Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Sustainable Forestry Initiative Announces Second Round of Funded Support for Indigenous-Led Climate Smart Forestry in Canada

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Ottawa, ON—The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) is proud to announce funding awards to eight projects to Indigenous partners advancing Indigenous-led Climate Smart Forestry (CSF) in Canada. Building on the momentum of the first round of funding, SFI has committed 2 million in funding to support Indigenous-led CSF projects as they implement innovative strategies that strengthen forest resilience, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and uphold Indigenous values in forest stewardship. The projects are part of the SFI Climate Smart Forestry Initiative – an effort to advance the interpretation and implementation of CSF practices across the SFI Canadian and U.S. footprint of more than 145 million certified hectares. “With this second round of funding, we are broadening the impact of Indigenous-led solutions that will help sustain forest health and advance climate action at a landscape scale.” said Lauren T. Cooper, Chief Conservation Officer of SFI. 

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Canada’s biggest sustainable forest label has a clear-cutting problem

By Leah Borts-Kuperman
Corporate Knights
April 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

For Torrance Coste, the associate director of the Wilderness Committee British Columbia. … has seen the scars of clear-cutting firsthand, in a territory that carries the stamp of approval of Sustainable Forestry Initiative, or SFI, a widely used forestry certification. Coste’s organization forms part of a complaint filed before the Competition Bureau of Canada challenging the integrity of SFI, a system created by the pulp and paper industry in 1994… …The complaint, led by Ecojustice on behalf of the Wilderness Committee, Greenpeace Canada and [others] wants SFI to stop calling their certification “sustainable,” to issue public correction of their claims and to pay a $10-million fine. …Another signatory to the complaint, Peter Wood, is a professor in the Department of Forest Resources Management at the University of British Columbia. …SFI responded, arguing that the organization is governed by an 18-member board divided equally among industry, conservation, and Indigenous and social sectors.

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BC Forests Minister says BC Wildfire Service on the verge of being fully staffed for fire summer

By Michael Potestio
Castanet
May 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The Minister of Forests says the BC Wildfire Service is expected to be fully staffed for the season by Friday. Ravi Parmar visited Kamloops Friday, making a stop in at the provincial wildfire co-ordination centre for a visit. “By this time next week, we will be fully staffed, fully resourced as an agency, but as you’re seeing with fires popping up, our initial attack is responding quickly,” Parmar told reporters. Parmar said the BCWS has up to 700 year-round wildland firefighters. Following recently completed training camps, he said the province will be hiring an additional 250 firefighters for the 2026 season, which, when combined with all the contractors will have more than 2,000 personnel for fore season once again. As for where most firefighters will be stationed this summer, Parmar said they are deployed to areas the BCWS believe they will be busy, noting resources in the northeast have been repositioned due to recent rain.

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Digital Tools Supporting BC’s Community Forests

By Jaya Freeman, Business Development Lead
Phoenix Connect in the BC Community Forests News
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Community Forests across British Columbia play a unique and vital role in forest stewardship. They balance ecological values, wildfire resilience, and local economic development-often with small teams and limited administrative capacity. At the same time, expectations around reporting, documentation, and data management continue to grow. Requirements tied to Electronic Submission Framework (ESF) submissions (RESULTS, FTA, FOM, RRS), spatial data, and operational tracking are becoming more detailed, while boards and communities expect clearer communication and transparency. For many community forests, the challenge isn’t just doing the work-it’s keeping information organized, accessible, and usable across teams. …Platforms like Phoenix Connect are used by many forestry organizations to manage operational data, mapping, and reporting workflows. …As reporting expectations and operational complexity continue to evolve, having reliable, accessible data will become increasingly important, not just for compliance, but for decision-making and communication.

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BC Community Forest Association Conference and Field Tour

