Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Preparing for ‘Firmageddon,’ researchers watch B.C.’s forests for die-offs and droughts

By Justine Hunter
The Globe and Mail
January 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

Mike Cruickshank

Fir trees in the Pacific Northwest have died off in record numbers in 2022 after three years of severe drought and heat waves, according to U.S. Forest Service researchers. …These mortality events are not unheard of, but this is twice as bad as any that has been recorded since the agency started tracking forest health in 1947. The dead trees are mostly white fir and California red fir, but what is killing them similarly threatens the BC interior. …Now, the province’s top forestry official is worried that recent droughts and heat waves will accelerate the die-off. …Shane Berg, B.C.’s Chief Forester said, “There’s only one way that you can actively and aggressively remove them, and that is to salvage the trees.” …At the Canadian Forest Service’s Pacific Forest Centre, researchers are hoping to breed more resilient varieties that can be replanted for future forests. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required].

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Restore logging in forest reserve

Letter by Glen Ridgway, North Cowichan
Lake Cowichan Gazette
January 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In a recent letter critical of the history of the forest reserve, the writer made reference to remarks by our new tall premier. The impact attributed to the remarks and their significance on the Municipal Forest Reserve was the equivalent to the Sermon on the Mount to Christians, the Gettysburg Address to Americans, of Churchill’s “We will fight them on the Beaches” to the Allied nations. So I checked and what I found was run of the mill “we must do better” with our forests. No stop logging and make your money with carbon credits as I had anticipated. And then a few weeks later the tall premier shows up in the middle of North Cowichan with $20 million to employ people using the products of logging, not selling carbon credits. No municipal person in sight… Contact our municipal council and tell them to join Canada and B.C. in a responsible economic use of our forest. 

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Watchdog ‘exploring options’ to address systemic issues raised about RCMP unit in B.C.

By Brett Forester
CBC News
January 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The RCMP’s federal watchdog agency is weighing its options after receiving nearly 500 formal complaints about a unit tasked with policing resistance to major resource extraction projects in British Columbia. More than 100 grievances accepted for investigation contain allegations of excessive force, illegal tactics, unprofessional behaviour, racism, discrimination and charter violations by the force’s Community-Industry Response Group (C-IRG). …The watchdog receives complaints, refers them to the Mounties for investigation, then reviews those investigations if complainants aren’t satisfied. …Chief Supt. John Brewer, the Mountie in charge of the C-IRG… suggested the misconduct allegations often come from activists upset about being arrested or citizens who find the use of force, authorized by court-ordered injunctions, unpleasant. …Brewer’s C-IRG deployed to Fairy Creek in 2021 to enforce an injunction prohibiting protesters from blockading old-growth logging operations. 

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How can forestry companies claim sustainability while clearcutting old-growth and second-growth forests?

Letter by Save Our Forests Team – Comox Valley
Comox Valley Record
January 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In a December 2022 … Canadian environmental groups and Ecojustice levelled a greenwashing case against the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI). The complaint alleges SFI’s claims of sustainability are “false and misleading” because it has “no rules requiring that logging meet prescribed sustainability criteria nor any on-the-ground assessment to confirm sustainability.” The complaint asserts that industry claims of “sustainability” are “greenwashing” because SFI only certifies a process, and logging companies are not evaluated to ensure that the outcome of their operations is sustainable. …In B.C., SFI-certified Mosaic Forest Management claims to be operating at a higher and better environmental standard than legally required …we call on Mosaic to be honest about the “sustainability” of their logging practices, whatever certification they have. Show us the results, especially as they relate to the forests adjacent to Strathcona Park/Ramparts Creek/Mount Washington.

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Logging is imminent in an area home to a threatened bison herd in northern Alberta

By Drew Anderson
The Narwhal
January 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A unique wood bison herd near Wood Buffalo National Park in northern Alberta is on the verge of being wiped out. The herd, one of only two naturally established disease-free herds in Alberta, has as few as nine bison remaining. With logging set to begin in the area imminently, community members are concerned it will have dire consequences. Federally, wood bison are considered a threatened species, but the Wabasca herd is stuck in a sort of regulatory limbo as the federal and provincial governments work to identify its critical habitat — a step that would bring protections through the Species At Risk Act. …Logging is now set to start on the southwest edge of the Wabasca range, an area that trapper Johnson Alook and members of ShagowAskee say will impact critical bison habitat, but which the B.C.-based logging company Tolko — and the provincial government — say is outside their range and won’t affect the herd.

