Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

World Wildlife Fund Canada creates Catalyst Fund to accelerate nature restoration across Canada

By World Wildlife Fund Canada
Cision Newswire
October 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – World Wildlife Fund Canada announced today the launch of the WWF-Canada Catalyst Fund, a $500,000 initiative designed to accelerate ecosystem restoration across the country and help Canada meet targets set in the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework and 2030 Nature Strategy. …the fund will support efforts by Indigenous Peoples, non-profits, businesses and all levels of government to expand or accelerate restoration of lost or degraded lands. The investment will specifically target small but effective restoration actions to support initiatives that are at the planning or implementation stage. …Funding will support large restoration projects of more than five hectares by encouraging actions such as better planning, the use of native plants and seeds, strengthened monitoring and maintenance protocols to ensure long-term success, or other innovative ideas. Ecosystem restoration can include activities such as replanting fire-damaged forests or stabilizing the banks of flood-ravaged rivers with native vegetation. 

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Forests Canada reaches 50 million tree milestone  

By Forests Canada
National Post
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Jess Kaknevicius & Rob Keen

Earlier this year, we reached a very special milestone – Forests Canada has proudly supported the planting of 50 million trees on more than 10,400 project sites across Canada. The collective environmental and economic impact of all those new and restored forests is an important part of our history, but we also know our work has only just begun.  …As we celebrate our 50 million tree milestone, we’re doing so together with the many people and organizations that also believe in our mission to conserve, restore, and grow Canada’s forests to sustain life and communities.  On behalf of all of us at Forests Canada, thank you to everyone who helped to make this possible. Together, we are growing something truly beautiful. 

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Women in Wood celebrates 10-year anniversary

By Women in Wood
Forests Canada
October 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Women in Wood – a network created to bring together passionate women from across Canada and around the world who work in, with and for the woods – celebrated its 10th anniversary with over 100 women from across the forest sector at an event at Fleming College on October 18. The event was highlighted by a panel featuring Women in Wood co-founders Jess Kaknevicius, CEO of Forests Canada, and Lacey Rose, Registered Professional Forester with County of Renfrew, along with Vanessa Nhan, Lead Forest Analyst at Silvacom, and Eleanor Reed, Forests Canada Field Advisor. The panel was moderated by Astrid Nielsen, owner of Dendron Forestry Services. “Being able to celebrate this milestone and connect with the next generation was uplifting and created a sense of hope,” Kaknevicius says.

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Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) to vote on new traceability rules amid fraud allegations

By Philip Jacobson
Mongabay.com
October 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, International

The world’s largest green timber label will vote next week on whether to begin work on new traceability rules, amid renewed scrutiny and accusations over whether the body is doing enough to prevent fraud within its supply chains. The Bonn-based Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) bills itself as “the world’s most trusted mark for sustainable forestry.” …But forestry experts and whistleblowers have alleged for years that the FSC lacks a proper control system, allowing bad actors to fraudulently pass off timber that was illegally or unsustainably logged as FSC-certified. Phil Guillery, who was the FSC’s integrity director from 2011-21, said in early October said that he believed “20-30% of claims in the system were false” during his tenure.” The FSC issued a swift rebuttal, calling them unsubstantiated and “based on outdated information that does not reflect the system today.” …However, a senior FSC official said that they believed the figure was actually an underestimate.

From FSC’s Statement on Recent Criticism: “References to widespread false FSC claims are based on outdated information that does not reflect the system today. …The article relies on a broad estimate of false claims without providing verified evidence to substantiate it.”

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Forest Stewardship Council General Assembly opens with a call for shared responsibility

Forest Stewardship Council International
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, International

The 2025 FSC General Assembly opened on 26 October in Panama City, uniting members from around the world for joint decision-making on the future of forest stewardship. …Panama’s Minister of Environment, His Excellency Mr. Juan Carlos Navarro, announced the country’s plan to formalize FSC certification across Indigenous territories, a milestone in national environmental policy. 174,000 hectares are in process of being certified today in Panama. “Stop blaming the FSC,” he stated. “Each of us must in our own countries guarantee sustainable development and guarantee with our actions, our strength and our passion, the survival of life around us.” FSC Board Chair Stuart Valentine provided a business report from the Board, reflecting on FSC’s new leadership, governance and strategic priorities, and what is coming in the future – including a new Global Strategy, revision of FSC’s Principles and Criteria, incorporation of risk-based approaches, and increased demonstration of FSC’s impact.  

