debris in hopes of protecting the forest-nestled town from a dangerous blaze. Those mitigations may now be put to the test. …”A big part of these treatments is not necessarily to stop the fire cold in its tracks, but to slow the fire and keep the fire on the surface rather than spreading fire in the canopy,” said Jen Beverly, a University of Alberta associate professor. …Parks Canada’s uses strategies like prescribed burns and the maintenance of a fireguard to protect properties and important sites in Jasper National Park. The federal agency and the municipality have been working to thin the forest around the town since 2003. In 2018 and 2019, they also hired Canfor to carefully cut down trees on a slope west of town to create a protective firebreak.

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An open letter to MLA Brittny Anderson about logging

Letter by Andrea Fox, Elemental Journeys
Nelson Star
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

RE: Reconnecting with forests and the need for responsible logging: Dear Brittny. Thank you for your testimonial of our adventure up Sproule Creek in the Nelson Star. It was my pleasure to share the magic of this place and reflect on the disastrous effect on this community watershed if we were to continue to exploit and build new roads through this primary forest. …I appreciate you highlighting the work of local community forests and small scale operations (such as Harrop-Procter). I believe that broad scale industrial forestry has much to learn from these progressive ways. In particular, British Columbia Timber Sales (BCTS) which is government owned and operated, as well as the Ministry of Forests, who relies on the archaic professional reliance model and the overinflated annual allowable cut method of approving permits. …If citizens are to consider re-electing the NDP, a major overhaul of BCTS is needed. We are counting on you.

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Alberni Valley Community Forest delivers $300,000 dividend to city

By Susie Quinn
The Alberni Valley News
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Alberni Valley Community Forest board has once again delivered a $300,000 dividend cheque to its sole shareholder, the City of Port Alberni. The dividends came from operating revenue in 2023 and were presented at the AVCF annual general meeting on May 22, 2024, community forest manager Chris Law said. The AVCF has contributed between $4 million and $5 million to the city since it was established, he added, including $2.5 million toward the purchase of the Somass Sawmill lands. Law and the AVCF board were busy this spring assessing their cut level to ensure it remains sustainable. “We’re only cutting half of what we’re allowed,” Law noted. “We’re not sure that’s sustainable in the long run.” …The AVCF is up to date on replanting what has been harvested, he added. Ongoing drought conditions have been challenging as mortality of seedlings is higher, however, anything that was lost due to drought has also been replanted at additional cost.

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Application period opens for Adam Yeadon Memorial Scholarship

By Lisa Bucher
My True North Now
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Adam Yeadon

The Adam Yeadon Memorial Scholarship is currently accepting applications. This scholarship aims to assist students from the Northwest Territories (NWT) who are seeking education in forestry or wildfire management. “As someone who chose to pursue a career in this field, I can confidently say there are many rewarding paths this industry can provide for your future. I encourage anyone interested to apply,” says Jay Macdonald, Minister of Environment and Climate Change. The Adam Yeadon Memorial Scholarship was created in 2024 to commemorate Yeadon’s legacy. The anniversary of Yeadon’s passing, who died on July 15 while defending his community on the fire line, was observed by family, friends, and the NWT Fire team in Fort Liard as they came together to remember and heal. Scholarships will be awarded to full-time post-secondary students who are enrolled in approved diploma, degree, or training programs in forestry or wildfire management.

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‘Canada needs a plan’: Okanagan MP calls for national wildfire force

By Logan Lockhart
Victoria News
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Richard Cannings

South Okanagan-West Kootenay MP Richard Cannings says Canada needs to “do things differently” as wildfires continue to rage nationwide and dozens of evacuation orders remain in place. Cannings, who serves as the NDP Emergency Preparedness and Climate Change Resilience critic, reiterated his call to the federal government to create a National Wildfire Fighting Force. The MP’s call comes as more than 380 blazes burn across B.C. and severe wildfires prompt the evacuation of Alberta’s Jasper National Park. …”Sadly, this is becoming our new normal, and we clearly need to do things differently. Canada needs a serious plan to deal with it — one that supports local efforts to combat these fires.” Cannings says such action would help local fire crews, including volunteer teams, and give Canada “the resources it needs to support people without relying on the military.” 