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Ministry of Forests discuss logging closures

By Marius Auer
The Merritt Herald
January 24, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

As mill closures drag on in Merritt, and become permanent in other parts of the province, those in the forestry industry are urging the provincial government to intervene and support the industry. Access to timber is a concern for a number of forestry companies… Aspen Planers’ Merritt operations have been temporarily halted since December 2022 due to a lack of approved cutting permits and access to timber, with no end in sight. Vaagen Fibre in Midway, B.C. has also indefinitely shut down… …a lack of access to timber supply, along with an opaque and unnecessarily complicated permitting process for cutting new logs, continue to strangle local operations in the Nicola Valley. …the Ministry said that most applications for cutting permits are granted within a reasonable timeframe. They were not able to provide clarification on Aspen Planers’ permits in particular, but added that recent data for the district overall shows most permits are issued quickly.

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Changing how we manage our B.C. forests will usher in a bright future

By Satnam Manhas, RPF
The Province
January 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Satnam Manhas

British Columbia has long been known for our forests, and for decades the province’s economy was dominated by forestry. But high rates of harvest due to the mountain-pine-beetle infestation, and increased wildfires due to climate change and historical fire suppression, are forcing us to make a serious choice.  Either we continue logging at the current rate and keep the status quo for another five years at most, or we consider some serious changes to how we manage our forests and forest sector: Leveraging innovations, using carbon markets to build value as our forests regrow, protecting the biodiversity we have left and integrating First Nations decision-making.  …Mills are being starved of wood because there simply isn’t enough to cut — something everyone knew would happen when these mega mills were built, despite the feigned shock we hear from so many commentators now.

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First Nations spell out how natural resource companies should work in B.C. at annual meeting

By Lee Wilson
APTN News
January 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Chris Roberts

First Nations, government and industry leaders gathered in Lheidli T’enneh territory to discuss opportunities in the resource sector – and what corporations need to do in the future.  Wei Wai Kum Chief Chris Roberts told the industry leaders in attendance that the First Nations need to be included projects because the land belongs to them.  “The recognition of our rights and our title and the fact the territories you’re all operating, where you have an interest, where the government the last 150 or 200 years to manage it, it is ours,” he said.  “It belongs to the nation in the territory where you live and play and work, and that acknowledgement and recognition is the foundation that leads to how we are going to be a part of it.”  …,Leaders from Haisla Nation, Saulteau First Nations and Wei Wai Kum First Nations had a panel discussion on progressive Indigenous businesses.

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‘I get shivers’: Five old-growth trees found in remote area of North Cowichan forest

By Skye Ryan
Chek News
January 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Striding over moss and crackling branches, Larry Pynn and Bruce Coates hiked deep into a North Cowichan forest Sunday to show us their find. “I get shivers, you know I love it, I really do,” said Bruce Coates, president of the Cowichan Valley Naturalists’ Society. “It feels so good to find these last few,” said Larry Pynn, a Cowichan resident and publisher of SixMountains.ca. The naturalists discovered a hidden treasure of trees growing way off the beaten path last week. …The area the giants are growing in along the Chemainus River is part of the North Cowichan Municipal Forest Reserve, which has temporarily halted logging due to a public consultation to determine the future of its over 5000 hectares of forest. That consultation ends later this month, so the naturalists hope this discovery will lead more people to want to protect this unique forest from harvesting.

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Harvesting Burnt Stands with Mercer Forestry Services

Mercer International Inc.
January 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…Globally, in all Mercer operating areas, we’ve experienced unseasonably warm temperatures, extreme drought conditions, and wildfires increasing in both number and severity. Mercer Forestry Services (MFS) has worked with the BC Wildfire Service to help fight wildfires by using logging equipment to build fire breaks and douse flames. …These natural disturbances can have a major effect on the environment, including the carbon balance. …Depending on the severity of a wildfire, however, burnt trees within the stand are not wasted. …Time is of the essence to harvest this timber, as the longer a tree sits after a forest fire, the less moisture it will contain. Therefore, MFS aims to harvest approved stands as soon as safely possible after it’s burnt to salvage as much of the tree as we can. …these areas affected by natural forces and harvesting can be replanted, regrown, and thrive once again. 

