Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Conservation groups worry Carney’s new nature strategy won’t come with funding

By David Thurton
CBC News
March 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The Carney government’s strategy to protect nature is expected to be released in the coming weeks — and some nature advocacy groups worry it won’t come with any new funding. Billions of federal dollars earmarked for conservation are set to expire at the end of March. If they aren’t renewed, the groups say Canada will not meet its 2030 targets. …national nature groups have been sounding the alarm that previous investments in biodiversity projects are in jeopardy, [saying] they haven’t received any assurances that long-term funding would be extended. …Funding for projects meant to halt and reverse species loss is set to soon expire. The enhanced nature legacy program earmarked $2.3 billion over five years, ending March 31. As The Hill Times reported, there was no mention of renewing the fund in the November federal budget and the main estimates tabled in February showed a drop in conservation funding — from $953 million in 2025-26 to $366 million in 2026-27.

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‘You have a voice’: women in forestry urged to share their talents

By Lindsay Kelly
Northern Ontario Business
March 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

When Diane Cave graduated from Dalhousie University, many of her classmates made a beeline to the Alberta, [to work] in the oil fields. But Cave, a chemical engineer by training, chose to go a different route. Today, she works in a very niche part of the forestry sector as the eastern lead with Element6 Solutions, engineering dust collection systems to ensure safe and productive workplaces. …“No matter what you do, you spend a lot of time at work, you spend a lot of time in the field, and if you don’t enjoy it, then you’re not going to excel at it,” said Cave, during an online Women in Forestry summit. …Svetlana Kayumova, who has a background in marketing, hadn’t considered a career in forestry until she got a job as an executive assistant at Interfor. That role gave her insight into the company, leading to a deeper curiosity about the forestry sector. 

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Naturalists, AWARE spotlight Rainbow Wildlife Corridor and Jane Lakes as key habitats for Whistler’s future

By Luke Faulks
Pique News Magazine
March 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Whistler’s forests are home to one of the region’s most elusive birds of prey: the northern goshawk. Bob Brett, a local biologist and co-founder of the Whistler Naturalists, says Whistler is almost uniquely positioned among southern B.C. communities to support the at-risk forest hawk because of the remaining old-growth forests scattered along the valley’s lower slopes. “[Goshawks] hunt inside the forest, so they need wide-spaced trees, they need big branches to nest on and they need access to the forest floor for hunting,” Brett said. “They’re in big trouble on the coast of British Columbia because of all the logging and the lack of old-growth suitable habitat,” he added. “…And our challenge is to make sure that Whistler continues to have habitat for them.” Brett said that challenge extends to the protection of connected ecosystems—particularly the Rainbow Wildlife Corridor, identified as the 21-Mile Creek corridor.

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Taan Forest becomes Canada’s first Forest Stewardship Council Verified Impact forest

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
March 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Taan Forest, the forest management enterprise owned by the Council of the Haïda Nation, is leading the way under the Forest Stewardship Council Verified Impact program. This milestone marks the first Verified Impact project in Canada and one of the first globally to be verified for enhancing Indigenous cultural values, showcasing how FSC certification can credibly demonstrate positive outcomes for biodiversity, cultural heritage, and community-led stewardship. Taan manages two forest licences spanning more than 190,000 hectares on Haida Gwaii, the ancestral homelands of the Haïda Nation. Prior to Taan, the forest was managed under high-intensity industrial logging practices. Following the Haida Gwaii Land Use Objectives Order (2010) and Taan’s FSC certification in 2011, management shifted toward a values-based stewardship model. Verified ecosystem services impacts now provide thirdparty confirmation, under the FSC’s framework, that Taan’s management approach is delivering measurable ecological and cultural benefits. …verified outcomes include more than 44,000 hectares of conservation area and improved habitat conditions for species such as Taan Haida Gwaii Black Bear, Ts’allang.nga  Marbled Murrelet, and Stads K’un  Northern Goshawk. 

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Sunshine Coast Community Forest gains non-profit status in a B.C. first

By Connie Jordison
Sunshine Coast
March 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Sunshine Coast Community Forest (SCCF) is now a Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) qualified donee, making it eligible to apply for funding programs reserved for registered non-profit groups. SCCF has operated as a non-profit since its creation in 2006 and applied to the CRA for the donee designation last year. …Executive director of SCCF Sara Zieleman said the CRA status is welcome, given the 25 per cent reduction in the firm’s timber harvest levels agreed to as part of its implementation of Ecosystem Based Management. Lower cut volumes are expected to curtail revenues and affect the amount of profit it has available to reinvest into the community. “While timber revenue remains SCCF’s primary funding source, the organization has increasingly pursued partnerships and grant funding to support projects related to forest resilience, ecosystem restoration, and recreation,” according to a statement the company released March 10.