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Anti-salvage logging seminar attracts provincial attention

By Will Peters
My Prince George Now
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

An expert panel called for the end of salvage logging, the practice of logging areas after a fire or insect outbreak, earlier in the month. The panel, hosted virtually by Conservation North and attended virtually by around 200 people from across western Canada, said salvage logging “usually causes more damage to a forest than the fire itself… reducing biodiversity, contributing to climate change, increasing the vulnerability of the forest to further fires, and often causes soil degradation and erosion.” Michelle Connolly, the Director of Conservation North, said 200 attendees from across BC tuned in for the discussion held on July 15th. …She said the general panel consensus was that “salvage logging has negative impacts on carbon and wildlife population.” “It is mostly for economic reasons, never for reasons of protecting nature, improving wildlife habitat, or helping the climate somehow.”

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Butt flickers beware: Central Okanagan on guard for careless cigarettes, illegal campfires

By Cindy White
Castanet
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

It’s something you’d think you wouldn’t have to remind people about after years of devastating wildfires. Yet, some motorists are still throwing cigarettes out their vehicle windows. A Kelowna man says he confronted people in a car along Clement Avenue Sunday night who were tossing cigarettes out the window. “They were smashing their butts on the side of the car and embers were floating around on the ground.” He reported the incident to police and he’s not alone in his vigilance. The Kelowna RCMP told Castanet that since July 1, 2024, there have been five files generated from members of the public reporting cigarette butts being tossed from a vehicle. WKFR chief Jason Brolund notes it’s not just cigarette butts. They get calls almost daily about things like campfires on the beach or in someone’s backyard. …The fine for throwing a cigarette out a car window in B.C. is $575.

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Siya Forestry launched by OIB, Infinity-Pacific partnership

By Don Urquhart
Times Chronicle South Okanagan
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Osoyoos Indian Band’s (OIB) Nk’Mip Forestry and the Infinity-Pacific Stewardship Group have officially launched their joint venture company Siya Forestry LP. The partnership between the OIB and the land and resource management firm saw Siya Forestry established in February 2024 with the new company dedicated to “cultivating a thriving local economy through sustainable forestry”. The collaboration brings together dedicated resources and forestry experts from both companies to advance sustainable practices and support community development across the Okanagan, Kootenay, and Boundary regions through a First Nations lens, the companies said in a statement. This commitment involves creating jobs for OIB members and local forest technicians and professionals, addressing community values and priorities, and setting new standards for environmental stewardship in the region.

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Conservation North conference talks negative impacts of salvage forestry

Prince George Citizen
July 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Some scientists are calling for a drastic change to the way B.C. deals with forests burned by fire and affected by insects. The remarks came as the scientists took part in a webinar organized by the volunteer group Conservation North on July 22. During the meeting, they said “salvage” logging after a fire usually causes more damage to a forest than the fire itself, and explained that logging reduces biodiversity, contributes to climate change, increases the vulnerability of the forest to further fires, and often causes soil degradation and erosion. They said the only reason for “salvage logging” is to create revenue and jobs, but these benefits aren’t worth the costs [and] little of the revenue benefits the public because forest companies obtain the rights to the wood for a pittance. …“The lesson is that leaving primary forests alone contributes to resilience of both communities and nature,” explains Conservation North spokesperson Michelle Connolly.

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Quebec refuses to participate in federal consultation on caribou decree

By Stéphane Blais
La Presse Canadienne in the Montreal Gazette
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Quebec Environment Minister Benoit Charette and provincial Forestry Minister Maïté Blanchette Vézina have informed federal Environment Minister Stephen Guilbeault that their government will not participate in consultations on the development of an emergency decree to protect caribou. In a six-page letter sent on Wednesday, the provincial ministers reiterated that the emergency decree announced last month by Ottawa is a “unilateral and illegitimate decision by the federal government that is categorically rejected by Quebec.” Ottawa’s approach “constitutes an unspeakable affront and is in opposition to the respect for the sharing of constitutional powers between the levels of government,” the ministers contend. Not only will Quebec not participate in consultations to determine the scope of the decree, but “the federal government must fully assume the economic and social consequences of its decision,” the ministers warned. …The job losses (~2,000) would result from a forecast loss of permitted logging …the equivalent of 1.4 million cubic metres of lumber annually.

