Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

New Memorandum of Understanding Leads to More Support for Communities to Manage Their Own Lands

By Indigenous Services Canada
Cision Newswire
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, UNCEDED TRADITIONAL ALGONQUIN TERRITORY, ON – Chief Robert Louie, Chairman of the Lands Advisory Board (LAB), Austin Bear, Chair of the First Nations Land Management Resource Centre, and the Honourable Patty Hajdu, Minister of Indigenous Services, signed a Memorandum of Understanding securing further funding for First Nations land management. With this new five-year funding agreement, part of the $187 million of funding over five years and over $34 million ongoing provided in Budget 2023, the LAB and the First Nations Land Management Resource Centre will support First Nations in governing their lands and creating economic and social opportunities for their communities. …Funding to support communities seeking to also opt out of the relevant sections of the Indian Act and develop their own land codes will be increased by 50%. In addition, up to 50 more First Nations will be supported to become signatories to this historic agreement over the next five years.

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Making the case for BC’s wood pellets at home

By Brian Barber, BSF, Select Seed Co.
Policy Options
April 25, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Brian Barber

Re: Canada should avoid the mistakes the U.K. made in biomass for energy. As a forester living and working in British Columbia, I have a good understanding of how BC’s forests are managed and harvested. Our current logging practices do not “risk devastating ecosystem collapse” everywhere, as suggested by Bertie Harrison-Broninski and Richard Robertson. …I am also aware of the export of wood pellets from BC and elsewhere to generate electricity at Drax’s facilities in the UK. Pellets are made from wood unsuitable for milling into higher-value products, and which would otherwise be burned on site. However, shipping pellets half-way around the world does not make sense. …BC Hydro is making funding opportunities available for climate action projects as its large hydro-electric dams can’t keep up with growing demand. Certainty there must be a business case for burning BC’s wood pellets in BC, while also protecting old growth.

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Emerald ash borer confirmed in Vancouver, British Columbia

By Canadian Food Inspection Agency
Government of British Columbia
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

OTTAWA, ON – The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) has confirmed the presence of emerald ash borer (EAB – Agrilus planipennis) in the City of Vancouver, British Columbia. These detections, which are outside of currently regulated areas for emerald ash borer in Canada, are the first detections of EAB larvae in BC. Emerald ash borer is a highly destructive insect that attacks and kills ash trees (Fraxinus sp.). It is a federally regulated pest in Canada. EAB is currently found in parts of six provinces and is spreading to new areas via the movement of firewood and ash material (such as logs, branches and wood chips). This pest poses no threat to human health. …The CFIA is conducting surveillance activities to determine where EAB may be present, and is collaborating with the City of Vancouver, the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation, the Province of British Columbia, to slow the spread of this pest.

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Minister Vandal announces investment supporting Yukon’s forest industry

By Canadian Northern Economic Development Agency
Cision Newswire
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

WHITEHORSE, YT – The forest and wood products industry is an important contributor to the Yukon’s economy. Businesses that harvest timber or manufacture products from wood provide essential goods, such as heating fuel and lumber, to people and communities and contribute to a diversified economy. Today, the Honourable Dan Vandal, Minister of Northern Affairs, PrairiesCan and Canadian Northern Economic Development Agency, announced that the Government of Canada is investing up to $341,600 in the Yukon Wood Products Association’s (YWPA) Yukon Forest Resources Capacity Support Initiative. …Through this initiative, the YWPA will provide training, build new opportunities for Yukon’s forest sector, and expand its membership to include artisans, craftspeople, woodworkers and non-timber forest products. It will also increase public awareness of the benefits of local forest and biomass opportunities as a way to reduce the territory’s reliance on imported goods and fossil fuels.

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Westlock County CAO to join provincial working group developing strategy for wildfire management

By Kevin Berger
Town and Country Today
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Tony Kulbisky

Westlock County, Alberta — Westlock County chief administrative officer (CAO) Tony Kulbisky will be providing his expertise as a firefighter for more than 15 years to a new provincial working group whose purpose is to establish a long-term strategy for the management of wildfires outside of Forest Protection Areas. Council agreed to sign a letter of support and to appoint Kulbisky to the working group, which is being established by the Rural Municipalities of Alberta (RMA). Last November, RMA members passed a resolution to have the association engage with the Alberta Government, Alberta Municipalities (AM), and the Alberta Fire Chiefs Association (ACFA) to develop a long-term strategy for managing wildland fire events outside of Forest Protection Areas. 