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Forest Products Association of Canada Responds to the Latest EUDR Proposal

Forest Products Association of Canada
October 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Forest Products Association of Canada (FPAC) President and CEO Derek Nighbor released the following statement following yesterday’s EU Commission proposal related to the implementation of the EU Deforestation-free Product Regulation (EUDR).  “This proposal does not address real concerns with an EU Information Technology (IT) system that is still not fit for purpose and does not address concerns raised by micro- and small businesses part of the integrated supply chain for larger organizations. “We would like to see practical simplification of the EUDR, that appropriately recognizes low-risk third countries such as Canada, as well as EU Member States.  We are committed to work quickly with global partners to find an improved proposal, that will both meet the intent of the Regulation, while also enabling strong and vibrant trading relationships, as committed to in the June 2025 strategic partnership between the European Union and Canada.

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Halalt First Nation shocked by N. Cowichan decision to make harvesting public forests a priority

Ladysmith Chemainus Chronicle
October 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…Chief James Thomas said in a letter to council that the Halalt community is concerned that North Cowichan made that decision in August considering the efforts of the municipality and the First Nation to establish a co-management framework for the 5,000-hectare MFR, and in light of the significant concerns Halalt members have raised regarding the impacts of forest operations in the Chemainus watershed.  …Thomas said the MFR is located within the Halalt’s unceded territory and the land is essential to the First Nation’s life and culture, and this includes the forests within the MFR and the surrounding landscape.  …Speaking for the majority of council, Coun. Bruce Findlay argued that North Cowichan could make some much-needed money if the sustainable harvesting of the natural resource resumed.

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British Columbia’s Community Forests have growing appeal

By Jim Stirling
The Logging and Sawmill Journal
October 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

QUESNEL, BC — Given what’s going on around the world, it’s easy to understand why more areas in BC are taking a closer look at the Community Forest form of log harvesting tenure. It returns the management and responsibility for small, designated areas of forest land back into the hands of appointed people who live, work and care about them. Some control of what happens to and on the forest land in their own back yard has a growing appeal to its residents. …A community forest attempts to better accommodate other land users. …Co-operating with others as one cohesive unit becomes the catalyst for achieving dynamic, site specific land use solutions. It’s challenging but exciting work. It requires administering a cocktail of flexibility and responsiveness. Nick Pickles understands all that. It’s part of the appeal to being manager of the Three Rivers Community Forest based in the Cariboo region. 

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North Cowichan mayor wants answers on timber harvesting

The Ladysmith Chemainus Chronicle
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

North Cowichan Mayor Rob Douglas has, again, sent a letter to Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar asking the province to help increase the amount of timber that the municipality’s saw and pulp mills have access to. Douglas said that three tree-farm licenses held by Western Forest Products supply much of the timber and fibre for local mills. He said that improving access to timber in these areas could help stabilize mill operations and reduce the impact of challenging market conditions and trade pressures. Douglas said Parmar’s mandate is to ensure a sustainable land base to enable the harvest of 45-million cubic metres of timber while the province is on track to harvest only 29-million cm this year. …The Domtar pulp mill in Crofton, along with Western Forest Products’ sawmills and remanufacturing plant in Chemainus and Cowichan Bay, collectively employ more than 670 workers and generate $7.7 million per year in property taxes for North Cowichan.

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BC Truck Loggers Association: Statement on the Provincial Forest Advisory Council’s Interim Status Report

BC Truck Loggers Association
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The TLA commends the Provincial Forest Advisory Council (PFAC) for its ongoing work to develop a long-term vision for BC’s forest sector, and release of its interim status report. …the TLA recognizes the significant effort that has gone into identifying the underlying issues, barriers, and key drivers influencing the …sector. …The … interim report acknowledges several critical issues that must be addressed if BC is to fully realize the potential of its forest sector, including: 

  • The lack of access to economic fibre is stifling investment, including the transition to value-added manufacturing. 
  • Current systems and structures are adding unnecessary costs and processes that are barriers to investment and innovation. 
  • The lack of cross-ministry coordination and fragmented mandates appear to be preventing action towards a coordinated set of goals.   
  • A rule-based, top-down-driven approach that can be costly, inefficient, and ineffective in achieving land management objectives. 
  • The need for better data and forest inventories. 