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Government of Canada investing $500,000 to support the growth of the forestry sector in Sturgeon Falls

By Federal Economic Development Agency for Northern Ontario – FedNor
The Government of Canada
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Sturgeon Falls, ON – Federal Economic Development Agency for Northern Ontario announced an investment of $500,000 by the Government of Canada in Sturgeon Falls Brush and Contracting Limited (SFB). The announcement will help SFB purchase a boiler system that will allow the company to dry lumber to the specific requirements of its clients in the cross-laminated timber industry. The boiler will use biomass from area mills as its heat source. This project is part of an ongoing expansion by SFB which will see the company grow to meet local market  demands. In addition to the purchase of the boiler, this investment will create three skilled positions, while also enabling SFB to sell kiln-dried lumber as a new product offering, increasing revenues for the company. Over the coming years, SFB’s expansion is expected to attract new businesses and investments in Sturgeon Falls.

Additional coverage in Northern Ontario Business: Sturgeon Falls contractor enters the kiln-dried lumber business

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Calling forest fire workers ‘heroes’ while not changing job conditions adds insult to injury

Letter by Lise Vaugeois MPP, Thunder Bay – Superior North
The Thunder Bay News Watch
July 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Lise Vaugeois

In response to the comments made in the July 18 Trillium article “Ontario proposes new ministerial powers to prepare for wildfires, steeper penalties for offenders“, I’m disappointed and puzzled to hear that Minister Graydon Smith’s proposals on Wildfire Management once again ignore the key issue of firefighter recruitment and retention. Wildland firefighters have repeatedly made the case that they need to be classified as “firefighters” in order receive the appropriate level of pay and benefits. Without this, the service cannot keep experienced firefighters and … fully staff their crews. On June 24, the Ford government made a promise to my colleague, Guy Bourgouin, and committed to reclassification… And yet, here we are again, with the Ministry now “studying” the reclassification issue instead of making the change they committed to make on June 24. …Calling people heroes, while enforcing unacceptable job conditions, is adding insult to injury.

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Climate change likely influenced forest fires in Labrador, says ecologist

By Abby Cole
CBC News
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Anthony Taylor

LABRADOR — A forest ecologist says abnormal weather is becoming more common and will likely cause more wildfires like the ones that threatened Labrador towns in recent weeks. Anthony Taylor of the University of New Brunswick told CBC News in a recent interview that climate change is a factor in the number and severity of forest fires this summer in Labrador. “You’ll see an increase in the frequency of years where you have big fires, and it’s directly related to the fact that you’re going to have an increase in the frequency of weather that’s more conducive to fires,” said Taylor, who researches how climate change affects forests. …Although there has been close to normal amounts of rainfall in Labrador, he said, higher temperatures cause increased evaporation and drier forests, likely contributing to conditions that are conducive to fire.

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Everything you need to know about the Southern Forest Products Assn and Southern Yellow Pine

The Southern Forest Products Association
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States
  • Membership continues to soar: New lumber manufacturer member and five associate members
  •  SFPA announces recipients of the John Edgar Rhodes 2023 Sawmill Safety Excellence Awards
  • Forest Products Expo 2025 booth sales now open: It’s not too late to reserve your space for the 38th Forest Products Machinery & Equipment Exposition, which returns to the Music City Center in Nashville from August 6-8, 2025
  •  SFPA is proud to be working closely with the American Wood Council on its upcoming Lifecycle Survey; the resulting EPDs will help us continue to tell the powerful sustainability story of U.S. wood products.
  • Promotional Activities – Mexico and Columbia