The BC Community Forest Association
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Silvopasture in Action: Collaboration, Innovation, and Climate Adaptation: This is more than a tour. It’s a chance to see innovation on the ground. In partnership with Coldstream Ranch, the Monashee Community Forest is demonstrating how forestry and ranching can work together to manage multiple values on the same landscape. Experience firsthand how silvopasture, integrating trees, forage, and livestock, is being used to support water protection, soil health, biodiversity, wildfire risk reduction, and economic resilience. From silviculture approaches to grazing design, this tour brings practical, real-world learning to life. …This project is rooted in strong relationships and shared goals, offering valuable insights into how collaboration across sectors can build trust, share risk, and support better decision-making. Whether you’re looking for new ideas, practical tools, or inspiration, this tour delivers. It’s a powerful example of how community forests are adapting to changing conditions while delivering meaningful benefits to their communities.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Marking its 10th anniversary, the Forest Enhancement Society of BC is highlighting a decade of work advancing forest resilience, fibre utilization, and climate action across the province. Framed by Earth Day reflections, the latest update underscores how thoughtful forest management—from wildfire risk reduction to rehabilitation and better use of low-value fibre—can play a meaningful role in addressing climate change. FESBC continues to support projects that reduce slash burning by turning residual fibre into bioenergy, cutting greenhouse gas emissions while creating economic opportunities for communities. The newsletter also points to the importance of collaboration, including Indigenous leadership, in delivering lasting forest stewardship outcomes. Featured stories include a fuel management project with Kenpesq’t Forestry, reflections from former forests minister Doug Donaldson, and recognition of FESBC’s impact at the BC Legislature. A safety tip from the BC Forest Safety Council rounds out the update, reinforcing the sector’s ongoing focus on worker safety.

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Skies are buzzing in west-central Alberta as prep for wildfire season gets underway

By Maggie Kirk
CBC News
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Air traffic in parts of west-central Alberta has been busier than normal over the last few days as the province prepares for another wildfire season. Newly recruited wildland firefighters are participating in training sessions in Hinton, Alta., about 270 kilometres west of Edmonton. The rookies will learn how to initially attack a fire, a process that includes a helicopter ride. Meanwhile in nearby Edson, Alta., about 90 kilometres to the east, seven planes have been stationed at the Edson Air Tanker Base. The planes, which arrived on Monday, are ready to be deployed in the event a wildfire breaks out in the region, said Derrick Forsythe, an information officer with Alberta Wildfire. The area has seen less snow than other parts of the province.

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Plantation gone wild: human hands help nature restore a forest in Comox Valley

By Lisa Hamilton
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
April 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mother Nature is the expert on growing forests, but sometimes she needs a helping hand. This hand is especially helpful when something disrupts her well-honed process in the first place. Such is the case with the forestry plantations in qax mot and the effort to restore these areas by the Comox Valley Land Trust (CVLT). Located at the Morrison Creek headwaters up Lake Trail Rd., the qax mot Conservation Area consists of 22 hectares of riparian forests and forestry plantations. …About 9 per cent of qax mot consists of forestry plantations. While it might seem like planting trees is always a good idea, the way the Douglas fir plantations were installed prohibit the natural regenerative cycle essential to a healthy forest. The trees were planted too closely, making it nearly impossible for light to break through the canopy, leaving the forest floor virtually barren of the undergrowth species we associate with a thriving West Coast forest.

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BC Quietly Cuts Penalty for Exporting Unprocessed Logs

By Ben Parfitt
The Tyee
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Ben Parfitt

As pulp mill and sawmill jobs plummet in number, British Columbia’s Forests Ministry is opening the door to more exports of unprocessed logs, including those produced from trees cut down in old-growth forests. Under current rules, companies … pay a “fee in lieu of manufacturing”… But in February, the provincial government quietly lowered those fees. The reduced fees will make it more profitable to ship logs away, and although the government says it will incentivize more logging, others warn that the change risks undermining  jobs in the province’s struggling forest industry. …Arnold Bercov, a former worker at the Harmac pulp mill and former president of the Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of Canada, warns that the move will hurt B.C.’s forestry sector. …[Saying] the government’s surplus test is “a trap.” “The more logs you export, the more mills that shut down,” he said. “And the more mills that shut down, the more exports you have.”

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Lack of weather radar affects work of firefighters in northern Manitoba, emergency co-ordinator says

By Mike Arsenault
CBC News
April 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Extreme weather events in northern Manitoba are challenging to navigate, and the lack of weather radar sites in the northern part of the province only adds to that challenge, experts say. “We experienced that a lot last summer during our forest fire,” said Mike Funk, the emergency co-ordinator for the City of Flin Flon. “We would get reports from Environment Canada, [saying] ‘We’re expecting rainfall,’ and they were great at predicting the time that it would hit [elsewhere]. But by the time it got close to your area, nothing happened.” Last spring, Flin Flon, more than 600 kilometers northwest of Winnipeg, was nearly encircled by wildfires. The city of roughly 5,000 was evacuated for weeks. Funk said a weather radar station in the north would give his community a clearer picture of what type of weather they could expect.