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Streamlined regulations help BC businesses grow, improve services

By Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth
Government of British Columbia
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Province is making 187 amendments to 38 regulations across 10 ministries to reduce red tape, improve permitting timelines and make government services more efficient and accessible. This work is part of Better Regulations for British Columbians (BR4BC) amendment package… This year’s focus is on expediting permitting and approval timelines for people and businesses in British Columbia. By streamlining approval processes, such as removing construction permit requirements for very small private water systems, simplifying the level of authority needed for special-use forestry permits, and eliminating outdated provisions related to soil relocation and open burning activities, the Province is making it easier to do business in B.C.

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Provincial Forest Advisory Council Releases Interim Status Report, Launches Phase 2 Engagement

Provincial Forest Advisory Council
October 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Shannon Janzen

Garry Merkel

The Provincial Forest Advisory Council is dedicated to developing independent recommendations for a new, stable forest system that supports resilient communities, economies, and ecosystems across British Columbia. The council has completed its interim report which analyzed core challenges, recurring barriers, and persistent structural issues within BC’s forest sector. The interim report was provided to the Cooperation and Responsible Government Accord 2025 (CARGA) sponsors: CARGA Sponsors – Honourable Ravi Parmar, Minister of Forests & MLA Rob Botterell, BC Green Caucus. It is clear to the Council that BC’s land management systems, processes, policy, and legislation were not built for our current reality and are not designed to achieve all three components of our objective in unison. Instead, we appear stuck in a forestry model that:  

  • Favours quota-based wood extraction ahead of land management,
  • Drives indecision, red tape and favours a drawn-out, and sometimes confusing, process versus definitive and reliable outcomes, and
  • Is unresponsive to changing circumstances, fostering conflict as opposed to collaboration and innovation. 

So, how do we get unstuck?  

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Canada backs Indigenous-led growth in Prairie forest sectors

By Natural Resources Canada
Government of Canada
October 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Backgrounder: On October 24, 2025, the Honourable Rebecca Chartrand, Minister of Northern and Arctic Affairs, on behalf of the Honourable Tim Hodgson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, announced a total investment of $5.44 million for 28 projects in the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta that will accelerate Indigenous participation and leadership in the sector, create good jobs and promote the use of Canadian wood in green construction. The Indigenous Forestry Initiative (IFI) program seeks to advance reconciliation in the forest sector by supporting Indigenous-identified priorities to accelerate Indigenous awareness, influence, inclusion and leadership. The IFI provides financial support to Indigenous-led activities in the forest sector, such as gathering, developing, using and protecting Indigenous knowledge, science and leadership in forest stewardship. It also funds projects focused on the identification, consideration and pursuit of economic development opportunities in the sector. The investment announced today includes $3.5 million in funding for 26 projects under the IFI.

Government Press Release: Canada backs Indigenous-led growth in Prairie forest sectors

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Bamfield Main Road reopens to traffic

By Ministry of Transportation and Transit
Government of British Columbia
October 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Bamfield Main Road has reopened to public travel following extensive safety and repair work by the Ministry of Transportation and Transit. However, additional daytime closures will be necessary in the coming weeks. Closure times will be publicized once confirmed. These daytime closures will allow crews to complete additional work between kilometres 8 and 9.5 of Bamfield Main Road, a 1.5-kilometre section managed by Mosaic Forest Management that had been fully closed due to the Mount Underwood wildfire. Crews have removed hazardous trees and repaired fire-damaged areas to ensure the road could reopen safely. The ministry is appreciative of the support of Mosaic, which collaborated with the Province to restore public access as quickly and safely as possible. 

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How this ‘exceptional’ drought is changing Northwest Territories forests and fires

By Claire McFarlane
Cabin Radio
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

For the Northwest Territories government’s 2024 Forest Health Report, published last month, researchers were only able to survey about one third of the area they would normally study. Smoke from nearby wildfires reduced visibility for crews on the ground and in the air, making it difficult for researchers to do their work. Even so, one of the report’s findings is the sheer impact of a drought that has covered much the NWT since June 2022 – and its effect on forests. Of about four million hectares of forest surveyed by researchers in 2024, more than 220,000 hectares showed stresses from either the ongoing drought or the high water of 2020 and 2021, the report asserted. Because the survey work was limited by factors like smoke, researchers think the real extent of the issue “is likely substantially larger.” …Drought can contribute to tree and plant mortality, which in turn creates fuel for wildfires. 