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Horse Gulch could have been prevented

By Nick Smith, executive director, Healthy Forests, Healthy Communities
Hungry Horse News
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Nick Smith

Writing recently on X, Frontier Institute President and CEO Kendall Cotton observed that Montana’s Horse Gulch Fire is burning in a portion of Helena-Lewis and Clark National Forest that was slated for landscape-scale thinning and controlled burns, that is, before anti-forestry litigation dramatically scaled back the planned effort, known as the “Middleman Project.” …the Middleman Project planned active forest management on 53,131 acres to mitigate wildfire risks …Two years after the project was approved, two anti-forestry groups sued to stop the project, claiming it violated federal law… The litigants focused on the adequacy and detail of the 584-page Environmental Assessment. According to the Frontier Institute’s research, in April 2024 the Forest Service agreed to a settlement to reduce the scale of the Middleman Project, forgoing almost all of the planned timber harvest and temporary road construction. They even agreed to pay $39,000 of taxpayer dollars to the anti-forestry groups to cover attorney fees!

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Brothers aim to make lumber industry more sustainable in Colville

By Demetra Maragos
KHQ Spokane
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

COLVILLE, Wash.—Kurtis Vaagen of Vaagen Bros Lumber leads a decade-long project to restore 50,000 acres of the Colville National Forest, aiming to create fire-resilient forests for future generations while emphasizing community and environmental stewardship. …Over the last three decades, state and federal policy changes have restricted timber harvests on both state and federal forestlands, compelling the forest products industry to adopt more efficient and sustainable timber harvesting practices. One lumber company based in Colville, Vaagen Bros Lumber, bid on a contract to restore the Colville National Forest over a decade ago. Emphasizing sustainability and the creation of future forests, Kurtis Vaagen, Vice President of Vaagen Bros Lumber, stated that their goal is to restore the forest to be fire-resilient for future generations.

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Durkee Fire creates extreme storms, wind and closes I-84 in eastern Oregon

By Emma Logan
The Salem Statesman Journal
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — One of the biggest fires burning in the United States is the Durkee Fire in eastern Oregon. As of Wednesday morning, the fire was reported at 244,858 acres and continues to grow as intense weather is expected to hit the area. The Oregon Department of Transportation closed Interstate 84 from Pendleton to Ontario on Wednesday. …The area is under a red flag warning, hurricane force winds and a flash flood warning, according to the Durkee Fire updates. The National Weather Service also expects extreme thunderstorms and lightning in the area. Due to the immense heat the Durkee Fire is creating and the existing winds, it is creating its own storms and changing the overall wind patterns. “We call those pyrocumulus and you end up with a thunderstorm over the fire because there’s so much heat and just enough moisture above the fire to get a storm that forms,” Mike Cantin, a meteorologist said.

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Forest thinning projects underway at Lake Tahoe

By Tahoe Fire and Fuels Team
Living with Fire Tahoe
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

LAKE TAHOE, Calif./Nev. – Tahoe Fire & Fuels Team forest thinning projects are underway in the Lake Tahoe Basin. These projects are expected to continue for the next several weeks with some projects continuing through the fall, conditions and weather permitting. For project details view the Forest Thinning Projects Map at Tahoe Living With Fire which highlights current and upcoming projects. After decades of fire suppression, Tahoe Basin’s forests are overstocked and highly vulnerable to insects, disease, and catastrophic wildfire. Forest thinning projects are a vital forest management tool used by land managers to help protect communities by removing excess vegetation (fuels) on public lands that can feed unwanted wildfires. These projects complement defensible space and home hardening efforts on private property in neighborhoods and communities. Forest thinning also contributes to improved forest health, wildlife habitat, and watershed and forest resilience in the face of climate change.