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Mosaic launches crowdsourced reporting pilot as Ladysmith preps for major forest cleanup

The Lake Cowichan Gazette
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

On May 2 volunteers will converge on the Bush Creek hatchery in Ladysmith to haul illegally dumped waste out of the surrounding forest and watershed. Over the past three years, the community cleanup, run by the Ladysmith Sportsmen’s Club, has removed nearly 160 tonnes of garbage. “Illegal dumping is a serious offence, one that harms our forests and puts communities at risk,” said Ravi Parmar, minister of Forests. “But because of this initiative, we’re reducing the risks and protecting our environment. We’re adding to the 160 tonnes already removed, through on-the-ground, people-led land restoration.” Mosaic Forest Management, which manages approximately 585,000 hectares of private forest land across Vancouver Island and the Sunshine Coast, will once again supply staff volunteers, donated materials and disposal support for the effort. Volunteers can email judsonboys@shaw.ca to get involoved. More information on Mosaic’s reporting pilot will be available at MosaicForests.com this summer.

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Thousands apply to become B.C. wildfire fighters — but only a few will make the cut

By Akshay Kulkarni
CBC News
April 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Thousands of people from across the province applied to become wildfire fighters this season — but the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS) says only about 200 made the cut for boot camp last week and even fewer will ultimately land a position. A BCWS official says in his 20-year-long career, this year features the largest-ever group of people applying to be a wildfire fighter. …Chandler Bachtold, an instructor at the boot camp with five years of experience, said that teamwork was a critical aspect of the job — as firefighters build fire lines with tools, lay hose along the forest floor and extinguish hotspots. …BCWS firefighters can spend 14 days out in the field before they get a break, so Bachtold says good physical and mental health is critical — along with the ability to be a team player.

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Industry partners boost University of Alberta forestry programs through new $6.5M research chair

By Bev Betkowski
University of Alberta News
April 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Forestry programs at the University of Alberta will be strengthened through the integration of Indigenous perspectives with the establishment of a new $6.5-million research chair. The Endowed Chair in Indigenous Forestry in the Faculty of Agricultural, Life & Environmental Sciences will support experiential learning, Indigenous-led courses and collaborations with communities, academics and industry. $526,065 will be used to establish an accelerator fund through which a community engagement and research co-ordinator will be hired to support the chair’s community and student engagement activities. The endowment supporting the chair is funded through the Forest Resource Improvement Program with sponsorship from Canfor, West Fraser and Weyerhaeuser. …The chair will lead a research program exploring relationships between Indigenous knowledge systems and western forestry practices, and will serve as a mentor to the next generation of Indigenous and non-Indigenous foresters.

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The importance of tree planting as wildfire seasons increase in severity

By Eddie Huband
City News Everywhere Winnipeg
April 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Randall Van Wagner

Wildfire season is upon us, and Manitobans are hoping for a reprieve from 2025, which was deemed the one most devastating in the province’s history. As the severity of wildfires increases, so too does the importance of reforestation and tree planting. “Wildfires are more prevalent, and they’re more powerful, and part of the reason is the buildup of fuel. Diseases, shorter and milder winters, less snowpack and less moisture in the spring, are contributing factors making for a difficult situation,” said Randall Van Wagner, the head of national greening program, Tree Canada. Van Wagner says while many areas regenerate on their own, more intense fires like what we saw last year cause more depth of burn in the soil, making it difficult for trees to regenerate. The organization estimates they’ve planted between 500,000 and one million trees in the past five years in Manitoba.

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Alberni Valley students, Scouts help replant Mount Underwood forest burned in 2025 wildfire

The Alberni Valley News
April 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

On a flat stretch of burned ground southwest of Port Alberni … close to 100 volunteers help to re-establish a thriving forest. Nearly 3,600 hectares burned during an aggressive wildfire that started on Aug. 11, 2025 and reached within nine kilometres of city limits. A community planting event held on April 16 brought together Mosaic Forest Management staff volunteers, students from the Alberni Valley Land Based Learning class, members of the Port Alberni Scouts, and their teachers, leaders and caregivers to plant seedlings in the footprint of the 2025 Mount Underwood wildfire — a human-caused fire that burned second growth and old growth forests within an area nearly nine times the size of Stanley Park. The seeds for the seedlings were sourced from Mosaic’s Mount Newton seed orchard in Saanich, a Mosaic spokesperson said, and selected for their climate resilience and ability to thrive in the sun-exposed conditions left behind by the fire.