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West Fraser listens to West Bragg Creek clearcut opponents

By Howard May
The Western Wheel
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

ALBERTA — Participants in an Alberta Wilderness Association sponsored talk with West Fraser Timber of Cochrane got a primer course in general forestry planning from company officials Tuesday, but little in the way of hope they’ll have any success in stopping or even slowing down clearcut logging in the recreation areas of West Bragg Creek and Moose Mountain. West Fraser recently made more detailed maps available to the public, showing the actual cut blocks in West Bragg Creek, along with the names of the biking/hiking /horseback trails affected, prompting anti-logging groups like Bragg Creek and Kananaskis Outdoor Recreation (BCKOR) to declare their “worst fears realized” on social media. West Fraser plans to clearcut 900 hectares, the size of 833 soccer fields. near West Bragg Creek and another 450 ha. in the Moose Mountain Trail Networks.

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BC Summit Sheds Light on Safeguarding Communities This Wildfire Season

By Emily Blatta
The Tyee
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

As B.C. heads into what is predicted to be a hot summer, the need to build wildfire resiliency is a top priority across the province. Last week’s FireSmart Wildfire Resiliency and Training Summit in Prince George brought together representatives from municipal governments, fire departments and other stakeholders to discuss insights from last year and what communities can do to recover, rebuild and repair. Lucy Grainger, FireSmart BC’s education officer, said… wildfires have become a collective responsibility, and they now require more interagency co-operation than ever before.  The annual Wildfire Resiliency and Training Summit, which is now in its fourth year, is an opportunity to connect people working throughout the region. …Alongside large fuel mitigation projects happening at the municipal scale in Prince George, free FireSmart assessments are now available to people living in the community.

 

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Has this week’s rain, snow helped Alberta’s wildfire situation?

By Shilpa Downton
CityNews Everywhere
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Southern Alberta didn’t see much rain in April, but May came in cold and wet. …According to Christie Tucker with Alberta Wildfire, the moisture across the province this week has made a difference. “Recent cooler weather and precipitation has meant wildfire activity has been subdued this week,” she says. “We’ve managed to extinguish a number of wildfires, including carryover fires that have been burning since last year.” She says there are currently 43 wildfires burning in the forest protection area of Alberta, with 3 of those being classified as held, and the rest considered under control. Tucker says the break in the weather has been helpful to contain those fires, but the province isn’t out of the woods yet. …The drought code still showing very high to extreme wildfire danger in some parts of the province. They would need a week of heavy and steady rain for the situation to improve.

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Night firefighting a Canadian first for B.C. helicopter company

By Kevin Forsyth
Parksville Qualicum Beach News
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A Parksville-area helicopter company is off to fight forest fires at night in Alberta, which will be a Canadian first. The crew from Ascent Helicopters arrived in Alberta on Sunday to do some initial training with personnel there, according to Trent Lemke, owner of Ascent Helicopters. Ascent has experience doing search and rescue and air ambulance operations at night, but this will be the first night-time firefighting contract, he added. “Alberta will be the first province to do so,” Lemke said. “No one has fought fire at night in Canada, in the U.S. they do it quite a bit.” Ascent’s purpose-built tanks on the bottom of their helicopters, combined with night vision use will bolster forest fire fighting efforts by allowing crews to “action” a blaze throughout the night, Lemke said. “If it’s a high-priority fire you can stay with it, where traditionally we’re pulling off just before dark,” he said.

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How mapping tree genomes can help plant forests resilient to climate change

By Stephanie Cram
CBC News
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Barb Thomas

A research team at the University of Alberta is looking into why some trees in Alberta are more resilient when faced with drought, disease and the risk of wildfires by sequencing tree genomes. …The genome Alberta resilient forests project, led by U of A professor Barb Thomas are using the genetic makeup of trees to map out the genome for pine and spruce trees. “We measure populations and make assessments and measurements … to produce progeny that could then be used for reforestation,” Thomas said. …The Genome Alberta Resilient Forests project is already getting a lot of attention from the province and timber industry. “We are working to understand the impacts of the changing climate on the forest and are supporting research into the genetics of trees that appear to be better adapted to the future climate,” wrote Richard Briand, chief forester for West Fraser’s Alberta branch. 