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Oregon hopes for better reception of wildfire hazard map after previous failed rollout

By Justin Higginbottom
Jefferson Public Radio
July 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Last week the Oregon Department of Forestry and Oregon State University researchers released a new draft map showing relative wildfire hazard throughout the state. They define wildfire hazard as a combination of how likely a wildfire is to occur and its potential intensity. The release comes two years after the state published a similar map, then called a “wildfire risk map,” before pulling the graphic over outrage from residents about how the information would impact property values and insurance rates. …This time around the state has focused on more public outreach to assuage fears like Byrd’s, hosting meetings in high-hazard areas in southern, central and northeastern Oregon. Other than public outreach, the color scheme of the new draft map has changed and there are fewer categories of wildfire hazard — three compared to five. But, as Golden explained, it’s not a drastically different map.

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75 days without wetting rains: US Forest Service in Northwest reports highest level of wildfire response activated

KTVZ News
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

PORTLAND, Ore. – Millions of acres of national forest lands across Oregon and Washington are continuing to see record-breaking dry timber conditions on both sides of the Cascades, the U.S. Forest Service said Tuesday. These critical conditions are spurring rapid wildfire growth from recent lightning storms, including the July 16-17th storms which produced over 2,000 strikes in 48 hours. Places like the Fremont-Winema and Deschutes national forests in Oregon have surpassed 75 days without wetting rains. And 45 days without wetting rain is widespread across the Pacific Northwest from the Rogue River-Siskiyou area of far southern Oregon over to the Wallowa-Whitman range in the east and north into the Okanogan-Wenatchee country of central Washington. “This is shaping up to be another monster fire year in the Pacific Northwest – and it’s just mid-July,” said Ed Hiatt, Pacific Northwest Assistant Fire Director for Operations.

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Grim Dilemma: Should We Kill One Owl Species to Save Another?

By Jim Robbins
Yale Environment 360
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Barred owl and spotted owl

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service released a plan to start killing 15,000 barred owls a year in the Pacific Northwest, starting as soon as this fall. This extraordinary initiative — more than a dozen years in the making — is intended to save the imperiled northern spotted owl from extinction. Barred owls have been moving west into spotted owl territory for decades, aggressively outcompeting them for prey and nesting sites. If its plan is adopted, the federal agency will soon launch what’s expected to be a three-decade campaign in which certified hunters will eventually shoot nearly half a million barred owls. Bridget Moran, with the Fish and Wildlife Service in Bend, Oregon, has been working on the strategy. “The spotted owl is at a crossroads. We have the science to indicate what we can do to conserve spotted owls, and [it’s] telling us that we must manage barred owls in addition to habitat to save them.”

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Researchers enhance tool to better predict where and when wildfires will occur

By Sean Nealon and Erica Fleishman
Oregon State University
July 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CORVALLIS, Ore. – A newly enhanced database is expected to help wildfire managers and scientists better predict where and when wildfires may occur by incorporating hundreds of additional factors that impact the ignition and spread of fire. “There is a tremendous amount of interest in what enables wildfire ignitions and what can be done to prevent them,” said Erica Fleishman, an Oregon State University professor. The Fire Program Analysis Fire-Occurrence Database was developed in 2013 by the U.S. Forest Service and since been updated five times. It incorporates basic information such as ignition location, discovery date and final wildfire size. The revised database now includes many new environmental and social factors, such as topography and vegetation, social vulnerability and economic justice metrics, and practical attributes such as the distance from the ignition to the nearest road.

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‘National forests are not national parks’: Logging debate in Whites divides forestry experts, environmentalists

By Kate Dario
New Hampshire Public Radio
July 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

NEW HAMPSHIRE, — The Liberty Trail on Mt. Chocorua is one of the most popular hiking paths in the White Mountain National Forest. …But the recent approval of a logging project in late June in the Sandwich Range has animated long simmering tensions over the best way to manage the national forest. The project will log more than 600 acres, a relatively tiny portion of the Sandwich Range’s more than 35,000 acreage. But it will cut trees near spots popular for hiking, bringing logging trucks to normally quiet slices of the forest. …Many Granite Staters may see the White Mountain National Forest as similar to a national park. But in reality, national forests are managed with economic considerations front of mind — which means supporting local timber industries as well as recreation-based tourism. “National forests are not national parks,” said Deputy Forest Service Chief Chris French. “They are intended to work under a multiple-use mandate.”