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North Cowichan Council votes against motion urging province to strengthen forest policies

By Robert Barron
The Ladysmith – Chemainus Chronicle
April 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

A motion to contact the province and urge it to review and strengthen its forestry policies, including those governing raw-log exports, failed in a 4-3 vote at North Cowichan’s council meeting on April 15. The motion by Coun. Christopher Justice, if it passed, was intended to help improve fibre availability for domestic processing, support value-added wood manufacturing, and sustain forestry employment on Vancouver Island. A number of delegations spoke to council on the issue at the meeting. Arnold Bercov, a former president of the Public and Private Workers of Canada, spoke in favour of council supporting Justice’s motion. …Brian Bull, a long-time worker at the WFP’s curtailed Chemainus sawmill, said if the motion passes, it would create a conversation about the issue at a time when many forest companies and the province don’t want to have that conversation. …Mosaic Forest Management’s Karen Brandt and Nick Broekhuizen also spoke on the issue.

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The B.C. Forest Industry Looks to Speak With a United Voice

By Jim Stirling
Forestnet
April 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

In this second in a series of stories, Jim Stirling looks at the issues that have brought the B.C. forest industry to a crisis point, where many community-supporting sawmills have been forced to shut down, and thousands of well-paying jobs in towns and cities across B.C. have vanished. Jim looks at how the province’s associations have recently banded together, to better communicate with a seemingly deaf-to-the-forest industry NDP government. …Today, forestry associations [are] speaking out as one. And when that happens, it sounds a different set of political alarm bells for elected representatives. They start paying attention. … The timing is right for the launch of “Forestry is a Solution”. …The initiative provides an opportunity for members of the public to voice their opinion on the forest industry’s contributions to B.C. and the economy. …The campaign encourages the public to show their support for the forest sector by signing a petition to be forwarded to provincial decision makers.

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First Nation sues B.C for approving logging on land slated for conservation

By Stefan Labbé
Business in Vancouver
April 27, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A BC First Nation has mounted a legal challenge against the Ministry of Forests after one of its officials approved a timber-cutting permit in forests that overlap with a proposed Indigenous conservation area. In an April 21 application, the Kanaka Bar Indian Band claims a district manager approved cutting permits for Interwest Timber to harvest roughly 35 hectares across four cut blocks. …One of 15 communities of the Nlaka’pamux Nation, most of the Kanaka Bar people live in several reserves south of Lytton, BC. Their traditional territory spans 32,000 hectares of rugged terrain in the Fraser River Canyon. While Interwest has held a forest licence in the area since 1998, the band has intentionally limited industrial activity. In 2021, leadership declined a logging company’s request for access, choosing instead to pursue an Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area… with the goal of turning the entire forested area into a conservation area similar to the neighbouring Stein Valley.

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Forest Fire Season Now in Effect on Island of Newfoundland

By Forestry, Agriculture and Lands
Government of Newfoundland and Labrador
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Forest fire season is in effect on the Island of Newfoundland beginning today, May 1, until September 30. Forest fire season will be in effect in Labrador from May 15 to September 30. During forest fire season, a permit is required to burn vegetation, wood or paper. Permits are available from provincial Forest Management District Offices. Permits are not required for campfires; however, when planning an outdoor fire, it is important to check the daily Forest Fire Hazard Map to determine the level of forest fire risk in your area. Following the unprecedented 2025 wildfire season, it is essential to remain vigilant and prepared for any challenges the 2026 forest fire season may bring. Homeowners play a big role in protecting their homes, neighbourhoods and communities from the threat of wildland fire. 

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Invasive spotted lanternfly found in Ontario. U.S. officials say stomp it

By Bridget Stringer-Holden
CBC News
May 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

A recent spotted lanternfly discovery in St. Catharines, Ont., is renewing concern about the destructive insect reaching Canada from the United States. There are no established populations of spotted lanternfly in Canada — meaning no confirmed reproducing populations in the wild — but experts say the invasive insect still poses a serious threat to vineyards, fruit trees and hardwoods because it feeds on plant sap and can kill grapevines. Last month, Ontario resident Aidan Dagg found a dead spotted lanternfly and uploaded it to iNaturalist, a social network and mobile app where people post and identify plants and animals. Dagg, who works as an inspector at a nursery in St. Catharines, had been on the lookout for the insect for the past few years. This was the first time he had found one.