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Leaders in the North Okanagan join forces to protect crucial watershed from fire

By Aaron Hemens
The Vernon Morning Star
March 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Fears of a wildfire devastating a drinking water source for up to 80,000 people in the North Okanagan are bringing local Indigenous and non-Indigenous governments together to protect their shared watershed. Last month, leaders of Okanagan Indian Band (OKIB), the District of Lake Country and City of Vernon declared that protecting the crucial North Aberdeen Plateau watershed goes far beyond just preventing or mitigating wildfires. “We can’t let it go back to what it was,” Lake Country Mayor Blair Ireland told fellow members of the Okanagan-Similkameen Collaborative Leadership Table at the Feb. 20 meeting. …In November, a North Aberdeen Plateau Guidance Plan was signed by Ireland, OKIB Chief Dan Wilson, and Vernon Mayor Victor Cumming. The plateau, near Kalamalka Lake in the North Okanagan, includes four smaller watersheds that provide water for homes and farms across Lake Country and the greater Vernon areas. 

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Dry wildfire conditions in southern Alberta ‘concerning’ as spring nears

By Matthew Black
The Edmonton Journal
March 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Alberta’s forestry minister says wildfire preparations have gone smoothly as the season opens, but he is concerned about the lack of precipitation and warm weather in the southern part of the province. Alberta’s wildfire season officially began March 1 with 30 wildfires extinguished already so far this calendar year. Two fires remain active, according to the province’s online wildfire dashboard, and more than 280 hectares have been affected so far. Forestry and Parks Minister Todd Loewen said Wednesday that while parts of the province are in relatively good shape ahead of the key spring weeks still to come, the southwest corner of the province in particular faces a more risky set of conditions. …Loewen said the province’s overall wildfire readiness is in a good state with most staff hiring already completed, but added the weather over the next two months will greatly affect how many fires crews the province will have this summer.

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Fungus causing white-nose syndrome in bats detected again in B.C.

By Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
March 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The fungus responsible for white-nose syndrome in North American bats has been detected in a bat guano (droppings) sample collected in the Metro Vancouver area. The fungus was first identified in B.C. in guano found in the Grand Forks area in 2022. White-nose syndrome is a fungal disease that disrupts bats’ winter hibernation. Infected bats wake more often and use up the energy they need to survive the winter, leading to starvation and death. While this is B.C.’s second detection of the fungus in guano samples, there have still been no confirmed cases of white-nose syndrome in bats in B.C. …Members of the public can help support bat conservation by reporting sightings of bat roosts, dead bats or unusual bat activity in winter to the BC Community Bat Program.

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Registration is Open for BC Community Forest Association’s 2026 Conference & AGM

BC Community Forest Association
March 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Registration is now open for our 2026 Conference & AGM with Early Bird pricing. The event will take place from June 3-5 in Vernon, BC, where community forest leaders, partners, and supporters will gather to connect, collaborate, and inspire action. The field trip will be hosted by Monashee Community Forest, a partnership of the Splatsin First Nation and the Village of Lumby. 

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Quesnel City Council encourages public to sign petition supporting the forest industry

By George Henderson
My Cariboo Now
March 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Quesnel City Council has endorsed the “Forestry is a Solution” campaign. Erin Robinson, Forestry Initiatives Manager at the City, talked about the “Forestry is a Solution” campaign at the most recent Council meeting. “It was launched in January at the BC Natural Resources Forum in Prince George.  The “Forestry is a Solution” campaign is led by a coalition of forest sector organizations, community leaders, workers, and industry advocates to demonstrate strong public support for British Columbia’s forest sector. The initiative highlights forestry’s role in: supporting affordable housing, reducing wildfire risk through active forest management, sustaining family-supporting jobs, generating public revenues, and contributing to lower carbon construction.” Robinson said it is in line with Council’s concerns over the current state of the industry.