 

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B.C. forest industry looks to get out of the woods amid meetings with government leaders

By Wolf Depner
BC Local News
January 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The state of the provincial forestry industry and its future is this week’s focus for Premier David Eby and other key industry leaders. …Bob Brash, TLA’s executive director, told Black Press that the association is looking for specific measures to help reduce what he called the “fair bit of concern and uncertainty” in the industry. …Forest companies have also lamented declines in the annual allowable cut with the proviso that the actual amount harvested is generally less. “Predictability on fibre supply is really critical,” said Linda Coady of the BC Council of Forest Industries. While the annual allowable cut was around 80 million cubic-meters per year around 2007… it will level out somewhere between 40 and 50 million cubic meters by 2030 – quite a swing. …Other issues facing include government’s deferral of nearly 1.7 million hectares of old growth forest.

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Parks Canada thinning forests around Banff townsite to lower wildfire, mountain pine beetle risk

By Jayme Doll
Global News
January 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ribbons of smoke curl up out of the forests framing the Trans Canada Highway as drivers enter and exit Banff’s townsite in the picturesque Rocky Mountains of western Alberta. There, Parks Canada crews have been hard at work trying to remove the fuel on the forest floor and canopy in Banff National Park. “What that involves is pruning and thinning the forest so we can reduce the amount of fuel load in terms of wildfire risk reduction,” said David Tavernini, Fire and Vegetation Specialist with Parks Canada. “This helps us manage wildfires safely and be able to protect the communities, people and infrastructure,” he added. This season, about 34 hectares of forest with be thinned. The forests in Banff National Park are not only old and beyond what is considered their natural burning cycle, but mountain pine beetle is also wreaking havoc on the ecosystem.

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BC Provides Funding to Expand Use of Fibre and Support Forestry Workers

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
January 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Forestry workers and communities throughout the province will benefit from new funding for the Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC) to increase fibre supply aimed at keeping people working and local mills running, while also mitigating wildfire risks and reducing climate emissions.  “The projects funded through the Forest Enhancement Society of BC will help us get more fire-damaged wood and logging waste to the mills that need it. At the same time, forestry contractors will have more work hauling fibre that would otherwise be too remote or costly to access. This also supports our continued focus on getting more well-paying jobs from our forests,” said Premier David Eby. With an investment of $50 million from the Province, FESBC will expand funding for projects and programs that increase the use of low-value or residual fibre, including trees damaged by recent wildfires and waste left over from logging that would otherwise be burned in slash piles.

Addition coverage in BlackPress by Wolf Depner: Province pumps $50-million into increasing fibre supply in B.C.

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Loggers warned to steer clear of newly mapped old-growth forest patches in central B.C.

By Ainslie Cruickshank
The Narwhal
January 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Two years after B.C.’s forestry watchdog warned biodiversity in the Prince George timber supply area may be at “high risk,” the provincial government has mapped important old-growth areas — and told logging companies to steer clear. Though these areas have not been legally protected, Ministry of Forests officials told logging companies in a Dec. 21 letter that they expect the old-growth parcels to be “respected as no harvest areas.” The move is “quite significant,” said Michelle Connolly, director of the non-profit Conservation North. “It’s an extensive area — it’s a quarter of a million hectares of high-value primary forest,” she said, adding, “they’re extremely important areas ecologically.” “The staff that did this actually should be commended,” she said. …The changes come two years after the Forest Practices Board, the forestry watchdog, wrapped up an investigation into the way biodiversity is managed in the Prince George timber supply area, following a complaint from a local resident. 

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‘Once You’ve Clear Cut It, That’s It’

By Zoe Yunker
The Tyee
January 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Chief Knox

Lemare Lake Logging Ltd., working on behalf of Kwakiutl First Nation band council, logged a tract of old-growth forest in Kwakiutl territory on northern Vancouver Island after receiving a cease-and-desist order from hereditary leaders. Hereditary Chief N’amugwis David Mungo Knox says that he tried to engage with the province and the parties in question to little effect, and that the nation has called for an old-growth moratorium for over a decade. “I’m trying to save what we have left for the future, because this is our ancient old growth. Once you’ve clear cut it, that’s it,” he said. The cutblocks are located within the Douglas Treaty area, a coastal strip of territory reaching from Port McNeil to Port Hardy… Knox said they include large tracts of red cedar, salmon spawning habitat and active bear dens, and that they reflect rare, old-growth forest in areas that have been heavily logged.