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Expansion of the emerald ash borer regulated area in Quebec and Nova Scotia

By The Canadian Food Inspection Agency
PR Newswire
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

OTTAWA, ON – The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA)… has put in place measures intended to protect Canada’s economy by slowing the spread of emerald ash borer (EAB) to non-infested areas of Canada. Following detections outside of regulated areas, the CFIA has updated its regulated areas for EAB to include three areas in Quebec (one municipal territory and two Regional County Municipalities) and part of one county in Nova Scotia. Preventing and slowing the spread of invasive species, such as EAB, is critical to safeguarding forests, native plants and forestry-related industries. The regulated area now includes the Regional County Municipalities of Bonaventure, Charlevoix-Est and the City of La Tuque, in Quebec, and part of Hants County, Nova Scotia. As a result, ash material (such as logs, branches and woodchips) and all species of firewood cannot be moved outside the regulated area without permission from the CFIA. 

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Saint John takes steps to protect itself better against wildfires

By Nipun Tiwari
CBC News
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Saint John’s fire department wants the city to adopt a long-term plan to reduce the risk of wildfires and strengthen the ability to fight them. A proposed plan, which includes raising public awareness and improving wildfire training for firefighters, earned the support of the city’s public safety committee at a meeting Wednesday. Recommendations came after a detailed evaluation of wildfire risks based on terrain, weather and climate influences, locations of homes and other factors. Saint John has not experienced large-scale wildfires in recent history, as other areas of New Brunswick have, but the evaluation identified a moderate overall wildfire risk in some areas of the city. Steep hillsides, and extensive forestry, park space and other green areas — particularly near dense neighbourhoods — create risky conditions for the city uncommon in other parts of the province, Deputy Chief Ed Moyer of the Saint John Fire Department told the committee.

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McMaster expands Forest Nature Preserve and launches first-of-its-kind climate research station

By Peter Rukavina
McMaster University
April 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

McMaster University is expanding the McMaster Forest Nature Preserve with the addition of more than 14 acres of ecologically significant, biodiverse land in West Hamilton, strengthening opportunities for research, learning and long-term environmental stewardship. The expansion was made possible through a philanthropic gift from the Patrick J. McNally Charitable Foundation, along with land donations from local landowners Mark Tamminga, Joany Verschuuren, Bill Walker, Heather Hill and Ken Vanderlaan. Together, these contributions ensure the land will be protected in perpetuity. The announcement coincided with Earth Week at the McMaster Carbon Sink Forest, where more than 100 students, faculty, staff and community members gathered for the forest’s annual tree planting. “What makes today meaningful is not only what has been protected, but what has been made possible,” said McMaster President and Vice-Chancellor Susan Tighe.

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Trump Conditions on DEI, Immigration Threaten State Wildfire Funding

By Alex Brown
The Missoula Current
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

A new effort to force states to affirm the Trump administration’s views on DEI, transgender athletes and immigration when signing contracts with the U.S. Forest Service is threatening millions of dollars in wildfire grant funding and fire reduction projects on federal lands. Some liberal states can’t sign the documents because the policies clash with state law, forestry experts say. Already, at least one state is reporting that the new rules have stalled work to reduce wildfire risk and assist with projects on national forest lands. Other states say the requirements are so vague that they don’t know how to follow them. And some timber industry leaders believe the standoff could cut into their revenues. …The update to the requirements governing federal partnerships comes even as many Western states brace for a brutal wildfire season, following a winter that brought record high temperatures and a paltry snowpack.

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Lumber Shorts | April 2026: Spring Readiness & Global Outlook

The Southern Forest Products Association
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The Southern Forest Products Association’s April update strikes a tone of resilience and forward momentum, emphasizing the industry’s commitment to “pressing on” despite ongoing market shifts, regulatory pressures, and global uncertainty. Preparations are already underway for Forest Products EXPO 2027, highlighting a more connected and automated future for sawmilling. Internationally, uncertainty around participation in the Dubai Wood Show reflects broader geopolitical challenges, while strategic planning continues through the development of the 2027 Unified Export Strategy, with a focus on both emerging and core markets. Exports remain a bright spot, with a record 22.7 billion board feet shipped globally in 2026, underscoring strong demand for Southern Yellow Pine. Domestically, January shipments showed modest gains month-over-month but remain slightly below recent years. The newsletter also highlights new membership growth, seasonal building resources, and an industry-wide cybersecurity assessment aimed at strengthening digital readiness across the sector. Receive your copy of the full Lumber Shorts monthly newsletter by subscribing today. 