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The Xwulqw’selu/Koksilah Watershed: too important to fail

By Alison Nicholson, electoral area director, CVRD
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
March 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Alison Nicholson

2026 was intended to be the final year of the joint effort by the province and Cowichan Tribes to heal the Xwulqw’selu/Koksilah watershed — bringing back summer river flows, restoring fish habitat, and reducing damaging winter floods. …it is clear we need more time. …Research shows that industrial forestry practices — specifically clearcutting — increase the frequency and severity of winter floods, which directly degrades instream habitat and worsens summer droughts. This tells us that while reducing water extraction in the lower watershed is necessary, it isn’t enough. …we cannot have a healthy river without addressing how the land is treated. …On Feb. 25, Mosaic Forest Management …announced a pilot to test new watershed stewardship approaches in the Koksilah Watershed. While welcome, it must be more than a private initiative. To succeed, the community needs assurance that it will be integrated into the planning process, with public access to data, independent review, and clear timelines.

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Delegation outlines forestry agreement for Powell River Council

By Paul Galinski
The Powell River Peak
March 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

City of Powell River councillors were provided an overview on March 5 of Tla’amin Nation’s negotiations to repatriate access to forest lands currently held by Western Forest Products (WFP). Adam Culos, general manager of Thichum Forest Products, said that Tla’amin had announced a milestone agreement, where Thichum Forest Products, through Tla’amin, is working on an agreement with WFP to acquire Tree Farm Licence 39 block one. Seanna McConnell, Western Forest Products vice-president, Indigenous partnerships, said Qwoqwnes Forestry Holdings Limited Partnership, wholly owned by Tla’amin, will be purchasing 100 per cent ownership of WFP’s Stillwater forest operation for $80 million. …Culos said the acquisition … supports Thichum’s long-term success through investment in their business and the future of the community, [adding] that almost all the wood supplies domestic mills, so there are three fibre supply agreements. One will be WFP, supporting the company’s five coastal mills, along with Mosaic Forest Management and Domtar.

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Two Cliff Gilker Park bridge replacements promised in 2026

By Connie Jordison
Sunshine Coast Reporter
March 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Reconstruction of Cliff Gilker Park’s Waterfall and Gorge bridges is to commence shortly and complete “well before the end of the year,” according to Sunshine Coast Regional District (SCRD) staff, thanks to an agreement with the Sunshine Coast Community Forest (SCCF). A contract award to SCCF to do that work was endorsed by the SCRD board at its Feb. 26 meeting. Completing those two replacements as a cooperative project, using wood rather than metal for bridge structures, will save the SCRD time and $578,930, according to a staff report. Rather than spending over $1.2 million as budgeted to reopen the two bridges, which were closed due to damage sustained during the November 2021 atmospheric rivers, the new project cost is $619,920. That price also covers trail resiliency work in the park.

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Uninvited guests: Invasive pests, diseases and the fate of our forests

By Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
University of British Columbia
March 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Webinar: March 24, 2026 | Invasive species are an unintended consequence of globalization and one that is wreaking havoc on forest ecosystems. From the blister rust fungus that decimated BC’s white pines to more recent invasions of Dutch elm disease and the emerald ash borer beetle, invasive pests and pathogens are a real and present danger that are reshaping forest and urban ecosystems in lasting ways. Join Dr. Richard Hamelin, a forest pathologist specializing in forest health and the application of genomics to disease management, for a timely and engaging look at the scope of the problem and the scientific tools being used to respond, including the application of genomics and tree breeding. Increasingly, citizen scientists play a critical role in detecting emerging threats, helping enable early intervention and improved forest protection.

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Petition asks province to reject logging proposal in rural B.C.

By Dillon White
The Vernon Morning Star
March 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A petition to reject a logging project in the Hatzic Valley has collected over 650 signatures. The proposed project would feature cut blocks between Kussman Road and Eng Road east of Mission, along with a new logging road. According to the province’s Forestry Operations Map, the project in question — FOM 2801 — is expected to be in operation from 2026 to 2030. In a statement to the Mission Record on Friday (March 6), the Ministry of Forests said it hasn’t received an application for a proposed road permit or a cutting permit at this time. “The licensee is welcome to submit an application for review by the Ministry of Forests,” the ministry said. The petition notes the history of landslides, flooding and debris flows in the area. It states that approving a new logging road construction would ignore decades of evidence and repeat past mistakes.