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Dan Macmaster is honoured with an alumni UBC Builder Award

Branchlines UBC Faculty of Forestry
October 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Dan Macmaster

An exceptional role model and volunteer with UBC Forestry, Dan Macmaster (MSFM’13, RPF) was selected as the recipient of a 2024-25 Alumni Builder Award in recognition of his extensive career accomplishments and mentorship of the next generation of foresters. Among his contributions, Dan has regularly volunteered with the Faculty’s Master of Sustainable Forest Management program, serving on the Advisory Committee, guest lecturing, presenting at field camps and organizing multi-day field activities for students. A Registered Professional Forester and the Forestry Manager with the Osoyoos Indian Band on their Nk’Mip First Nations Woodland licence, Dan plays an instrumental role in managing the Band’s six forestry licences, including log extraction, wildfire risk mitigation and habitat and biodiversity management. He is also closely involved in business partnership procurement for the Band with the forest sector, utilities and different levels of government, among others.

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NorthX strengthens Canada’s leadership in wildfire tech with 2025 Call for Innovation

By NorthX Climate Tech
Cision Newswire
October 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC – NorthX Climate Tech (NorthX), a BC-based innovation catalyst backing the builders of Canadian climate hard tech, today launched a funding opportunity for Canadian wildfire technologies. Through the 2025 Wildfire Tech Call for Innovation, NorthX will provide up to $3 million in non-dilutive investments to Canadian companies developing advanced technologies that prevent mega wildfires, enhance firefighting response, and support faster recovery. “With each passing year, wildfires are posing an ever-growing threat to communities across Canada,” said Sarah Goodman, President & CEO of NorthX. “In response, NorthX led the way with Canada’s first wildfire innovation call in 2024. This new round builds on that success, backing Canadian innovators developing the tools to fight fires, cut emissions, and protect lives.” …Founded in 2021 with an initial investment from the Government of Canada, the BC Government, and Shell Canada, NorthX Climate Tech (NorthX) is a catalyst for climate action…

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First Nation files lawsuit demanding Aboriginal title over lands in western Quebec

Canadian Press in CTV News Montreal
October 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

An Algonquin First Nation has filed a title claim in Quebec Superior Court over large swaths of territory across the west of the province in an effort to address what it described as historic injustices against its peoples. Jean-Guy Whiteduck, chief of the Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg First Nation, says his people need to have a say in the way water, wildlife and forestry are managed in their traditional territory. He said that meaningful reconciliation can’t exist until that happens. …Whiteduck says the lawsuit only covers areas that are owned or managed by governments… The Aboriginal title claim covers … just over 8,000 square kilometres of land. …Lawyer, Jullian Riddel, said the case has the potential to set a major precedent, making Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg the first Indigenous community in the province to see its title over its traditional territories recognized by the court. …He said so far only four First Nations, all in British Columbia, have reached that milestone.

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New Democrat Guy Bourgouin believes province needs long term northern forestry strategy

By Denis Puska
My Timmins Now
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Guy Bourgouin

The MPP for Mushkegowuk James Bay believes the province must be more proactive instead of reactive when it comes to the northern forestry industry. New Democrat Guy Bourgouin questions whether more mills like Kap Paper could face either closure or curtailment in operations before a long-term plan is developed. He adds one area he would like to see addressed is an extension of power and co-generation agreements beyond five years. …Bourgouin says the NDP continues to push for a forestry strategy that includes investments in modernization, better coordination across various ministries and work centered transition support and training programs. Bourgouin notes that there are numerous one-industry towns that rely on the forestry industry for survival.

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Addressing wildfire risk ‘top of mind’ for some Nova Scotia woodlots owners after devastating fires

By Josh Hoffman
CBC News
October 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Nova Scotia — Reducing the risk of wildfires is a growing concern for some woodlot owners in Nova Scotia after devastating blazes across the province in recent years, according to an organization that represents them. The Western Woodlot Services Cooperative organized a wildfire prevention conference in Bridgewater, N.S., on Saturday, where dozens of owners showed up to hear about what role they can play in decreasing the potential of wildfires spreading through their properties. “Figuring out ways of how we can be more fire smart or how we can mitigate fire risk within our woodlots is really top of mind for a lot of our private woodlot owner members,” said Patricia Amero, general manager of the co-operative. 