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Red ink and red flags for BC forestry

Resource Works
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Two special videos are coming from the Indigenous Resource Network (IRN) — “a 2-part documentary focused on the unique stories of Indigenous forestry workers.” Part One launches May 9 on IRN’s YouTube channel. …The BC government has committed to a policy of encouraging and enabling greater First Nations participation and more Indigenous partnerships in the industry. …We hope the IRN video tells us more. Because, sadly, the policy has become yet one more factor in the uncertainties affecting the sector. And at this point, the outlook of BC’s forest sector is a full of red ink and red flags. …BC has been implementing bans on, or deferrals of, much old-growth logging, with consequent impact on the industry. And the province has been pushing for more “value-added forestry” — more “high-value product lines…”  But that will be, at best, a painfully slow advancement. And if there is less wood cut, does that not mean more challenge for value-added forestry? 

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Wildfire Coexistence in BC: Solutions Symposium

UBC Faculty of Forestry
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

UBC Forestry and the Centre for Wildfire Coexistence are excited to announce the Wildfire Coexistence in BC: Solutions Symposium, in partnership with the Irving K. Barber Faculty of Science at UBC Okanagan! This Symposium will bring together British Columbia’s leading wildfire experts and practitioners to highlight the urgent need to develop a transformative vision and implementation strategy for wildfires before it is too late. We will shed light on the profound impacts of wildfires and tremendous costs to the BC population, emphasizing that the 2017‒2023 fire seasons were not an anomaly but a new and escalating reality fueled by climate change. Join us June 3-5, 2024 at UBC Okanagan in Kelowna and learn about the stark realities of the societal, health, cultural, environmental, and economic costs of wildfires across British Columbia and the actions needed now.

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Environment minister defends clear-cutting of Bragg Creek-area recreation mecca

By Bill Kaufmann
The Calgary Herald
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

ALBERTA — Impending clear-cutting of treasured hiking and biking areas near Bragg Creek will be done responsibly, Alberta’s minister of environment and protected areas said Tuesday. But conservationists and outdoor enthusiasts say they have their doubts, and insist logging two large blocks in the West Bragg Creek and Moose Mountain areas is also economically dubious. Forestry company West Fraser said it’s going ahead in the fall of 2026 with logging what could be nearly 900 hectares of forest in a recreation zone less than an hour from Calgary. They have provincial government sanction to do so under a 20-year forestry management plan, but only under sustainable conditions, said Environment and Protected Areas Minister Rebecca Schulz. “My department is concerned with ensuring we are protecting the environment, that environment standards are upheld, that we’re looking at impacts to water, wildlife, air and biodiversity — so those are the kinds of things we look at before projects move forward,” she said. 

Related coverage in CBC: West Fraser to host open house on contentious logging plans

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Low West Kootenay snowpack threatens drinking water drawn from creeks

By Bill Metcalfe
Terrace Standard
May 31, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The reservoir at Mountain Station, which feeds all the water pipes in Nelson, is not really a reservoir. …“Our reservoir is actually the snowpack, along with Five Mile Creek and the other creeks,” Chris Johnson, the city’s manager of community planning, climate and infrastructure says. The West Kootenay snowpack is only at 72 per cent of normal this year. But a low snowpack is not necessarily a threat to Nelson’s water supply, says Johnson. “We could still have a spring and summer such that enough precipitation falls that ensures the creeks continue to run strongly throughout the dry season.” Should Nelson be worried about its drinking water supply over the long term, in light of the lower snowpacks caused by climate change? It depends on the interactions of a multitude of factors including snow, rain, temperature, the aspect (north or south facing) of the watershed and how much forest cover it has.

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Locals question BC Timber Sales’ future cutblock plans – Coast Reporter

By Connie Jordison
Sunshine Coast Reporter
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Sunshine Coast Streamkeepers Society, the Roberts Creek Official Community Plan Committee and Elphinstone Logging Focus and individuals have contacted BC Timber Sales (BCTS) with concerns about the agency’s plans within the Sunshine Coast business area over the next three years. Those who have not yet submitted comments have until May 4 to do so. A public BCTS notice provides links to mapping and details on proposed cutblocks, tree retention areas and road sections. Just over 1,200 hectares are slated to be included in 64 cutblocks within BCTS’s map area 1214 (which includes areas on the upper and lower Sunshine Coast) from May 2024 to May 2027. …Streamkeepers pointed out, “logging the Roberts Creek headwaters will change the natural hydrology of the ecosystem of both the forest and the numerous upper main tributaries.”