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City of Mission sees significant profit from timber sales last year

City of Mission
March 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mission, BC – Despite the continuing uncertainty around tariffs on softwood lumber, the City of Mission’s forestry operation saw a net profit of over $1.1 million last year from timber sales. By taking advantage of temporary market upticks throughout the year, the Forestry Department released three timber sales culminated in a net profit of $1,138,769 after fee and fund transfers in 2025. The original forecast for the year was a net profit of $459,133. The revenue from timber sales fuels the City of Mission’s Forestry Legacy Reserve. This unique reserve is used by Council to allocate funding for projects and initiatives that benefit the community now and into the future. Recent examples of this reserve in action include the new Emiry Park in Cedar Valley and the covered lacrosse box at Centennial Park – both of these projects were made possible in part by funding from the Forestry Legacy Reserve, funds that would otherwise need to be raised through taxation. 

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Mosaic launching Koksilah watershed pilot

By Robert Barron
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
March 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mosaic Forest Management is testing a new approach to forest management in the Koksilah watershed. The forest company is launching a multi-year pilot program on its private lands in the watershed to demonstrate how working forests can deliver both economic performance and environmental resilience by integrating watershed services, carbon programs, renewable energy, recreation and real estate activities alongside timber production. The Koksilah River has been experiencing persistent problems in recent years, including extreme water fluctuations and severely low flows in the summer months, which led to Cowichan Tribes and the province signing B.C.’s first water sustainability plan for the watershed in 2023, to find solutions. …“This pilot is about figuring out what works by combining sustainable forestry with watershed stewardship and other land solutions,” said Duncan Davies, president and CEO of Mosaic. “We’re committed to building the business model that makes this approach viable and scalable where the right conditions exist.”

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City of Powell River councillors endorse forestry campaign

By Paul Galinski
The Powell River Peak
March 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

City of Powell River Council has officially endorsed the Forestry is a Solution campaign led by a broad coalition of community leaders, workers and forest industry advocates. At the March 6 city council meeting, councillors reviewed correspondence from Kim Haakstad, CEO of BC Council of Forest Industries, which has the goal to demonstrate deep public support for BC’s forest sector and ensure it remains a strategic asset for the future. The request had three components. The first was to officially endorse the Forestry is a Solution campaign. Secondly, encourage community members to visit the forestryisasolution.com website to sign a petition and send a letter to their MLA, the minister of forests, the premier and the official opposition forest critic… and share information about the campaign. Mayor Ron Woznow said he had worked with 22 other mayors regarding the importance of forestry… especially in terms of the significant debt the province is facing.

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Low snow pack raises concerns about Cowichan Lake water levels

By Robert Barron
Cowichan Valley Citizen
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The lack of significant snowfall in the mountains around Cowichan Lake could be a problem for water levels during the upcoming dry season, according to Brain Houle, the environment manager at the now closed Domtar pulp mill in Crofton. While Domtar shut the mill down earlier this year, the forest company agreed to continue operations at the weir until the end of 2026. Houle said that while there is still time to accumulate more snow before the winter ends, it is possible that the weather will not bring more snow to the mountains before warm weather begins the annual snow melt. “With the Crofton mill now shut down and water withdrawals from the river significantly reduced, it is even more important to avoid the need to use pumps this year,” …Houle said that a stakeholder meeting was recently held … to discuss water issues related to the Cowichan watershed in 2026, including weir operations.

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Quadra Island community rallies to protect old-growth forests and watersheds

By Kari Fredheim
Campbell River Mirror
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Quadra Island Peaceful Grannies are calling on the community to join a peaceful rally on Friday, Feb. 27, taking place outside the post office at Quathiaski Cove. The gathering is a stand against the ongoing over-logging of Quadra Island’s forests and the growing threat to the island’s watersheds, wildlife and ecological integrity. According to the group, across Quadra’s watersheds, from Darkwater Lake and Assu Creek to Beech’s Creek and beyond, the pattern is consistent. Roads are punched into previously unroaded forests, logging proceeds into areas designated for protection and communities are left to fight for their water, their fish, and their safety after the fact. The Peaceful Grannies are calling on the Government of B.C. to make changes to several policies and protections including placing a moratorium on logging of remaining old-growth and mature forests on Quadra Island until proper conservation plans are in place.

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Budget 2026 supports wildfire-resilient forests, communities

By the Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

More local governments, contractors and First Nations will take on wildfire-risk-mitigation roles in and around their communities thanks to a $30-million investment in training, equipment and FireSmart programs. “Through powerful partnerships with local communities, we’re doing the work to get ahead of wildfire season,” said Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests. “We’re investing in local governments, contractors and First Nations to mitigate the risks of wildfire, protecting people and community. This is how we create jobs, support workers and build more resilient forests, restoring confidence in our sector.” The FireSmart Community Funding and Supports program is receiving an additional $15 million to continue prioritizing core FireSmart activities to protect the most vulnerable communities in B.C. The program is part of B.C.’s Community Resiliency Investment (CRI) program. Along with the Crown Land Wildfire Risk Reduction program, it reduces wildfire risk by funding planning, education, co-ordination and fuel-management activities on publicly owned and Crown land.