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A documentary highlighting the 2021 Fairy Creek standoff makes its Nova Scotia debut

By Emily Baron Cadloff
The Canadian Press
October 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

HALIFAX – A documentary on BC’s Fairy Creek blockade is making waves in Nova Scotia. “Fairy Creek” covers a period of eight months in 2021, when thousands of activists blockaded logging roads leading to old-growth forests on Vancouver Island. …Now, it’s getting a Nova Scotia debut with screenings in Halifax, Tatamagouche, Inverness, Annapolis Royal and Wolfville. …Neal Livingston, a Nova Scotia filmmaker, says… “We don’t have a history of that (in Nova Scotia).” Livingston says the film is especially timely for Nova Scotians, as activists in Cape Breton say they have been targeted by recent legislation. …The province introduced an omnibus bill that would make blocking forest access roads illegal and come with a fine of up to $50,000 and/or six months in jail. This fine is a steep increase from the current $2,000 penalty.

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Nova Scotia still failing to consult on law blocking protests on Crown land: Mi’kmaq leaders

By Lyndsay Armstrong
The Canadian Press in Global News
October 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Twila Gaudet

A Mi’kmaq leader in Nova Scotia says the provincial government continues to ignore First Nations’ concerns on a new law they say targets their community’s ability to protect its territory. The law was recently pushed through the legislature without advanced notice or consultation, said Twila Gaudet, the director of consultation for Kwilmu’kw Maw-klusuaqn, which works on behalf of the Assembly of Nova Scotia Mi’kmaw Chiefs. In a statement Tuesday, Gaudet said the law “appears to be targeting Mi’kmaw harvesters who are protesting the unsustainable forest management practices in the Cape Breton Highlands.” Among other things, the law makes it illegal for protesters to block forest access roads on Crown land, and offenders could be fined up to $50,000 and imprisoned for up to six months. It also allows government to “demolish or otherwise dispose of” structures on Crown land if they pose a threat to the province’s economic interests.

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Ecological stoichiometry of mountain pine beetle, its mutualist fungi, and the disease white pine blister rust in whitebark pine

By Diana Six, Hannah Alverson and Lorinda Bullington
Research Gate
October 22, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Ecological stoichiometry can help clarify how symbionts and other co-occurring organisms mediate nutrient deficiencies for hosts. We used ecological stoichiometry (comparisons of elemental compositions in food vs consumer) to investigate whether obligate mutualist fungi (Grosmannia clavigera, Ophiostoma montium) of the tree-killing bark beetle Dendroctonus ponderosae (mountain pine beetle) and the invasive tree pathogenic fungus, Cronartium ribicola (causal agent of the disease white pine blister rust) influenced availability of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus to the beetle in Pinus albicaulis (whitebark pine), as well as how these elements varied among three populations of the tree. 

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The only constant is change, but new forestry rule ignores that

By Elaine Oneil, Washington Farm Forestry Association
The Chronicle
October 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Elaine Oneil

It makes no sense that Washington’s Department of Ecology has decided there can be no measurable temperature change at no time in no place on our forested headwater streams after timber harvest. They are willing to force a vote on a new rule at the Forest Practices Board. …Small forest landowners have been arguing against this proposed taking of private assets for nearly a decade. The Department of Ecology says it’s just enforcing the Clean Water Act, but the Clean Water Act doesn’t say that there can be no change at no time in no place — that is an interpretation by the Department of Ecology, and not a reasonable one. They also say it’s to protect the fish; there are no fish in these headwater streams. …Please join me as the Forest Practices Board takes their final vote on this matter on Nov. 12.

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Tribal Leaders Applaud Senate Rejection of Barred Owl Resolution Threatening Forest and Wildlife Health

Intertribal Timber Council
PR Newswire
October 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

PORTLAND, Ore — The Intertribal Timber Council (ITC) is a nonprofit nation-wide consortium …dedicated to improving the management of natural resources of importance to Native American communities. ITC strongly opposes S.J.Res.69, a measure that would involve the Congressional Review Act to invalidate a federal wildlife management plan intended to prevent the extinction of the Northern Spotted Owl (NSO) in the Pacific Northwest. The ITC is grateful to Senators who helped vote to defeat a bill that would have severely impacted federal forest management in the Pacific Northwest. The invasive barred owl poses a direct threat to the ecological integrity of tribal, federal, and private forestlands. The federal barred owl management strategy is a critical tool to protect the NSO, which is listed as “threatened” under the Endangered Species Act. …ITC and many of its member tribes support barred owl removal as a humane and effective measure to recover the NSO and restore ecosystem integrity.