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Joe Smith Creek cutblock auction decision delayed into May

By Connie Jordison
Coast Reporter
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The decision on whether to list, further delay or forego the auction of logging rights for TA0521 (Joe Smith Creek cutblock) “will be coming in the next few weeks” according to an April 24 email from the Ministry of Forests to Coast Reporter. Documents posted on BC Timber Sales’s (BCTS) website had the auction listed to occur by March 31. In the email the Ministry stated “initial timelines for cutblock decisions were estimates only. The Ministry will take as long as is necessary to ensure the proper reviews are conducted before decisions are released.”  On April 25, Elphinstone Logging Focus (ELF) ended an over three-week protest presence in opposition to logging the site at road access to the cutblock, just off the B & K logging road in the Roberts Creek area. Spokesperson Hans Penner told Coast Reporter the group would stand down “for now,” while it would be “keeping a close eye on BCTS’s sales list.

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Abbotsford’s Conair Aerial Firefighting: On the front lines of the wildfire battle in B.C.

By Ben Lypka
Today in BC – Black Press
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Summer is just around the corner and for much of British Columbia that now means dealing with the looming threat of wildfires. But for one Abbotsford company it is their time to shine. Conair Aerial Firefighting, located on the Abbotsford International Airport grounds, is a global leader in the battle against wildfires and continues to grow. The company boasts the third-largest fleet of any company in Canada, with 70 aircraft taking on challenging situations all across the planet. They have been used for years in places like B.C., Alaska, Alberta, Australia, France and Washington State. Conair also recently announced a new deal to work with the Saskatchewan provincial government to battle fires in that area. Conair invited the media and government officials to tour their facility on April 26 and learn more about both the production and training aspects of the company.

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Skattebo Education Forest Hosts Forestry Intelligence Projects

By Selkirk College
Education News Canada
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Skattebo Education Forest is located on the east shore of the Kootenay River between Nelson and Castlegar, just south of the community of Glade. Classes from natural resource diploma programs visit Skattebo to participate in field trips where they collect forest, fisheries and ecosystem data and learn to interpret this information. Skattebo also provides Selkirk Innovates researchers with the perfect location to test new technology and techniques in projects that benefit local communities, industry, and the environment. Principal investigator Dr. Brendan Wilson leads this suite of forestry intelligence research. “We’re very excited about the work we’re doing in Skattebo,” says Wilson, “because it connects learning with real-world applied research.” Skattebo research projects are currently testing methods to identify individual trees in the forest, quantify common forest stand metrics, determine canopy heights, determine tree health status, identify cones for seedstock, assess understory fuels and more.

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New tool empowers citizens during environmental assessments

By Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy
Government of British Columbia
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s Environmental Assessment Office (EAO) has launched a new tool to engage the public during environmental assessments, empowering people to have a more meaningful impact on the decision-making process for major projects proposed throughout the province. EPIC.engage is a new engagement platform designed to improve the overall experience for people providing feedback during the public comment periods of an environmental assessment. …“Public engagement is a critical part of our environmental assessment process and of transparency. It provides valuable information about proposed major projects in BC,” said George Heyman, Minister of Environment and Climate Change Strategy. “EPIC.engage makes it easier for the public to provide information that is both helpful and might otherwise be missed during the technical process of an environmental assessment.” Providing feedback is anonymous. The platform protects the identity of commentors while verifying that are not “bots” or people seeking to undermine a project or the assessment process.