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Ontario Professional Foresters to Gather in Ottawa Valley

Ontario Professional Foresters Association
March 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The Ontario Professional Foresters Association will host its 2026 Annual Conference and AGM in Pembroke, Ontario, April 21–23, bringing together forestry professionals, government representatives and industry leaders under the theme “Professional Forestry in Action: Diverse Roles, Shared Impact.” The conference opens with an optional field tour through the Ottawa Valley, where participants will visit forest management sites and hear directly from field practitioners about harvesting, regeneration and forest renewal practices. The program also features a series of technical sessions and plenaries examining key issues facing the profession. Among the highlights is a presentation by Derek Nighbor, President and CEO of the Forest Products Association of Canada, who will discuss how evolving Canada–US relations are affecting the forestry sector and what may lie ahead. The three-day event also includes networking opportunities and the Association’s Annual General Meeting, with both in-person and virtual attendance options available.

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Canadian Forestry Today: Reality, Resilience, and the Road Ahead

By The Canadian Woodlands Forum
LinkedIn
March 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The Canadian Woodlands Forum will host its Spring Meeting in Moncton, featuring a presentation by Anthony Robinson, owner, publisher and CEO of Forestnet Media, the company behind Logging & Sawmilling Journal and TimberWest Magazine. Robinson’s talk — “Canadian Forestry Today: Reality, Resilience, and the Road Ahead” — will draw on more than a decade covering the forest sector across North America, from logging operations and sawmills to industry events and conversations with sector leaders. His presentation will examine intensifying competition among equipment manufacturers, consolidation among mill technology and engineering firms, and the widening gap between industry realities and government and advocacy structures. Robinson will also explore why some companies continue to invest despite challenging market cycles, and highlight emerging trends in innovation, people-first leadership, and the growing importance of effective industry storytelling.

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From vandalism to fires, is a ‘social crisis’ growing in the heart of Quebec’s logging industry?

By Michelle Lalonde
The Montreal Gazette
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

The president of a logging company says anti-logging activists are fuelling a “social crisis” in the Mauricie region by sabotaging his company’s legal and government-authorized forestry projects and he called on the Quebec government to take action to protect workers and restore order. Antoine Langlois, president and founder of Forex Langlois Inc., contacted The Gazette this week to denounce what he and police believe was an intentionally set fire in Lac-aux-Sables last month that destroyed two machines owned by his company. …Sgt. Valérie Beauchamp of the Sûreté du Québec said police believe the fire was set intentionally sometime during the previous night…. Anonymous activists did take responsibility for sabotaging a forest in the same region on Jan. 26. In a statement posted on the Instagram account of a collective called Soulèvements du fleuve, an “anonymous group” said they had inserted metal spikes in trees in the Mékinac forest north of Ste-Thècle.

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Ground Shift or Power Shift: Mark Rey – The Timber Industry’s National Forest Overlord

By Jonathan Ratner
The Wildlife News
March 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Part 2 of a 3 part series on the Ground Shift initiative. This installment examines Mark Rey’s role in rewriting the rules for America’s national forests. Mark Rey is one of the central figures in the Ground Shift initiative. His career in the timber industry and in federal policy helps explain why we are deeply skeptical of where this effort is headed. …With a career as a timber lobbyist and experience in crafting legislation to circumvent environmental protections and public participation in forest management, Mark Rey was the selection of choice by the George W. Bush administration in 2001 to oversee the National Forest system as USDA Undersecretary for Natural Resources and Environment. …The Healthy Forests Restoration Act is considered Rey’s “signature accomplishment.” …A healthy forest, under this law, was one that had been reduced to stumps. …And now, he has been tapped to generate ideas for the future of the conservation movement. What could go wrong?

Read Part I: Ground Shift or Power Shift? Is a Ground Shift in the environmental movement a good idea, or not?