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The Hagen Family Foundation donates to a frog conservation project in British Columbia, Canada

By Rolf C. Hagen Inc.
Cision Newswire
January 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BAIE-D’URFÉ, QC – The Hagen Family Foundation announces a donation towards Wildlife Preservation Canada for the conservation efforts to save the Oregon spotted frog (Rana pretiosa), the most endangered frog in Canada. A sum of $10,000 was donated to provide financial relief and support for their recovery plan of this species at risk. Wildlife Preservation Canada’s mission is to save animal species at risk from extinction in Canada… According to the Wildlife Preservation Canada (WPC) website, the biggest factor driving the decline of the Oregon spotted frog is likely habitat loss caused by development, agricultural land conversion, resource extraction, and hydrological alterations. Other threats include invasive species and pollution. With just a handful of breeding populations left in Canada, this species could easily disappear without hands-on intervention.

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We need more community control over our forests

By Peter Ewart
Prince George Citizen
January 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C. has some of the richest and most diverse forests in the world. But, as everyone knows, these forests are in bad shape now and the forest industry itself is in crisis. How has this come about? There are a host of problems ranging from the over-harvesting of timber to raw log exports, pine and spruce beetle infestations, lack of reinvestment, failure to extract more value from the wood, environmental degradation, and now an acute shortage of wood fibre which has contributed to the closure of the pulp line at Prince George Pulp & Paper and 300 employees losing their jobs. One thing is clear. For too long, government forest policy has been under the thumb of the giant globalized forest companies with just about everyone else relegated to the sidelines. And we are seeing the results of this lop-sided big company domination with the sorry state of our forests today.

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Not Your Grandparent’s Forest Sector with Derek Nighbor

Alberta Forest Products Association
January 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In this episode Derek Nighbor, President and CEO of the Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC), joins Aspen Dudzic at AFPA’s 80th AGM and Conference to share his unique view of forestry in the federal landscape. Join them as they dig into big topics like net-zero carbon and what it means when we hear people talk about nature-based climate solutions, and what a forest bioeconomy is all about. Derek also shares a bit about what drives his passion for Canadian forestry and explores themes of innovation, sustainability, and why as Derek puts it, “this is not your grandma and grandpa’s forest sector.” Join Aspen and Derek for all that and a whole lot more. And if you’re eager for even more, check out ForestryForTheFuture.ca!

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Future of the Sector: Thomas Bennett, FIT

Forest Friendly Communities
January 16, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Thomas Bennett

This is Thomas Bennett, Forester In Training (FIT). He’s an Assistant Operations Engineer at Teal Jones. In this role, he works closely with his supervisor on all phases of timber development in the Fraser Valley, specifically Upper Pitt Lake, from admin and contracting to harvesting and road planning. Thomas, 23, always knew he wanted to work outdoors for his career. His enthusiasm about forestry led him to join UBC’s Urban Forestry program, before switching to Forest Resources Management to become a Registered Professional Forester (RPF). While in the program, Thomas received the Gordon Baskerville Best in Program Award. …“Challenging times in the industry bring opportunity for creativity and innovation,” says Thomas. Technological advancements like cross-laminated timber and wood-based products substituted for plastic make his future in the industry that much more exciting for him.

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Impact of Forest Practices on Water Quality near Avola, BC

BC Forest Practices Board
January 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Owners of a property near Avola, BC (the complainants) are concerned that:

  • given a history of landslides in the area, planned harvesting by BC Timber Sales (BCTS) will cause landslides that could cause harm or loss of life, and damage their house, property and licensed waterworks;
  • a road being constructed by BCTS caused sediment and heavy metals to enter the groundwater and surface water that they divert for human consumption, irrigation and farm animals; and,
  • sediment from BCTS’s road damaged their licensed waterworks.

The Board considered whether BCTS complied with FRPA’s requirements regarding landslides, fish habitat, drinking water and licensed waterworks.