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Secretary of Agriculture Issues 2026 Wildfire Readiness Memorandum Ahead of Active Fire Season

US Department of Agriculture
April 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins issued a new Secretarial Memorandum and letter directing the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service to heighten national wildfire readiness, accelerate community-focused risk reduction, and strengthen firefighter health and safety for the 2026 fire year. “Under President Trump’s leadership, we have continuously implemented major reforms restoring active forest management, returning the Forest Service to a world‑leading forestry and fire management organization, and modernizing wildfire response and improving coordination across federal agencies. This fire season we are prepared to continue our full suppression strategy to suppress fire starts quickly to protect our forests and rural communities,” said Secretary Rollins. “This memorandum ensures the entire Department is aligned… to protect communities and the natural resources Americans depend on. Proper forest management remains central to this effort – reducing wildfire risk, strengthening rural economies, providing affordable, high‑quality lumber for American homes, and preserving the nation’s landscapes…”

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U.S. Endowment Launches RFP for Technology Solutions to Improve Forest Health and Forest Management

The US Endowment for Forestry and Communities
April 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities announced a new Request for Proposals (RFP) to accelerate the deployment of innovative technology solutions that improve forest health, strengthen forest management capacity and support the long-term strength of working forests, wood markets and forest-reliant communities. Across the country, forests are facing growing pressure from wildfire, pests and disease, fragmentation, limited active management and shifting market conditions. At the same time, new technology is creating practical opportunities to help landowners, forest managers and partners better monitor forests, make informed decisions and carry out work more effectively at the landscape scale. …The Endowment will provide up to $500,000 through this RFP to support one or more projects. …Proposals are due on June 4, 2026, at 5 p.m. EDT.

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More than 60 percent of U.S. is covered by drought as impacts worsen

National Weather Service – US Seasonal Drought Outlook
April 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Extensive drought conditions continue across much of the nation, with over 60-percent of the contiguous United States currently experiencing drought conditions as of the April 7 US Drought Monitor. During the last month, widespread drought expansion and intensification occurred across the West, the central US, and the Southeast south of the Ohio River, as dry conditions and above-normal temperatures combined with increasing Spring evapotranspiration rates to rapidly dry soils and reduce streamflow levels. In contrast, several rounds of heavy precipitation eased drought across much of the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes region. A potent Kona Low brought flooding rainfall and eased drought conditions across Hawaii, while Alaska, Puerto Rico, and the US Virgin Islands remain drought free. During the upcoming 3-month period, below-average precipitation favored for the Northwest combined with much below-normal mountain snow cover will likely lead to drought persistence and expansion.

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Alaskans, Are You Ready? Wildfire Prevention and Preparedness Week Kicks Off May 3

By Alaska Division of Forestry & Fire Protection
Alaska Wildland Fire Information
May 3, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

May is Wildfire Awareness Month! Today kicks off Nationwide Wildfire Community Preparedness Day which leads us into our very own Alaska specific Alaska Wildland Fire Prevention and Preparedness Week. Gov. Mike Dunleavy has proclaimed May 3rd–9th, as Wildland Fire Prevention and Preparedness Week in Alaska. This serves as a timely public reminder that while wildland fire is a natural part of Alaska’s landscape, it can quickly become dangerous, especially when caused by human activity. The governor stresses that Alaskans must use precaution, practice prevention, and be prepared to protect their communities that are among Alaska’s wilderness areas. 

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Colorado wildfire leaders warn of ‘very challenging fire year’ amid widespread drought

By Ryan Spencer
Vail Daily News
May 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Colorado wildfire leaders are bracing for what could be an especially busy and dangerous summer for wildfires across the West. The Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control presented its wildfire preparedness plan to Gov. Jared Polis on Thursday, April 30, during a news conference where state and federal partners affirmed their readiness to respond and called on the public to prepare. “We are facing a very challenging fire year, where our resources will be tested across not only Colorado, but across the West,” said Colorado Division of Fire Prevention and Control Michael Morgan during the briefing at the division’s hangar in Broomfield. Colorado — and most of the West — is heading into summer after some of the worst winter snowpack conditions on record and persisting widespread drought. The latest U.S. Drought Monitor Report shows that 100% of Colorado and roughly 70% of the West are facing some level of drought.