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The fire that never starts — Reducing roadside ignitions

By Andrew Avitt, Forest Service Communications
US Department of Agriculture
March 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

When 95% of wildfires are started by humans — especially in a part of the country like Southern California with 25 million people — stopping wildfires before they start is a lofty goal. But for Nicole Molinari, an ecologist for the Forest Service, a recent mapping effort contains a compelling insight — nearly two thirds of human-caused fires occur along roadsides in the area. The compiled dataset, California Southern Zone Forests & Human Caused Fire Ignition Analysis, maps 26 years of fire starts across the Angeles, San Bernardino, Los Padres, and Cleveland national forests, including 850 miles of national forest roads. Equipped with this data, and with the recent memory of the two fires that devastated parts of Los Angeles last year, federal, state and local land managers are developing strategies to reduce ignitions in this highly flammable, densely populated region.

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Viewpoint: Stop rollback of wildlife protections on Montana’s public land

By Mike Garrity, Executive Director, Alliance for the Wild Rockies
The Missoula Current
March 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Four Montana-based Conservation Groups — Alliance for the Wild Rockies, Gallatin Wildlife Association, Native Ecosystems Council, and Council on Fish & Wildlife — sued the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and U.S. Forest Service for removing wildlife protections on 1.1 million acres of the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest in Montana. The federal government agencies issued a “Forest Plan Amendment” in 2025 to remove protections on 1.1 million acres of habitat that was formerly mapped and protected as “lynx habitat” for the Canada lynx, a threatened species listed under the Endangered Species Act. …The lynx population in the Greater Yellowstone Area is currently at risk of extinction, but if managed properly, the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest could aid the recovery of the imperiled Greater Yellowstone lynx population by serving as a connectivity corridor with the healthier lynx populations in Northern Montana. 

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Could Oregon’s Valley of the Giants face logging under federal timber plan?

By Eder Campuzano
Salem Statesman Journal in Central Oregon Daily News
March 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

©TravelOregon

An iconic swathe of old growth forest in west Polk County is among the 2.5 million acres the Bureau of Land Management has proposed for a logging ramp-up meant to expand domestic timber production. The Valley of the Giants, home to some of the largest and oldest trees on Oregon’s Coast Range, is renowned for the titanic Douglas firs and Western Hemlocks that compose its canopy. It was recognized as an Outstanding Natural Area and an Area of Critical Environmental Concern by the BLM in 1976. …Now, the agency has identified Valley of the Giants as one of several old growth forests that may fall under President Trump’s logging expansion… The announcement has drawn support from the state timber industry and the ire of environmental groups, but the expansion of logging rights is not a done deal. The BLM is accepting public comment on the proposal via email and on the federal register until March 23.

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Investment companies block access to tens of thousands of acres in Wahkiakum, Pacific counties

By Henry Brannan
The Washington State Standard
March 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

ELOCHOMAN RIVER VALLEY, Washington — Investment companies have whittled away the land hunters can use in Wahkiakum and Pacific counties. Access to tens of thousands of acres of longtime hunting grounds is now blocked because a new generation of private landowners won’t offer access. The landowners are often investment companies, not based in the region or even the country. Not only is hunting off limits on their lands, they also often block access to adjacent properties that are state-owned — and therefore should be public — or adjacent privately owned property that still allows free hunting. Steve Ogden, an assistant manager for land operations at Washington Department of Natural Resources, said the agency’s hands are tied — private landowners can’t be forced to allow people on their land. The companies’ land restrictions have begun to erase generations-old family traditions, especially among the working class, and reduce access to affordable foods, like elk, in Washington’s second-poorest county.

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Montana and the U.S. Forest Service use new agreement to target 400,000 acres of forest for management

By Jordan Hansen
The Daily Montanan
March 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Montana and the U.S. Forest Service announced last week they were moving ahead on a shared agreement between the two to do forestry work in large swathes of the state. Last summer, the state and Forest Service signed an agreement formalizing closer cooperation between federal forest management operations and the state Department of Natural Resources and Conservation. That came about two months after a Trump Administration executive order seeking to increase domestic timber production. On Friday, Gov. Greg Gianforte, DNRC Director Amanda Kaster and U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz said that two large areas have been selected for state and federal work. The focus of the work will be on approximately 213,910 acres in the Flathead and Kootenai National Forests and 200,000 acres within the Bitterroot National Forest. The project areas were selected due to wildfire risk and how close they are to being implemented.