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BC Community Forest Association April Newsletter

The BC Community Forest Association
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The April newsletter includes:

  • 2024 BCCFA Conference & AGM, June 11 – 13 in Mackenzie, BC: Conference sessions, accommodations, field trip, and carpooling.
  • Wildfire Resiliency and Training Summit review and report.
  • BC works with communities to boost wildfire prevention, preparedness
  • Updates from the Forest Investment and Reporting Branch
  • Commercial Thinning  – A Practical Guide for Woodlot Licensees in the North-Central Interior of British Columbia 
  • Fire is medicine –  Westbank First Nation’s Ntityix Resources – Home of the Westbank Community Forest 
  • Kootenay Community Forest Seeking a Mill Manager

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Climate change, not habitat loss, may be biggest threat to caribou herds: study

By Bob Weber
Canadian Press in CBC News
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Climate change, not habitat loss, may be the biggest threat to the survival of threatened caribou herds, new research suggests. “We might need to do additional management actions if our goal is to conserve caribou,” said Melanie Dickie, lead author of the study. For years, biologists have pointed to sustained industry-caused damage to the old-growth forests preferred by caribou as the reason the species is now threatened. …But climate change has also been at work in the forests. Slowly warming temperatures have greatly expanded the range in which whitetail deer can thrive. …Using an extensive network of camera traps that captured tens of thousands of images of whitetail deer, the researchers concluded that the north-south temperature gradient made a much larger difference to deer density than the east-west differences in human disturbance. …If Dickie’s paper is correct, no amount of tree-planting and cutline remediation will be enough.

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B.C. court acknowledges First Nation’s land claim off Vancouver Island

By Lynda Mapes
The Seattle Times
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In a historic victory for the Nuchatlaht First Nation, the Supreme Court of BC has recognized the aboriginal title to more than 4 square miles of land on Nootka Island, including a pristine salmon lake, salmon stream and forest that had been threatened by industrial logging off the west side of Vancouver Island. The ruling by Justice Elliott Myers recognized Nuchatlaht’s title to the remote coastal strip of land. With the ruling, the Nuchatlaht Nation of just 160 people has become the second-largest aboriginal titleholder in B.C. And the Nation is just getting started: Nuchatlaht is weighing going back to court on appeal for acknowledgment of a far larger claim. …Nuchatlaht’s victory marks the first time a B.C. trial court has recognized a First Nation’s aboriginal title of its ancestral territory.

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Ontario investing an additional $6 million in forest access road construction and repair

By Natural Resources and Forestry
Government of Ontario
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

TORONTO – The Ontario government is investing an additional $6 million in the Provincial Forest Access Roads Funding Program to help construct and maintain forestry roads used for regional travel between communities, the transport of goods and emergency preparedness and response along with providing access routes for the tourism sector and industry. The investment will increase funding for the program to over $59 million in 2024-25. “Many people rely on this road network every day for travel between work and home and everywhere in-between,” said Graydon Smith, Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry. “This investment will keep people and vehicles moving safely, support efficient business operations and build safer, stronger communities.” The Provincial Forest Access Roads Funding Program provides funding for new construction and maintenance of over 19,500 kilometres of public forest access roads and other essential infrastructure. …Public forest access road infrastructure is vital to Northern, rural and Indigenous communities. 

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Federal government concerned about further delays in release of Quebec government’s caribou strategy

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
Cision Newswire
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Steven Guilbeault

GATINEAU, QC – The Honourable Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, has issued the following statement in response to the measures announced today by the Government of Quebec for the Boreal and Mountain Caribou in the Gaspé Peninsula. “I would like to thank the Government of Quebec for presenting their plans before the May 1 deadline. However, several critical elements are missing, particularly the Quebec government’s August 2022 commitment to reduce the rate of disturbance in caribou habitat so that at least 65 percent of the territory for each caribou population is undisturbed. In addition, today’s announcement does not mention several caribou populations. The Government of Quebec must publish a strategy for all Boreal Caribou populations in Quebec, including immediate interim measures.”

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Eight U.S. wood groups seek delay of EU deforestation regulation

By Rich Christianson
The Woodworking Network
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

A consortium of eight U.S. wood-related trade groups signed a letter requesting the European Commission to push back the mandatory compliance deadline of the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) by 24 months. The EUDR was implemented last June to limit the EU market’s impact on global deforestation and forest degradation, as well as to promote deforestation-free supply chains, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and protect human rights. Compliance of the EUDR is scheduled to begin at December 30 of this year. …In their letter, the U.S. wood groups agreed that they “view healthy forests and their sustainable management as a core responsibility.… However, a regulation of this scope and scale must be implemented with great care and due diligence. An additional 24 months will provide the time necessary to understand, evaluate, and prepare for substantial, sector-wide changes required.