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States across the wildfire-prone Western US are using AI for early detection

By Dorany Pineda and Brittany Peterson
The Associated Press in Vancouver is Awesome
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

On a March afternoon, artificial intelligence detected something resembling smoke on a camera feed from Arizona’s Coconino National Forest. …One of dozens of AI cameras installed for the utility Arizona Public Service had spotted early signs of what came to be known as the Diamond Fire. Firefighters raced to the scene and contained the blaze before it grew past 7 acres. …Arizona Public Service has nearly 40 active AI smoke-detection cameras and plans to have 71 by summer’s end, and the state’s fire agency has deployed seven of its own. Another utility, Xcel Energy in Colorado, has installed 126 and aims to have cameras in seven of the eight states it serves by year’s end. “Earlier detection means we can launch aircraft and personnel to it and keep those fires as small as we can,” said Arizona’s John Truett. …“The AI that’s being run on the cameras is actually beating 911 calls,” he said.

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Rising Jet Fuel Costs Won’t Impact Cal Fire’s Aerial Firefighting Fleet

By Peyton Headlee
KCRA 3 Sacramento
May 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SACRAMENTO, Calif. —The rising cost of jet fuel is putting pressure on airlines and organizations that rely on planes, but Cal Fire says its aerial firefighting operations will not be affected as crews prepare for peak fire season. Cal Fire operates the largest aerial firefighting fleet in the world, with aircraft stationed across California to respond to fires wherever they ignite.  Despite the high jet fuel costs, the organization says it remains committed to fighting fires without interruption and that public safety is non-negotiable. One way Cal Fire saves money is by conducting some of its training sessions in flight simulators instead of using planes and helicopters. This approach reduces fuel consumption and minimizes wear and tear on the aircraft, which lowers maintenance costs.

Related news in Yahoo! News, by Daniel Farr: Shocking cost to fuel world’s largest flying firefighting fleet as California wildfire season looms

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Wildfires are torching state budgets

By Kylie Mohr
The Oregon Capital Chronicle
May 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

…Wildfires burned more than 1.9 million acres in Oregon in 2024. By the time they finally died down at the end of October, the state had spent more than $350 million fighting them, greatly exceeding the $10 million it had allocated. “By July 21, I had already completely blown through my cash on hand,” said Kyle Williams, Oregon Department of Forestry’s deputy director for fire operations. Contractors weren’t promptly paid for services they’d already provided, from digging fuel breaks to supplying meals, and the state had to hold an emergency legislative session to allocate the money. That summer highlighted the flaws in how the state funds both firefighting and the preventive work that reduces the chances of large, destructive blazes in the first place. This year, as drought and a devastating snowpack stack up across the West, officials are bracing for what could be a challenging fire season. The Idaho Department of Lands has roughly $38 million set aside. 

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Conservation groups file lawsuit to stop logging, burning in Montana’s most popular National Forest

By Darrell Ehrlick
News From The States
April 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

The Gallatin Wildlife Association, Alliance for The Wild Rockies, Native Ecosystems Council, and Council on Wildlife and Fish claim in a new federal lawsuit the United States Forest Service could be logging and using prescribed burns in Montana’s best-known recreational areas without presenting required research that would demonstrate the project isn’t negatively impacting threatened or endangered species. Their attorneys say logging and burning on more than 5,600 acres between Hyalite and South Cottonwood canyons, south of Bozeman in the Gallatin Mountains would mean cutting through old-growth forests, building new roads and negatively impact threatened species ranging from Canada lynx to Northern goshawks to whitebark pine trees. It claims U.S. Forest Service officials have overlooked or ignored a handful of federal laws to fast-track the project which the groups say will be highly visible to recreational enthusiasts. U.S. Forest Service staff have a policy of not commenting on any pending litigation. 

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‘A lot of needs’: Inside the Bozeman lab that might not survive the U.S. Forest Service overhaul

By Emma Jane Jackson
The Bozeman Daily Chronicle
April 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Justin Runyon

…“I’ve loved insects since as long as I can remember,” Justin Runyon said. “I used to turn on the outside lights at our house, and get excited by large moths and beetles. I think it’s just inherent in my DNA.” That lifelong interest carried him through a master’s degree at Montana State University and a Ph.D. at Penn State before taking a position as a research entomologist at the Rocky Mountain Research Station on the southeast corner of campus. He hasn’t left in the 17 years since. Now, that lab could be on the chopping block as part of a sweeping agency reorganization announced in March. ..This overhaul involves closing all regional offices and consolidating research leadership into a single national hub in Fort Collins….The agency may look different in the coming months than it did when Runyon first arrived 17 years ago, but he maintains that the work remains grounded in necessity.