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$1.718 Million in Grants Announced for Innovative Finance for National Forests Program

The US Endowment for Forestry and Communities
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

GREENVILLE, South CarolinaSeven new grants will support local stakeholders and project developers to connect public and private capital to unfunded environmental challenges in National Forests and surrounding landscapes across the United States. These seven awards represent the fourth round of funding from the Innovative Finance for National Forests Grant Program. This partnership is funded and administered by the USDA Forest Service National Partnership Office’s Conservation Finance Program and the U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities (Endowment). “The 2024 Innovative Finance for National Forests grantees are exploring use of loan guarantees, state revolving funds, and other mechanisms to reduce forest wildfire risk, enhance watershed protection, and create new recreation opportunities,” said Pete Madden, president and chief executive officer of the Endowment.

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A new plan for Pennsylvania forests: new uses, more trails, continued logging

By Ad Crable
The Bay Journal
July 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

It’s been 30 years since the largest landowner in Pennsylvania — the state itself — came up with a strategic plan to guide the use of its 2.2 million acres of forest, along with 12 million privately owned acres. The Pennsylvania Bureau of Forestry’s list of challenges has evolved in those three decades, now including climate change, invasive plants, diseases and destructive insects. New recreational uses have also come to the fore, such as mountain biking, forest bathing, e-bikes and all-terrain vehicles — not to mention an inundation of visitors during and since the COVID-19 pandemic. Time for a new blueprint. After several years of public opinion polling and surveying the many stakeholders of state forests, the bureau has drafted a new plan called Forests for All: A Plan for Pennsylvania’s Forests and People.

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A new National Diagnostic Protocol will help keep Australian pine plantations safe from there Pine Wood Nematode

By Andrea Wild
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
July 26, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — Pine Wilt Disease is a disease of pine trees. …The problem involves three bodies: a nematode, a fungus and a beetle. The nematode is a tiny roundworm only one millimetre long. It’s called Pine Wood Nematode (Bursaphelenchus xylophilus). It causes Pine Wilt Disease. When Pine Wilt Nematode is carried to a pine tree by a beetle, it feeds on cells inside the tree and multiplies very rapidly. Billions of nematodes — and the tree’s response to them — prevent water flow, causing the tree to wilt and die. …Trees killed by the nematodes are attractive to several species of beetles, which breed inside the damaged tree. The nematodes gather in the breeding chambers of the beetles, attach to the bodies of the beetles, and travel with them to new host trees. Dr Dan Huston… and his colleague, Dr Mike Hodda wrote the National Diagnostic Protocol for Pine Wood Nematode.

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Forestry company covers Bob Brown Foundation activists’ legal costs after revoking protest ban

Pulse Tasmania
July 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Sustainable Timber Tasmania (STT) has been forced to back down after wrongly issuing notices banning 19 environmental protesters from entering over 800,000 hectares of Tasmanian public forest. The notices, issued last year, barred protesters from entering all permanent timber production zone land and forestry roads in response to protest action against the logging of a 17-hectare native coupe in the state’s north-west. Bob Brown Foundation campaign manager Scott Jordan described the ban as “illegal intimidation”, saying it prevented some protesters from leaving their homes or going to work. “This is an embarrassing backdown by the state logging agency who have taken six months to come clean,” he said. “That Forestry Tasmania, a government agency, acted in such an unlawful and intimidatory manner is a symptom of a government that will do anything to prevent public protest against logging of our precious native forests.” Jordan said the business will cover the protesters’ estimated $27,000 legal costs.