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Montana logging project hits dead end over illegal road use in grizzly habitat

By Monique Merrill
Courthouse News Service
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A Montana logging project in grizzly habitat in the Kootenai National Forest will remain on hold until federal officials reassess how road use — particularly illegal road use — impacts the bears, a federal judge ruled on Monday. “This court has repeatedly held that it is arbitrary and capricious to not include illegal motorized use that it knows to occur into calculations, regardless of whether the use is chronic and site specific,” U.S. District Judge Dana Christensen wrote in the 40-page opinion. The Center for Biological Diversity led environmental groups in suing the U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2022, seeking to block the Knotty Pine Project, and Christensen granted the environmentalists’ motion for a preliminary injunction the following year. …Christensen found the Forest Service violated the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to take a hard look at the impact of unauthorized road use on grizzly bears.

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Forest rule change threatens steep tax losses

By Jeff Clemens
The Chinook Observer
October 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SOUTH BEND, Washington — Pacific County Commissioners Jerry Doyle, Lisa Olsen and David Tobin sent a scathing letter on Oct. 20 to the Washington Forest Practices Board (FPB) regarding a proposed increase in timber-harvest buffer zones along streams. Rural counties and forestry groups are mounting a vigorous push against bigger setbacks away from small non-salmon-bearing streams, arguing that over the course of time the loss of timber acreage will add up to billions in lost local economic activity and millions less taxes that currently support government services. Washington state established the Forest Practices Act and the FPB in 1974. It is tasked with establishing laws to “protect salmon, clean water, and the working forest economy.”

Related coverage in the Chinook Observer, by Elaine O’neil is executive director of the Washington Farm Forest Association: Stream setback plan violates ‘the Washington Way’

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Climate dollars eyed to backfill Washington wildfire funding

By Bill Lucia
The Washington State Standard
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Washington’s lands commissioner, Dave Upthegrove, is on a mission to secure $60 million of additional wildfire funding in next year’s legislative session, despite a tightening budget outlook. On Monday, he and a leading Democratic House lawmaker indicated that they want to tap revenue from the state’s cap-and-trade program for at least some of that money. The maneuver would mean turning to a steady-flowing stream of cash at a time when the state’s operating budget is squeezed. “Climate Commitment Act dollars are going to be on the table,” said state Rep. Larry Springer, D-Kirkland, who is deputy House majority leader. Lawmakers this year already started dedicating some of the climate dollars to the wildfire programs in question. At issue is funding provided under a 2021 law known as House Bill 1168, which passed with broad bipartisan support. With that legislation, lawmakers committed to direct $500 million over eight years to wildfire programs.

Related coverage, in KOMO News by Stella Sun: Washington wildfires burn 250K+ acres, budget cuts may affect fire prevention efforts

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Some Oregon wildfire mitigation projects stalled by government shutdown

By Justin Higginbottom
Oregon Public Broadcasting
October 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Fall is the busy season for forestry work, like fuels reduction. Summer fire restrictions have ended, and winter snow has not yet arrived. But Armando Lopez, owner of DL Reforestation in Jackson County, said the federal government shutdown has put his work on hold. Inspectors can’t visit project areas, and he’s waiting on hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments. Every day, he eagerly checks whether the government has reopened. …Lopez employs around 40 workers, most of them on temporary H-2B visas. If the shutdown doesn’t end next week, Lopez said, he won’t be able to pay them. …The Oregon Department of Forestry said in a statement that payment delays for contractors like Lopez are varied, depending on the federal agency and funding source. …But U.S. Forest Service, state, private and tribal forestry awards are continuing.

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Bureau of Land Management Seeks Public Input on Proposal to Rescind Public Lands Rule Affecting Western Oregon Forests

By John Oliver
Grants Pass Tribune
October 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — The Bureau of Land Management is seeking public comments on its proposal to rescind the Conservation and Landscape Health Rule, adopted in 2024. The rule was designed to elevate conservation as a recognized use of federal lands, placing it on equal footing with traditional uses such as grazing, recreation, and timber harvesting. …The Rule aimed to modernize how the BLM manages its 245 million acres nationwide, emphasizing ecological health, habitat restoration, and the use of science and Indigenous knowledge in planning decisions. Supporters of the rule have described it as an effort to ensure the long-term sustainability of public lands amid growing challenges such as wildfire risks. However, its implementation drew opposition from some state and local officials in the West, including timber industry representatives and rural county leaders, who warned that the new policy could restrict economic activities on public lands and diminish local control over forest management.