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Province, Blueberry River First Nations reach agreement

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
January 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government and Blueberry River First Nations have reached a historic agreement that will guide them forward in a partnership approach to land, water and resource stewardship that ensures Blueberry River members can meaningfully exercise their Treaty 8 rights, and provide stability and predictability for industry in the region. “This agreement provides a clear pathway to get the hard work started on healing and restoring the land, and start on the joint planning with strong criteria to protect ecosystems, wildlife habitat and old forests,” said Chief Judy Desjarlais of the Blueberry River First Nations. “With the knowledge and guidance of our Elders, this new agreement will ensure there will be healthy land and resources for current and future generations to carry on our people’s way of life.”

Additional coverage in Victoria Times Colonist, by the Canadian Press: B.C. signs ‘historic’ deal with First Nation after court fight over treaty rights

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FireSmart program envisions water reservoirs surrounding Kaslo

By John Boivin
Nelson Star
January 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The people working to protect Kaslo from forest fires want to establish a series of temporary ponds that could be used as water reservoirs around the town. The pitch was made by John Cathro, who has been heading up the Village of Kaslo FireSmart program for the last few years. “We know we don’t have enough water when we need it. We don’t have the ability to get the water from temporary storage to where we need it,” Cathro told the Dec. 13 meeting of Kaslo Village council. “So that [planning] is going to be a big part of the coming year.” Cathro presented the idea while updating council on the community’s work to better protect itself from wildfires. He said a lot had been accomplished in the last few years by various agencies working together on FireSmart programs – from the community forest to regional government to local fire protection services.

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Protecting the hemlocks: Stakeholders meet in Nova Scotia to share knowledge about destructive hemlock woolly adelgid

By Jason Malloy
Annapolis Valley Register in The Saltwire Network
January 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Jon Sweeney

CALEDONIA, N.S. — Scientists and researchers are working to protect Nova Scotia hemlocks from a destructive insect that has been wreaking havoc here for more than five years. Hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA)… can kill trees in two to 10 years after infestation. …Scientists, researchers, foresters and other stakeholders met for the Atlantic Canada Forest Health Workshop Jan. 17-19 in Liverpool and took a trip to Kejimkujik National Park. They shared what has happened already regarding HWA and plans for the future. …Jon Sweeney, a research scientist with the Canadian Forest Services, Natural Resources Canada, based in Fredericton, N.B., is keeping an eye on the insects spread. While it has not been detected in New Brunswick, it is in Maine and Nova Scotia. “You’re not going to lose a forest — other trees will take over — but you’re going to lose that unique hemlock, cool, old-growth forest,” he said.

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Salvaging of Prince Edward Island woodlots slow going in months post-Fiona

By Nancy Russell
CBC News
January 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The phone hasn’t stopped ringing for forestry contractor Matt Hughes as woodlot owners across P.E.I. try to salvage what they can in the wake of post-tropical storm Fiona. …”It’s unfortunate for land owners that have lost a lot of value of timber.” Hughes was part of the province’s Emergency Forestry Task Force that made eleven recommendations, including salvage incentives, based on the amount of damage, ranging from $250 to $850 a hectare. …One of the biggest challenges has been getting into the woodlots to clear out the downed wood, said Hughes. …Hughes says forestry contracters are about to face the third lumber price decrease since Dec. 1. …There have been some additional challenges, said Hughes, including the weather, the high cost of diesel and plummeting lumber prices.

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New Brunswick promises forest report by April after seven years of missed deadlines

By Jacques Poitras
CBC News
January 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Tom MacFarlane

A report on the state of the province’s forests that was first promised almost seven years ago should finally be public before April 1, a committee of the legislature was told Wednesday. Tom MacFarlane, the deputy minister, acknowledged that his department has missed several deadlines. He made the new commitment after Green Leader David Coon hammered the department. “Delay after delay after delay after delay,” Coon said. Earlier in the morning, Coon also forced MacFarlane to admit that the department had not published an annual plan listing its objectives — a plan required under provincial law to be posted on the department’s website. “I’m not aware as to why we haven’t published an annual plan,” MacFarlane said. He said the department has been using a mandate letter from Premier Blaine Higgs as a guide.