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Nez Perce-Clearwater National Forests move forward with contentious logging project

By Kathy Hedberg
The Lewiston Tribune
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Grangeville, Idaho — The Nez Perce-Clearwater National Forests are moving ahead with a logging project near Grangeville that was rejected two years ago by a U.S. District judge. An environmental impact statement is being prepared for the so-called “End of the World” project area, which is located about 6 miles south of Grangeville and would encompass about 49,565 acres within the Fish Creek, Cove Creek and North Fork White Bird Creek watersheds. The area is in the heart of Nez Perce-Clearwater Lower Salmon Wildfire Crisis Landscape and is recognized as wildland urban interface by Idaho County. The agency proposes precommercial thinning on 1,098 acres and timber harvest on another 17,262 acres to reduce hazardous wildfire fields and improve forest health. The project also includes 7,900 acres of prescribed burning to reduce hazardous fuels and create a fuel break along the Grangeville-Salmon Road to increase public and firefighter safety.

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State and federal officials are endangering wildlife, misusing federal grants for logging

By Robert Bryant and Gretchen Mehmel
The Minnesota Reformer
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Robert Bryant

Gretchen Mehmel

Senior managers at both the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service should be held  to account for allowing the misuse of federal grants to facilitate logging in Minnesota’s wildlife management areas and aquatic management areas. Both agencies cooperated to fund and allow aggressive logging, which has devalued habitat and undermined the legitimacy of federal grants. It seems the only accountability that will work is to step outside the respective agencies’ control systems and go public, while relying on the Office of Legislative Auditor to do its work. The OLA recently announced a special review of DNR’s oversight of wildlife management areas. …But there still hasn’t been any substantive changes in policy… The solution is to stop treating wildlife management areas like conventional state forest — we need a timber harvest system for WMAs that considers the best interest of the critters, and not just profit-seeking timber companies.

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Washington State University teams with community colleges on forests

Farm Progress
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Washington State University is working with four local community colleges to improve tree canopy cover in several urban areas throughout the state. The five-year project, designed to increase resilience amid a changing climate, is supported by a nearly $1.8 million Inflation Reduction Act grant from the USDA Forest Service Urban and Community Forestry Program. WSU researchers will collaborate with faculty and students to create thriving urban forests in neighborhoods near those schools. …Partners at the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) hope the project will result in a more diverse and skilled workforce while inspiring colleges throughout the country to embrace similar approaches. …“A lot of these students are not necessarily on environmental science career tracks,” Joey Hulbert, at the WSU Puyallup Research & Extension Center and the project’s principal investigator said. “It’s a good opportunity to inspire them to work with trees and reach them before they really decide on a career path.”

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Salt River Project gets a little help from Apple to thin 30,000 acres

By Peter Aleshire
The Payson Roundup
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Technology giant Apple has partnered with the Salt River Project to thin 30,000 acres of forest in the next decade, including most of the watershed of the C.C. Cragin Reservoir. Reducing the tree densities on that crucial watershed will not only save the 15,000 acre-foot reservoir – it will save about 1.8 billion gallons of water over the next 20 years, according to the SRP. “Apple’s leadership… will help protect Central Arizona communities and the water supply for the Phoenix metropolitan area,” said Elvy Barton, SRP Water and Forest Sustainability senior manager. “In terms of acreage, this is the largest corporate investment in Arizona watershed restoration efforts. This investment is critical because it addresses the wildfire risks of an entire watershed.” The 64,000-acre watershed of the C.C. Cragin Reservoir is among the most critical projects. A fire on the watershed could cause massive post-fire flooding that would fill the reservoir with mud and debris.

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That big tree on your land could be a champion

By Elizabeth Walztoni
Bangor Daily News
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

If you know of a particularly large tree, it might be notable statewide. The Maine Forest Service keeps a registry of champion large trees across the state, and accepts resident nominations. The program was started in 1967 under then-state forester Austin Wilkins and currently lists more than 140 trees across 138 species. Every few years, an updated publication lists all the registry’s trees; the most recent is from 2020 and a new version should be released later this year. The registry is also an opportunity for public involvement and connection to trees, coordinator Jan Ames Santerre said. “Trees just capture people’s imagination when they attain large size,” she said. Pine, spruce, walnut, maple, oak, elm, birch and other large trees are well-represented, but the program also includes some plants that most often grow as shrubs, like shadbush and juniper.