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Gov. Kotek issues executive order placing climate lens on farms, forests, waterways

By Gosia Wozniacka
The Oregonian
October 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Tina Kotek

Gov. Tina Kotek wants Oregon to go full force on harnessing the potential of forests, farms, wetlands and waterways to reduce emissions, preserve wildlife habitat and help communities withstand the threat of climate change. That’s the focus of a sweeping executive order Kotek issued on Thursday to prioritize conservation on both natural landscapes such as forests or wetlands as well as on so-called working lands – farms, ranches and commercial timberlands. It also includes waterways and state-managed ocean waters. Kotek’s order calls on state agencies to collectively protect or restore 10% more land and waterways over the next decade, based on current baseline conditions, with a focus on safeguarding the most climate-resilient landscapes. …Kotek said the order is one of a series of actions she’s taking to push the ball forward on preventing and responding to global warming. 

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Land managers use fire to help maintain forest health but some environmentalists are wary

By Sophie Hartley
Indianapolis Star
October 29, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

The question of how to manage Indiana’s forests sparks some of the livelier and more contentious debates among local environmentalists. Many Midwestern forest managers want to utilize prescribed burning to root out invasive species, prevent wildfires and move forests toward what they see as ideal conditions. …Already the United States Forest Service and The Nature Conservancy use pre-planned, controlled burns set by professionals to alter the array of plants in Indiana ecosystems. …Yet, some environmentalists, who believe that forests should be left to their own devices, have in recent years mounted a protest against intensive forest management techniques like prescribed burning. …The practice of prescribed burning is far from new. …Many eastern hardwood forests were razed for agriculture, and Indiana forests have seen little fire over the past 100 or so years.

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Grant program funds Indigenous forest research in the Northeast

By Adiah Gholston
New England Public Media
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

Ash trees are an important part of the basket weaving tradition, which has long played a significant cultural, spiritual and practical role in the lives of tribal citizens across the country, including John Daigle, a citizen member of the Penobscot Nation in Maine. But the emergence of the emerald ash borer beetle …has posed challenges for Indigenous basket makers. A grant awarded to Daigle, a professor of forest recreation management at the University of Maine, could help preserve and advance the craft. It’s part of the Indigenous Forest Knowledge Fund, a program run by the Northeastern States Research Cooperative to support projects related to tribal homelands or ancestral territories of the Northern Forest region… Daigle’s project was one of three winners this year. His team will also develop technologies to support the processing and storage of ash splints before widespread ash mortality, which could help sustain basket-making supplies.

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Ice storm decimated Michigan’s ‘wood basket,’ meaning tough years ahead

By Ellie Katz
Bridge Michigan
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

…An ice storm impacted about 3 million acres of forest in 30 counties in northern Michigan early this spring. Hardwoods like maple and oak were shredded while softwoods like pine snapped in half. Foresters, loggers and sawmills in the region worked around the clock to salvage as much of that downed timber as possible. Now there’s a new concern: Much of northern Michigan’s “wood basket” — worth about $2.2 billion — has been emptied. The glut of timber after the storm had to be harvested quickly, flooding the market and leading to a good year for Up North foresters. But now there’s little left to harvest that the storm didn’t destroy, and foresters worry what the next several years will look like until newly planted trees can replace what the storm took away. The sudden shortage could ripple throughout the supply chain, crippling an important sector of northern Michigan’s economy, foresters say.

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Plantation forests are key for koalas’ survival: Researchers say urgent rethink on logging is needed

By Griffith University
Phys.Org
October 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

A new study has shown areas of state forest in Northern New South Wales, currently zoned as hardwood eucalypt plantation and slated for logging in 2025–2026, are in fact vital koala habitat. Tuckers Nob State Forest, southwest of Coffs Harbor, was analyzed in the collaborative research project between Griffith University, CQUniversity, conservation organizations and citizen scientists. Published in the journal Wild, the study combined drone technology, historical mapping, and ground surveys to track koala populations in the forest. The team’s findings challenged current assumptions that timber plantations lacked conservation value. “Instead, we’ve shown many plantation areas still contained original, high-quality eucalypt forest that supported our endangered koala populations,” said co-author Dr. Timothy Cadman, from Griffith University. …These findings suggested excluding areas such as the Tuckers Nob study site from the proposed Great Koala National Park footprint for the sake of logging was both “short-sighted and inconsistent with current conservation strategies.”