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Vast Regions of Western States Added to Wildfire Risk Priorities

By Jay Lee
The Nature Conservancy
January 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

“We welcome Under Secretary Wilkes and Chief Moore to Arizona today and the expansion of the Wildfire Crisis Strategy to more at-risk landscapes in Arizona and across the West. Although heavy precipitation and resulting flooding are immediate concerns in the West, fire danger will return. Fire is a challenge across much of the region, and we appreciate the increased investment in solutions. The outlooks of many forests across Arizona have improved thanks to these kinds of investments. In addition to reducing wildfire risk and supporting post-fire recovery, this work can increase the resiliency of forest and rangeland ecosystems and improve watershed health that will benefit both people and nature,” said Daniel Stellar, Nature Conservancy State Director in response to today’s announcement by U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack of 11 additional landscapes to the Wildfire Crisis Strategy priority landscapes effort.

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New finding: Lack of humidity, not rainfall, is bigger problem for trees

By Nathan Gilles
Columbia Insight
January 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

From “Firmageddon” to western redcedars, drought has been implicated in the death of multiple tree species across the Pacific Northwest. Yet, how exactly drought is stressing and killing the region’s trees has remained something of a scientific mystery. But that is changing. A recent study out of Oregon State University provides new light on drought’s ability to kill trees. …The study examines how Douglas-fir trees responded to two very different elements of drought that are known to slow tree growth and lead to tree death: lack of rainfall and low moisture levels in the air. The study found that atmospheric aridity (dry air) was far more determinantal to the health of Douglas-firs than a lack of rainfall. As vapor pressure deficit goes up it increases the evaporative demand, or how much water is leaving the tree. To slow water loss, many trees will essentially take smaller breaths of air. …this means tree growth slows as well.

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Forest Service OKs logging, tree planting, prescribed burn project near Ashland

By Brett French
The Billings Gazette
January 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

ASHLAND, Montana — In a fire-prone region of southeastern Montana, the Custer Gallatin National Forest is proposing an ambitious tree planting, logging and controlled burn plan over the next eight to 20 years. The project area for the South Otter Landscape Restoration and Resiliency Project stretches across more than 456 square miles, south of the community of Ashland. The entire ranger district covers more than 680 square miles between the Tongue and Powder rivers, just east of the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation. “This project uses forest management tools, such as prescribed burning and thinning to reduce negative effects of future wildfires, while also enhancing conditions that welcome frequent low-intensity fire events,” said Ron Hecker, Ashland District ranger. The Forest Service released its draft decision notice, finding of no significant impact and environmental assessment for the project.

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Unprecedented Levels of High-Severity Fire Burn in Sierra Nevada Forests

By Kat Kerlin
University of California Davis
January 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

High-severity wildfire is increasing in Sierra Nevada and Southern Cascade forests and has been burning at unprecedented rates compared to the years before Euro-American settlement, according to a study from the Safford Lab at the University of California, Davis. Those rates have especially shot up over the past decade. For the study … scientists analyzed fire severity data from the U.S. Forest Service and Google Earth Engine, across seven major forest types. They found that in low- and middle-elevation forest types, the average annual area that burned at low-to-moderate severity has decreased from more than 90 percent before 1850 to 60-70 percent today. At the same time, the area burned annually at high severity has nearly quintupled, rising from less than 10% to 43% today. (High-severity burns are those where more than 95% of aboveground tree biomass is killed by fire.) UC Davis project scientist John N. Williams said this ratio is severely out of balance.

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Are trees ‘the enemy?’ Some Utah lawmakers claim overgrown forests suck too much water

By Brian Maffly
The Salt Lake Tribune
January 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A group of conservative Utah lawmakers are claiming “overgrown” forests are guzzling Utah’s water resources dry, rural members are now calling for a major logging initiative as the best hope for saving the shrinking Great Salt Lake and Lake Powell, despite a lack of scientific evidence that tree removal would make a big difference. Water conservation and efficiency measures are not enough to replenish Utah’s drought-depleted reservoirs and avert the ecological disaster unfolding at the Great Salt Lake, according to presentations Thursday before the Legislature’s “Yellow Cake Caucus,” a group of conservative lawmakers organized by Rep. Phil Lyman. Utah’s 5 million acres of forests are crowded with 100 to 200 trees per acre, about 10 times the densities in the 1800s, said Randy Julander, a retired federal hydrologist. And the trees on about a quarter of this land are standing dead because there isn’t enough water in the ground to sustain them, he added.