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Longleaf pine comeback makes Mississippi forests more climate resilient

By Kala Nance
The Daily Mississippian
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Throughout the Southeast, foresters and activists are coming together to restore America’s longleaf pine forests. The Nature Conservancy reports that longleaf pines once dominated the coastal plain, covering more than 90 million acres. Now there are just 5.2 million acres. In Mississippi, more than two million longleaf pine seedlings have been planted in the past several years, according to the Natural Forest Foundation. This state-wide replanting has restored about 4,000 acres of natural habitat, stretching across the DeSoto, Bienville and Homochitto National Forests. Greene County timber company owner Dillon McInnis is part of the movement to restore the longleaf species to Mississippi’s landscape.

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Hoosier National Forest officials find no negative impacts with Houston South plan

By Karl Schneider
Indianapolis Star
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

A management project in Hoosier National Forest is moving forward after forestry officials found the proposed logging and controlled burns would have no significant impact on Lake Monroe, a drinking water source for more than 145,000 people. The U.S. Forestry Service’s Houston South management plan would allow about 4,300 acres of pine and hardwood trees to be harvested, as well as a prescribed fire regimen on 13,500 acres over about a decade, a move that some fear will cause sediment to move into the lake. Chris Thornton, district ranger of the Hoosier National Forest, said the Houston South plan would take measures to stop soil erosion from reaching the watershed. …The USFS says the management plan will revitalize forest health by reducing stressors. …The Indiana Forest Alliance, Monroe County Board of Commissioners, Hoosier Environmental Council and Friends of Lake Monroe filed a lawsuit in January 2023 claiming the project would degrade Lake Monroe’s water quality.

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North Carolina’s First-Ever High School Forestry Course to be Offered

By Andrew Stevens
Goldsboro Daily News
April 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

RALEIGH – The North Carolina Forestry Association (NCFA) has teamed up with the North Carolina Future Farmers of America Association (NC FFA) to create North Carolina’s first-ever high school forestry course with an industry-aligned credential: AN53 Natural Resources II-Forestry. Both organizations have collaborated with ForestryWorks to create the course, which will be implemented in high schools for the 2024-2025 school year. In North Carolina, there is a steady need for skilled forestry professionals due to ongoing forest management needs, forest products manufacturing, and conservation efforts. However, recent statistics show us that the overall forest workforce in the U.S. is aging, with 59% of the total forestry and logging labor force between the ages of 35-64 and only 12% between the ages of 16-24

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Western Australia’s parched forest canopy is turning brown as large areas die

By Sarah Brookes
WAtoday
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Western Australia’s dying forests need urgent health monitoring as they face the impacts of climate change. Murdoch University forest ecologist Joe Fontaine said large areas of vegetation across the state started to turn brown and die off in February. He urged the state government to support university-government partnerships to develop a system to monitor the health and determine the risks of future events on WA’s forests. Climate change was set to make large-scale plant die-offs more likely. “The likelihood of WA’s event has been evident to scientists for months, yet there was no consistent monitoring or warning system in place to prepare the community or to influence behaviour such as groundwater use,” he said. …WA Greens MLC Brad Pettitt said we were witnessing a devastating ecosystem collapse that was likely to accelerate the loss of many of the state’s unique and globally significant species and ecosystems.

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Japan’s pollen countermeasures face challenges amid slow cedar logging

The Japan Times
May 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

A persistent labor shortage and tepid demand for timber are complicating Japan’s efforts to mitigate pollen allergies by reducing the number of cedar trees, raising concerns about the feasibility of its ambitious forestry goals. These challenges have come into sharp focus as the government aims to reduce pollen production by cutting cedar forest plantations by about 20% over the next decade, with the ultimate goal of halving pollen output in about 30 years. In May last year, the government adopted new strategies to combat pollen allergies. It decided to increase the annual rate of logging of cedar forest plantations from the current 50,000 hectares to 70,000 hectares, and set a target to reduce the area of such forests by about 20% by the end of fiscal year 2033. Starting this fiscal year, prefectural governments are to engage in comprehensive discussions with owners of cedar forest plantations to initiate tree-felling in designated priority areas.