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Iconic Oregon forest eyed for Trump’s domestic logging expansion

By Eder Campuzano
Statesman Journal
March 7, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

An iconic swathe of old growth forest in west Polk County is among the 2. 5 million acres the Bureau of Land Management has proposed for a logging ramp-up meant to expand domestic timber production. The Valley of the Giants, home to some of the largest and oldest trees on Oregon’s Coast Range, is renowned for the titanic Douglas firs and Western Hemlocks that compose its canopy. It was recognized as an Outstanding Natural Area and an Area of Critical Environmental Concern by the BLM in 1976….The announcement has drawn support from the state timber industry and the ire of environmental groups, but the expansion of logging rights is not a done deal. …The Douglas firs and Western Hemlocks that populate the forest are typically about 20 feet in circumference and are 200 feet tall. Most trees are between 400 and 450 years old.

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Recent Bureau of Land Management Timber Sales Bring In Over $8.3 Million

My Central Oregon
March 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The Bureau of Land Management sold 27.6 million board feet of timber across 1,255 public acres in Oregon, for a total of $8,327,275, and indicates a strong demand in American lumber manufacturing by exceeding total appraised values by over $3 million. This timber will feed local mills and support jobs in local communities. The Coos Bay District sold the Eckley Empanada timber tract (1.8 million board feet, 105 public acres) to Harveys’ Selective Logging, Inc., of Creswell, Ore., for $$142,228. The Medford District sold the Thom Bone timber tract (6 million board feet, 585 public acres) to Estremado Logging Inc. of Gold Hill, Ore., for $458,766. The Northwest Oregon District sold the Gopher Broke timber tract (7 million board feet, 223 public acres) to Boise Cascade Wood Products of Willamina, Ore., for $2,499,716; and the John Boy timber tract (8 million board feet, 167 public acres) to Rosboro Company, LLC, of Springfield, Ore., for $3,913,070.

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Review of Colorado’s Forest Action Plan reveals focused forest management

Colorado State Forest Service
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Colorado State Forest Service and its partners conducted a vast majority of their forest management work in high-priority areas of the state and greatly increased the acres of forests they managed and enhanced annually from 2020 through 2024, according to a review of the 2020 Colorado Forest Action Plan published this month. The Forest Action Plan is a 10-year, science-based, collaborative roadmap for protecting Colorado’s forests and the many benefits they provide. The CSFS completed a five-year review of the plan, following requirements from the USDA Forest Service and National Association of State Foresters. The review captures projects completed across jurisdictions and tracked using the Colorado Forest Tracker, overlayed on the composite priority map from the Forest Action Plan. …The CSFS collaborated with dozens of stakeholders and subject matter experts to produce the 2020 Colorado Forest Action Plan, which is required by the USDA Forest Service through the federal Farm Bill.

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Trump administration wants to Make Oregon Logged Again, revving up decades‑old battles over big timber

By Gosia Wozniacka
The Oregonian
March 9, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

In western Oregon, public forests that once fueled rural prosperity – and later came under strict habitat protections that sharply reduced logging and local revenues – are again at the center of a political and economic storm. The Trump administration is proposing to quadruple logging in Oregon, raising timber harvests to levels not seen since before spotted owl protections in the 1990s. The plan has stirred a mix of hope and dread across the state. In cash-hungry rural counties hollowed out by decades of dwindling timber receipts … the proposal looks like a long‑awaited lifeline that could stabilize county budgets and create new jobs. … But in forested watersheds and old growth reserves, a sweeping expansion of logging would undermine hard-won conservation protections and threaten the recovery of the northern spotted owls, marbled murrelets and coho salmon…

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Repealing the Roadless Rule would set back public land management

By Mary Erickson, Scott Fitzwilliams, Tricia O’Connor and David Whittekiend
The Idaho Statesman
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

As retired Forest Service leaders who had the privilege of managing millions of acres of national forests across the West, we understand the importance of stewarding these lands for the benefit of local communities and the nation. Full repeal of the Roadless Area Conservation Rule would undermine trust in agency managers, hinder collaborative agreements, adversely affect resources the public cares about and ultimately restrict efficient land management. Repealing the rule is favored by many of those who opposed it from the beginning or perceive that it undermines effective forest management. …after over two decades of implementation and learning, forest managers and partners know there could be thoughtful improvements to the Roadless Rule. …Rather than seeking to repeal the rule, the Forest Service should meaningfully engage stakeholders to update the rule and improve implementation based on what has been learned over the past 25 years. This will allow future land managers to benefit local communities and the nation.