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Trump administration falls behind on wildfire prevention with risky fire season ahead

By Lauren Sommer
National Public Radio
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

With wildfires already burning and drought persisting across much of the US, fire experts are bracing for what could be an extreme fire season. The U.S. Forest Service is going into it having done far less work than in recent years to manage the dry, flammable vegetation that can fuel catastrophic fires. In 2025, the Forest Service reduced vegetation on almost 1.5 million fewer acres than in 2024, according to an analysis of the agency’s data by NPR and firefighting experts. …The Forest Service said in a statement that the drop in prevention work is mostly due to staff being occupied with firefighting and because environmental conditions were not right for doing prescribed burns in the Southeast. The agency lost 16% of its workforce as of last summer, with 5,860 personnel leaving in the first six months of 2025 as part of the Trump administration’s efforts to reduce the size of government. 

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Forest Service Chief fields questions on Milwaukee office closure, deep budget cuts

By Danielle Kaeding
Wisconsin Public Radio
May 4, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Tom Schultz

US Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz provided details to lawmakers Thursday on employees affected by the closure of its regional office in Milwaukee, as well as President Donald Trump’s budget that cuts 75 percent of the agency’s funding. Schultz fielded questions from members of a Senate appropriations subcommittee. Last month, the Forest Service announced it would close 57 research facilities in 31 states and close nine regional offices, including in Milwaukee. The agency is proposing to shift operations to Madison as one of six nationwide hubs. Wisconsin Democratic US Sen. Tammy Baldwin, noted she had written to Schultz about the Milwaukee office closure as Senate Democrats have demanded answers on the reorganization. Schultz told Baldwin. …“We are proposing to move this to Madison, where we have the existing Forest Products Lab. We think it’s a better location,” Schultz said. “There’s been discussions over the last 10 years to relocate from Milwaukee to Madison.”

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A roadmap to recovery – the U.S. timber industry

By Tom Laventure
Price County Review
April 30, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Scott Dane

HARRIS, Michigan — In his keynote address at the Great Lakes Timber Professionals Association’ Spring Celebration in Harris, Michigan on April 1, Scott Dane said the past 18 months has shown significant progress with the challenges of the logging and partnering wood products industries. Dane, the executive director at American Loggers Council, based in Washington, D.C., said this is the result of partnerships who have formed a bipartisan blueprint for the recovery of the U.S. timber industry. “The challenges within the industry really boils down to one simple common denominator, and that’s markets,” Dane said. …Dane said first the bad news… “Loggers are being crushed by a perfect storm of low demand, unpredictable quotas, volatile prices, rising costs, and shrinking markets,” Dane said, referencing an editorial he read. …Now the good news, he said. Encouraging opportunities include increased domestic lumber production, cross-laminated timber, and biofuels – both sustainable aviation fuel and biojet.

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Minnesota Department of Natural Resources to plant nearly 2 million tree seedlings on state land this spring

Grand Rapids Herald-Review
April 28, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources is planting nearly 2 million tree seedlings on DNR-managed forest land across the state this spring. Each year, DNR foresters coordinate tree plantings in state forests, wildlife management areas, state parks, and other DNR-managed lands. This spring, 14 species will be planted on more than 3,000 acres throughout the state, including several varieties of pine, spruce and oak, as well as yellow birch, sugar maple, black walnut and tamarack. These reforestation efforts are led by the DNR’s Silviculture Program. Silviculture is the art and science of growing and tending forests to serve a variety of goals, including clean air and water, recreation opportunities, healthy wildlife habitat, biodiversity and timber productivity. Foresters consider current characteristics, climate resilience and future goals for each site to create a plan for planting and ongoing care.

 

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Tropical Rainforest Loss Drops 36% in 2025, but Fires Threaten Global Progress

World Resources Institute
April 29, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Tropical rainforest loss fell 36% in 2025 from the record high of 2024, according to new data from the University of Maryland’s GLAD Lab…. The findings suggest that strong policies and enforcement can curb forest loss. However, climate-driven fires are a dangerous new normal, threatening to reverse recent gains. In 2025, the world lost 4.3 million hectares of tropical primary rainforest, an area roughly the size of Denmark. Despite the decline, loss remains 46% higher than a decade ago, with primary forests disappearing at a rate of 11 football (soccer) fields every minute. …“But part of the decline reflects a lull after an extreme fire year. Fires and climate change are feeding off each other, and with El Niño on the horizon for 2026, investments in prevention and response will be critical as extreme fire conditions become the norm,” said Elizabeth Goldman, Co-Director of Global Forest Watch, World Resources Institute.

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