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Groundbreaking study confirms FSC standards are vital for thriving wildlife in tropical forests

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
April 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

A new study reveals compelling evidence that forests certified by the Forest Stewardship Council® (FSC®) in Gabon and the Republic of Congo harbour a higher abundance of larger mammals and critically endangered species, such as gorillas and elephants, compared to non-FSC certified forests. The research was led by Utrecht University with support from WWF and the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), and was published in Nature on 10 April 2024. It underscores the effectiveness of measures implemented in FSC-certified forest concessions to safeguard wildlife. By meticulously counting individual animals and strategically positioning camera traps, the research conducted by Joeri Zwerts confirmed that certified concessions notably harbor a larger population of large mammals – 2.7 times more for mammals over 100 kg, such as gorillas and forests elephants, and 2.5 times more for mammals from 30–100 kg, such as leopards and chimpanzees – when compared to non-FSC-certified areas. 

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Ash dieback plan can ‘restore eroded confidence’ in forestry

By Charles O’Donnell
Agriland
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The Ash Dieback Action Plan, which received cabinet approval today (Tuesday, April 30) is a “positive step” to restoring the “eroded confidence” of farmers in forestry, according to one senator. Tim Lombard said that the supports announced today may be a “catalyst to drive the Forestry Programme forward”. A €5,000/ha payment will be provided to affected forest owners, separate from the clearing and replanting grants. …Lombard, the vice-chairperson of the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Agriculture, Food and the Marine, said: “The committee has pushed hard for a resolution for impacted farmers and I’m pleased that we finally have a significant package in place “We’ve seen the impact of ash dieback in plantations across the country. We all have neighbours hit by this. It’s been horrendous for those farmers affected,” he added.

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Fewer wildfires, great biodiversity: what is the secret to the success of Mexico’s forests?

By Linda Farthing
The Guardian
May 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

More than half of the country’s forestry is in community and Indigenous hands – and from CO2 absorption to reducing poverty the results are impressive. Dexter Melchor Matías works in the Zapotec Indigenous town of Ixtlán de Juárez, about 1,600ft (490 metres) above the wide Oaxaca valley in Mexico, where community forestry has become a way of life. Like him, about 10 million people across the country live in and make a living from forests, with half of that population identifying as Indigenous. As average temperatures soar around the world and wildfires rage across the Americas, in Mexico, where more than a quarter of the country suffers from drought, the number of wildfires has remained steady since 2012. More than half of Mexico’s forests are in community and Indigenous hands, a situation unlike anywhere else in the world, which, according to experts, helps explain why the country has done better at controlling large fires.

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18% of European Timber Importers Are Not Aware of Incoming Deforestation Legislation

iov42
April 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

LONDON — New research from iov42, a technology company specialising in digital identity, trust, and data integrity has revealed that almost one in five (18%) European timber importers are not aware of any incoming deforestation legislation, despite the fact that regulations like the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) and UK Environment Act will imminently become law. Despite the uncertainty around deforestation regulation timings, more than a quarter (27%) of respondents claim to be fully prepared, although there is a marked difference in levels of preparedness from country to country. 44% of UK respondents feel somewhat prepared, whereas in Belgium almost a quarter (24%) have not even commenced preparations.  iov42’s 2024 Deforestation Regulation Readiness Survey is based on responses from those with active involvement in importing timber and related commodities in the UK, Germany, France, Belgium, Austria, and Italy. All of whom will be or are affected by existing and incoming regulation designed to combat deforestation… 

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Oregon wildfire, smoke experts weigh in on future risks and 2024 season

By Alex Baumhardt
The Oregon Capital Chronicle
April 26, 2024
Category: Forestry

Oregon’s getting better at preventing and responding to wildfires, experts said, but much more still needs to be done. A panel of University of Oregon professors who study climate change, smoke and wildfire discussed the 2024 wildfire season. Wildfire risk in the West and in Oregon this year is not abnormally higher than in recent years, said Daniel Gavin, a professor in the geography department who specializes in the study of climate change impacts and fires on ecosystems over time. …Fortunately, the number of cameras monitoring high risk areas around the state have grown from several hundred to roughly 1,200, said Doug Toomey, a professor who also leads a regional partnership for wildfire prevention and monitoring. And communities across Oregon and the West are improving communication systems for evacuations, said Amanda Stasiewicz, a social scientist focusing on policy and human impacts of wildfire, as well as forest and rangeland management.

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