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Stakeholders say forestry projects may ruin grizzly habitat

By Thom Bridge
The Independent Record
January 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Across the West, federal and state land management agencies are strategically logging, thinning and burning forests with the goal of making them more resilient to uncontrolled wildfire, as well as diseases. But conservationists and wildlife advocates worry the work will harm grizzly bears and other federally-protected species that call those habitats home. In Western Montana, three projects from different agencies have drawn criticism and lawsuits from stakeholders that say the work will damage grizzly bear habitat. With me today is Joshua Murdock, the outdoors and natural resources reporter at the Missoulian, to talk about the projects and people’s concerns. [37 min podcast]

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‘It is heartbreaking’: Feds appear unmoved by objections to plan increasing logging 500% in state’s national forests

By Charles Duncan
Spectrum Local News
January 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

North Carolina — A new plan guiding the future of Pisgah and Nantahala national forests in the North Carolina mountains is expected to be released by the end of the month. The latest draft of the plan opens up about half of the forests’ 1 million acres to logging. The plan drew more than 14,000 objections, a record, according to the Forest Service. Many objected to opening old-growth areas to timber companies. But new documents out this week indicate the Forest Service does not plan to change its mind …The forest plan has been in the works for years, replacing a plan that dates back to 1987 and hasn’t been updated since 1994. …The proposed plan would almost double the amount of logging in Pisgah and Nantahala in the short term, going from 650 acres per year to 1,200 acres. The long term goal is for 3,200 acres of logging each year, a five-fold increase from the current number.

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Proposed public safety training center in Atlanta located in one of largest urban forests

By Joe Ripley
11 Alive
January 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

ATLANTA — Months of protests over Atlanta’s proposed public safety training center have centered around two key areas: strengthening law enforcement and the environmental impact of the project. Protesters of the “Defend the Atlanta Forest” movement say the South River Forest, where the proposed training center is being built, is one of the largest urban forests in the region. …The Atlanta Police Foundation said the training center will be built on about 150 acres of city-owned property in unincorporated DeKalb County, with 21st-century Environmental Protection Agency standards and limited pollution to the environment. It adds that there is no significant tree cover on the land and cites research saying what types of trees growing on the site are dominated by invasive species.

Additional Coverage in the Washington Post: Activists resist development dubbed ‘Cop City’

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Logging is one of the many industries affected by higher temperatures this winter

By Henry Epp
National Public Radio
January 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Winter is an important time for loggers in the Northeast to harvest timber. But this year’s warmer temperatures, and climate change generally, has made it difficult for them to work consistently.  It’s been an unusually warm winter in the Northeast, and one of the many industries affected by the high temperatures is logging. Loggers need frozen ground to reach some forested areas. But Henry Epp from Vermont Public reports the ground just hasn’t been frozen. Brian Lafoe is operating a machine called a forwarder in a patch of woods in East Burke, a small town in northeastern Vermont.   …The heavy machinery has left ruts in the ground. Usually that’s not an issue at this time of year….But on this sunny January morning, the temperature is starting to rise above freezing. And that means Lafoe can’t run the forwarder much longer or else he’ll start to damage the soil.

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St. Louis County to add logging regulations to protect endangered bat

By Parker Loew
The Ely Echo
January 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

In February, northern long-eared bats will gain new federal protections that impact loggers in St. Louis County.  The long-eared bats, placed on the endangered species list in November under the Biden administration, has lost 95% of its population in Minnesota over the last five years due to an invasive foreign fungus.  Bats are critical to a functioning ecosystem, especially in Minnesota, where mosquitos and other invasive insects need to be kept in check.  ….Many loggers and forest management workers question how regulations involving logging will do anything to stop mortality in Minnesota’s bat population since white-nose syndrome affects bats during hibernation when they are underground and not in trees. …Dane thinks that the northern long-eared bat will be weaponized to destruct and litigate to the detriment of forest management and believes the species to be the “next spotted owl.”