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Wisconsin’s forests first initiative developing strategic plan road map for forest conservation

By Jake Donoho
WJFW-TV12
March 6, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

RHNELANDER, Wisconsin — Wisconsin’s Forest Industry Roadmap and Strategies for Tomorrow, or Wisconsin Forests FIRST is a statewide initiative made for developing a plan and roadmap to ensure Wisconsin’s forests remain healthy and productive, while strengthening the timber industry. Wisconsin’s timber industry is one of the leading economic factors in the state, especially in the Northwoods. The new roadmap being developed by Wisconsin Forests FIRST Initiative aims to identify challenges within the industry to ensure long-term success. Wisconsin Council on Forestry chair, Tom Hittle, explains what the roadmap will consist of. …The research for the roadmap will last two years and seek out data-driven insights to support forest health in collaboration with local and statewide experts. The Great Lakes Timber Professionals and the Paper Council received a $1 million grant from the state to pursue the project with the Wisconsin Council on Forestry.

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Proposed US Forest Service Plan to Streamline Logging on Three Montana Forests

By Laura Lundquist
The Missoula Current
March 5, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

MONTANA — Three national forests east of Missoula are proposing a plan to require continuous logging across almost a million acres of southwest Montana for at least the next decade. On Monday, the U.S. Forest Service released a draft plan for a Tri-Forest Sustained-Yield Unit, which would direct logging to occur on more than 925,000 acres across the Beaverhead-Deerlodge, Helena-Lewis and Clark and Custer Gallatin national forests. The plan’s stated purpose is to “to support local economies and the timber industry.” Logging is predicted to ramp up to produce 35 million board-feet of lumber annually by the end of 10 years, according to the plan. … The plan says logging won’t occur in wilderness areas, recommended wilderness or wilderness study areas. …But some regional public land advocates are questioning the plan at a time when the Trump administration has pushed a number of other initiatives that favor the timber industry and reduce public comment.

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New England Clean Energy Connect conservation plan will not protect Maine’s mature forests

By Robert Bryan and Paul Larrivee (licensed foresters)
Central Maine
March 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

In November 2025, the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) approved a conservation plan and forest management plan as mitigation for impacts from the NECEC transmission corridor that runs from the Quebec border 53 miles to central Maine. As professional foresters, we were astonished by the lack of scientific credibility in the definition of “mature forest habitat” that was approved by DEP, and the business-as-usual commercial forestry proposed for over 80% of the conservation area. The DEP’s approval requires NECEC to establish and protect 50,000 acres to be managed for mature-forest wildlife species and wildlife travel corridors along riparian areas and between mature forest habitats. …To ensure that ecologically mature forest develops in a manner that meets the intent of the DEP/BEP orders, several things need to change….If allowed to stand, the definitions and management described in the forest management plan would set a terrible precedent for conserving mature forests in Maine. 

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From forest to flatpack, IKEA faces timber traceability test under EU’s Deforestation Regulation

By Annelise Giseburt
Mongabay
March 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

As the EU’s Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) nears implementation this year, furniture giant IKEA may need stronger traceability systems to prove its timber isn’t linked to post-2020 deforestation. Although nearly all IKEA wood is FSC-certified or recycled, past investigations show this voluntary scheme can miss illegal or unsustainable logging. The EUDR requires geolocation data and stricter due diligence than existing certifications or regulations, but repeated delays and possible rule changes have created uncertainty for companies like IKEA preparing to comply. Industry watchdogs say high-profile companies like IKEA can “do more” to champion the landmark regulation and implement leading wood traceability systems, rather than relying solely on existing — voluntary— certification schemes.

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Forest Stewardship Council launches new Climate and Biodiversity Strategy

Forest Stewardship Council
March 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

At a time of accelerating climate change, biodiversity loss, and growing pressure on forest ecosystems and forest-dependent people, FSC is stepping up its role. With the publication of the Climate and Biodiversity Strategic Framework 2026-2032, FSC enters a new phase, reinforcing responsible forest management as an impactful solution for climate mitigation and adaptation, biodiversity conservation, and upholding the rights and livelihoods of forest-dependent communities. Forests cover 30% of the world’s land, sequester a net 7.6 billion tonnes of CO₂ annually, and host up to 80% of terrestrial biodiversity. …As forests face increasing threats, so do climate and biodiversity. FSC is acting, not only as a standard setter, but as a global solution that generates verified outcomes for climate and biodiversity at a moment when the world needs both. The Climate and Biodiversity Strategic Framework provides a clear, structured approach to strengthen FSC’s contributions over the coming years within and beyond certification.  

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