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To save the world’s tropical forests, learn from Brazil

The Economist
October 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Chopping down rainforests is daft. The social costs of clearing a typical patch of Brazilian Amazon are perhaps 30 times the benefits of rearing cows on it, by one estimate from 2023. The problem is, those costs, which include aggravating climate change, are spread across the entire world’s population, whereas the profits from cutting down the trees go to the men commanding the chainsaws. Somehow, the world has to find a way to make conservation pay. …Yet there is hope. Though Brazil lost more rainforest than any other country last year, due to to wildfires, it also shows how better policy can make a difference. …The pace of deforestation fell by 80% during Lula’s first terms (2003-11), and fell again when he returned in 2023, before the wildfires set things back. …Since preserving rainforests is a global public good, the world should help pay for it. [to access the full story an Economist subscription is required]

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‘Stronger Leadership’ Needed for Future of Forestry

By Charlie King
Sustainability Magazine
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Mikhail Tarasov

Mikhail Tarasov, IKEA Head of Forestry, on why unity, transparency & stronger FSC leadership is needed. …Responsible forest management lies at the heart of the fight against climate change and biodiversity loss. …To safeguard this capacity, responsible governance, transparent certification and collaboration across industries are more critical than ever. From from 26 to 31 October, FSC comes together for its General Assembly “to discuss a responsible future for the world’s forests and the people and animals who inhabit them”. …The system faces criticism from both ends of the spectrum. Some industry voices regard FSC’s standards as overly demanding; others argue they could be stricter. …“We see this tension as a sign of FSC’s strength — proof that it continues to navigate the complex realities of responsible forest management. “By engaging in tough conversations and seeking common ground, FSC is forging a path few others dare to take.”

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European wood, pulp and energy sectors urge delay to EU deforestation law

The European Organization of the Sawmill Industry
October 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

A coalition of 19 European associations say the recent amendments proposed by the European Commission to the EU Deforestation Regulation prolong a situation of costly uncertainty and unrealistic implementation timelines. The new proposal, and the very challenging timeline to have it approved, risks undermining both the credibility and the practical enforcement of the Regulation, while placing European operators in an untenable position of legal and operational uncertainty. …The signatories state that the newly revised regulation, still pending final approval, leaves little time for companies to adapt. …The group highlights that different enforcement dates across company sizes are unfeasible, since small firms must align immediately to avoid disrupting business relations. The statement urges the Commission to implement a “stop-the-clock” mechanism to allow more time for assessing the regulation’s practical impact and simplifying its obligations, while reaffirming support for the EUDR’s environmental objective of halting deforestation.

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Massive wildfires are forcing governments worldwide to budget more for disaster

By Mark Mann
Corporate Knights
October 24, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

…The World Resources Institute calculates that forests are burning at twice the rate they were two decades ago. In Canada … the frequency and severity of forest fires have quadrupled over the last half century. …the global wildfire defence market is projecting annual growth rates that range from 8.4% to 12.6%, much of it driven by public funding. For example, the United States’ budget for wildland fire management was $1.9 billion in 2025, a 10% increase from the previous year. …On October 22, a consortium of national organizations in Canada published an open letter to the federal government asking for a five-year investment of $4.1 billion in wildfire defence. …Coupled with U.S. auto tariffs, the wildfires prompted South Korea’s government to quickly assemble a US$8.6-billion supplementary budget, of which nearly a billion was earmarked for wildfire recovery. …The bushfire crisis of 2019/2020 in Australia caused AUD$2.4 billion of insured loss. …in 2025, Brazil allocated the equivalent of USD$95 million for firefighting efforts.

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From Forest to Fashion: Textile Exchange Conference delegates explore sustainable forestry in Portugal

The Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC)
October 23, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

As part of the official Textile Exchange Conference 2025 programme in Lisbon, over 20 sustainability professionals from leading global fashion brands stepped out of the city and into the forests of Talhadas, in Sever do Vouga, to experience first-hand how sustainably managed forests support responsible sourcing for the fashion and textile sectors. …The field visit also highlighted how collaboration between the forestry and fashion sectors can drive meaningful change. The project in Talhadas was made possible through industry support from the Inditex Group, whose investment is contributing to reforestation and biodiversity restoration in the region. This partnership demonstrates how brand commitments to sustainability and ESG goals can translate into real, on-the-ground impact. …For many attendees, the visit underscored a vital message: that sustainability in fashion begins with the forest. 

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