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Heat-sensitive trees moving uphill due to rising temperatures, study finds

By University of Birmingham
Phys.Org
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Trees in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest are migrating in search of more favorable temperatures, with species in mountain forests moving uphill to escape rising heat caused by climate change, a new study reveals. Most species in higher parts of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest are moving upwards as temperatures rise, but scientists say that those trees which thrive in colder temperatures are at risk of dying out as the world continues to warm. Researchers studying the forest, which stretches along Brazil’s Atlantic seaboard, have also discovered that some trees in lowland forests are migrating downhill. …The researchers studied 627 tree species across 96 different locations across the Brazilian Atlantic Forest to calculate community temperature scores —a means of understanding climate patterns across the Forest. Researchers also discovered that younger trees in high-altitude forests are moving uphill—young tree groups had more growth than the older ones, and this growth had increased over a decade of observing the forest.

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‘Rogue’ government agency Forestry Corporation of New South Wales accused of more illegal logging

By Michael Slezak
ABC News, Australia
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

AUSTRALIA — A New South Wales government agency has racked up more than $1.1 million in penalties for more than a dozen instances of unlawful activity in fewer than five years, including seven criminal convictions. It also faces three more criminal prosecutions that could result in up to $12 million in additional penalties, if found guilty, and is under investigation for a further 18 potentially-illegal actions. That agency is the state government-owned logging company, Forestry Corporation of NSW. And now a community group has uncovered fresh evidence of illegal logging that experts say is driving endangered species towards extinction, allegations the NSW Environmental Protection Authority said it had added to its list of investigations. …But according to James Jooste from the Australian Forest Products Association NSW, an industry body that represents the timber industry, the allegations are all part of a plan by anti-logging activists to discredit and shut down the industry.

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Short rotation forestry knocks down carbon loss

By Richard Rinnie
NZ Farmers Weekly
July 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

NEW ZEALAND — Short rotation forestry could provide a pathway for New Zealand to replace 6% of its fossil fuel use, while also providing farmers in difficult country a valued biofuel crop option. The latest work by Scion silviculture scientist Dr Alan Jones and his team estimates the reduction in fossil fuel use could be achieved with plantings over about 150,000 hectares of land, or less than 1% of New Zealand’s land area. Jones presented his team’s research findings to a Bioenergy NZ seminar series aimed at exploring NZ’s options on alternative energy pathways to help meet its Paris Accord obligations. …Typically, the trees would be harvested at year 16, with Pinus radiata and three types of eucalyptus being most suitable. …Jones said transport costs are an acknowledged challenge with biofuel sourcing, but decentralised processing of the raw material could also impact an otherwise unsuitable area’s viability.

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Istanbul deploys AI, drones, fire towers to combat forest fires

The Daily Sabah
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Istanbul regional director of forestry at the General Directorate of Forestry, Celal Pir, announced that they are employing camera-equipped fire towers, drones (UAVs), and an AI-supported meteorological monitoring system to prevent and combat forest fires in Istanbul. …the General Directorate of Forestry’s technological infrastructure operates 24/7 to protect the forests across the city. In an interview with Anadolu Agency (AA), Celal Pir mentioned that, with global warming, it is now possible to encounter fires in any season, but they occur more frequently from May to November. …”Based on the time of day, our AI creates a fire risk map and organizes teams accordingly. We deploy our vehicles to high-risk areas and keep them on alert,” he said. Pir concluded by stating that 90% of fires are caused by human activity.

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Robbins Lumber among Maine companies beginning climate project

By Keenan Mills
WABI TV5
July 24, 2024
Category: Forestry

SEARSMONT, Maine – The New England Forest Foundation is building a stronger community. They recently gifted six companies across the state grants with the goal of more climate-friendly forestry work. Maine’s Robbins Lumber Company was one of the businesses granted this money. …The United States Department of Agriculture is partnering with the New England Forest Foundation to start a Climate-Smart Commodities Partnership Project. The $30 million project gives an opportunity for companies like Robbins Lumber not only to increase carbon in the forests in their area but across the state. “It benefits the landowners, it benefits the general public, because all of these thinnings are going to be using, to make electricity,” answered Jim Robbins. …The climate isn’t the only thing benefiting from this project. “Plus, it provides a lot of jobs. In rural Maine, where we need jobs,” added Robbins.

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