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Details trickle out after deadly encounter at Atlanta training center site

By Tyler Estep
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
January 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

ATLANTA — Details surrounding the deadly encounter near the planned site of Atlanta’s public safety center continued to trickle out, as a wounded state trooper recovered and activists both mourned a fallen comrade and questioned the official account of events. At least seven other people were arrested and charged with domestic terrorism in the southern DeKalb County woods. Activists tied to the “Defend the Forest” movement identified the person killed by law enforcement. …The Georgia Bureau of Investigation later confirmed Teran’s identity. The GBI alleges troopers conducting a “clearing operation” in the forested land near the training center site… found “mortar style fireworks, multiple edged weapons, pellet rifles, gas masks, and a blow torch”.

Additional coverage in CNN: Policing and environmental concerns behind protests

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Orion Global Solutions, LLC Launches Reforestation Mission with 1T.org

Orion Global Solutions, LLC
PRWeb
January 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Orion Global Solutions recently pledged to plant 10,000 trees over the next 5 years through 1T.org, an organization that is part of the World Economic Forum aimed at mobilizing and connecting the global reforestation community to conserve, restore, and grow one trillion trees by 2030. To accomplish this, Orion has partnered with Plant for Planet, National Forest Foundation, and Jewish National Fund-KKL (Israel). Planting trees is an aspect of the sustainability journey that has a personal significance to the Orion team. Orion’s CEO, Yacov Wrocherinsky, was named after his uncle Moises Jakobo Wrocherinsky, who was very involved in the Jewish community in Argentina. After his passing in 1948, the Jewish community partnered with JNF-KKL (Israel) to plant a forest with thousands of trees in his honor in Israel. …“We are excited for the opportunity to join the 1T community and continue the family legacy,” said Yacov Wrocherinsky.

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Brazil’s new president works to reverse Amazon deforestation

By Fabiano Maisonnave and Diane Jeantet
The Associated Press
January 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Luiz Inácio da Silva

RIO DE JANEIRO — Environmentalists, Indigenous people and voters sympathetic to their causes were important to Lula’s narrow victory over former President Jair Bolsonaro. Now Lula is seeking to fulfill campaign pledges he made to them on a wide range of issues, from expanding Indigenous territories to halting a surge in illegal deforestation. To carry out these goals, Lula is appointing well-known environmentalists and Indigenous people to key positions at Funai and other agencies that Bolsonaro had filled with allies of agribusiness and military officers. In Lula’s previous two terms as president, he had a mixed record on environmental and Indigenous issues. And he is certain to face obstacles from pro-Bolsonaro state governors who still control swaths of the Amazon. But experts say Lula is taking the right first steps.

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Explained: Controversial Coillte deal with British investment fund

By James Cox
Echo LIVE
January 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

A deal between Irish forestry business Coillte and British investment firm Gresham House has been labelled “scandalous” and a “land grab” by critics, who include forest owners, farmers and opposition politicians. But what does the deal involve? Gresham House has announced a €200 million Irish forest fund, accepted by Coillte. The fund is set out to plant an average of 700 hectares of new forests over the next five years. The deal could see up to 123,000 acres of land and forest being sold to Gresham House. Coillte, a semi-state agency, has pledged to plant 10,000 hectares of new forests by 2050, the British investors would account for 3.5 per cent of these new forests. Patrick Lawless, managing director, Gresham House Ireland, has claimed the new fund will “create a platform for enhancing Ireland’s forestry sector, delivering real change and momentum and making a meaningful contribution to Ireland’s crucial afforestation ambitions”.

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Brazil launches first anti-deforestation raids under Lula bid to protect Amazon

By Jake Spring
Reuters
January 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

URUARA, Brazil – Brazilian environmental agents cut through the rainforest with machetes on Thursday in search of criminals in the first anti-deforestation raids under President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who has pledged to end surging destruction inherited from his predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro. Reuters exclusively accompanied raids led by environmental agency Ibama in the rainforest state of Para to stop loggers and ranchers illegally clearing the forest. The agency also launched raids this week in the states of Roraima and Acre, Ibama environmental enforcement coordinator Tatiane Leite said. …Flanked by police with semiautomatic weapons, Ibama agents hacked a path through the adjacent jungle to reach an area the size of 57 football fields strewn with downed trees and charged trunks. Some messily planted corn sprouted up to knee-level in what appeared to be an attempt to lay claim to the area to eventually turn it into cattle pasture, the agents said.

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