Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Canada and Portugal Pledge Cooperation on Fighting Wildland Fires and Protecting Communities

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
July 6, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

OTTAWA, ON – As wildfire seasons become longer and more extreme, the Government of Canada is focused on keeping people safe while strengthening our long-term response. …Alongside our international partners, we are committed to strengthening cross-border cooperation and wildland fire resource sharing. That’s why Élise Racicot, Ambassador of Canada to Portugal, and Tiago Oliveira, Chair of the Board of Directors for the Agency for Integrated Rural Fire Management of the Portuguese Republic, signed a memorandum of understanding to strengthen Canada and Portugal’s cooperation on combating and mitigating wildland fires and protecting communities in the face of climate change–driven threats. The signing of this arrangement between Natural Resources Canada and the Agency for Integrated Rural Fire Management of the Portuguese Republic facilitates more effective and efficient mutual wildfire assistance between the two countries.

Read More

FPInnovations and Deloupe leading the way: Impressive achievements highlighting sustainable innovations in forest transportation sector

By FPInnovations
Globe Newswire
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

MONTREAL — FPInnovations announced that it has achieved very promising results in terms of fuel economy and reduction of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) during the field testing of an innovative electric drive trailer for use in forest operations. The prototype trailer, developed in collaboration with Deloupe, features an electric drive axle implemented by FPInnovations with support of Voltari Power, a subsidiary of Voltari Marine Electric, and shows the possibilities for the forest transportation sector to fight climate change. The project was made possible thanks to an investment totalling more than $1.8 million provided through Natural Resources Canada’s Clean Growth Program and its Forest Innovation Program, Québec government’s Innov-R program through the research and development consortiums (InnovÉÉ), and British Columbia’s Ministry of Forests.

Read More

Engaging the Next Wave in Canada’s Forestry Future

By Kerry Patterson-Baker
Truck LoggerBC Magazine
June 30, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Launched by the Forest Products Association of Canada in 2021, Forestry For The Future is educating Canadians about forestry’s many contributions to our economy, environment, and society. Using diverse and creative communications across a multitude of platforms, this effort is focused on increasing awareness of Canada’s forest sector and the essential role it can play in helping resolve Canada’s current and future climate change challenges: 

  • Empowering tomorrow’s leaders: Forestry For The Future has employed TikTok to distribute forest facts directly to mobile phones from coast-to-coast. 
  • Managing for a sustainable tomorrow: Forestry For The Future continues to highlight how the sector sustainably manages forests in a way that balances economic, social, and environmental factors.
  • Pioneering a sustainable bioeconomy: Highlighting the sector’s contribution to a net-zero economy also plays a key role in our approach. 
  • Leading the way: Forests have a crucial role to play in providing multiple nature-based solutions to climate change. 

Read More

UNESCO report on Wood Buffalo park shows urgency of problems, First Nation says

By Bob Weber
The Canadian Press in the Prince George Citizen
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A report from a United Nations body on environmental threats to Canada’s largest national park shows the urgency of the problems, says a spokesman for the First Nation that originally brought concerns about Wood Buffalo National Park to UNESCO. The document, released last week and the latest in series of examinations of the park on the Alberta-Northwest Territories boundary, reaffirms threats from dams, oilsands development and climate change. …The Mikisew Cree brought concerns about the World Heritage site, before UNESCO almost a decade ago. The park’s traditional users saw water levels dropping year after year because, they felt,of British Columbia’s upstream Bennett Dam. They also feared growing oilsands tailing ponds posed a risk to water quality. UNESCO responded in 2016, finding those fears well grounded. Ottawa developed an $87-million plan to better manage and monitor water in the park. The new report is an assessment of how well that plan is working. 

Read More

City of Port Alberni supports request for second access road

By Elena Rardon
Alberni Valley News
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The City of Port Alberni has agreed to support a letter asking for the provincial and federal governments to create an official alternative access road into the community. The West Coast of Vancouver Island was mostly cut off after a wildfire forced the closure of Highway 4. A detour was opened up via Bamfield Main to Lake Cowichan, but this route was lengthy, with limited visibility, slow-moving traffic and lack of amenities. In response, Nuu-chah-nulth nations… drafted a letter calling on the Governments of Canada and B.C. to “make immediate investments” in securing a permanent second access road. …The letter also asks for more investments in wildfire resources, including a contract with the Port Alberni-based Coulson Aviation. …“Two large corporations not only control our access out into the forest, but now they control access in and out of our community,” said Douglas, referring to Mosaic Forest Management.

Read More

In the line of fire: Nelson’s wildland urban interface still needs attention: Blackwell

By Timothy Schafer
The Nelson Daily
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

NELSON, BC — A significant piece of Nelson’s wildland urban interface has a moderate wildfire behaviour threat or higher, according to a new community wildfire resiliency plan written for the Heritage city. Around 15 per cent of the wildland — a one-kilometre wide section of the forest around the city — is subject to the threat of wildfire behaviour, the report by Bruce Blackwell and Associates and John Cathro warned. “This, along with other analyses presented and discussed throughout the document, indicate that wildfire is a real threat to Nelson and its wildland urban interface,” Blackwell wrote. Nelson has begun planning and preparing for a wildfire emergency, he added, but should refer to the community wildland resiliency plan (CWRP) on how to continue this process effectively. …Last year, changes to the format of the CWPP places more emphasis on resilience and preparedness.

Read More

B.C. must urgently change forest strategies or face more wildfire disasters: report

By Dirk Meissner
Canadian Press in the Vancouver Sun
June 30, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA — Strategy shifts are urgently needed to cut the risk of catastrophic wildfires in B.C. forests that threaten to decimate ecosystems and communities, says the B.C. Forests Practices Board. The board is calling on the provincial government to undertake a “paradigm shift” in how it manages forests, saying wildfire risk mitigation currently focuses on areas near communities, but leaves the wider forest landscape severely vulnerable. The report comes as the largest wildfire in the province’s history, the Donnie Creek wildfire, continues to burn out of control in the remote northeast. “The key is there’s an urgency to this,” board chair Keith Atkinson said. “We’re obviously experiencing, maybe, our most severe year in front of us.” The Donnie Creek fire, about 150 kilometres southeast of Fort Nelson, is an example of a catastrophic wildfire that impacts few people but will cause lasting damage, he said. …Forests Minister Bruce Ralston said in a statement the report was a call to action to prevent wildfires.

Additional coverage in Castanet by Colin Dacre: ‘No short-term fix’: B.C. forestry watchdog urges wildfire mitigation

Read More

Stanley Park’s dead trees lead to serious wildfire concern

By Kamil Karamali and Darrian Matassa-Fung
Global News
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Stanley Park’s trees are struggling as drought conditions and a looper moth outbreak have combined to wreak havoc on the population. The dead trees are spurring calls for the park board to start preparing for the worst. Even more concerning, the Vancouver Park Board hasn’t updated its forest fire risk mitigation plan for the park since 2009. The 2009 report predicted that the hemlock looper moth posed a substantial risk to the forest — a risk that has become a reality in the past three years. “About 20 per cent of the standing tree canopy is dead trees,” said Tom Digby, a Vancouver Park Board commissioner. “The whole city is anxious about what that could mean for possible combustibility and fire in the park.”

Read More

B.C. drought conditions expected to get worse: BC Wildfire Service

By Emily Marsten
Vancouver CityNews
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC Wildfire Service says drought conditions in the province are expected to get worse this summer as the weather continues to heat up. This week, temperatures in the Lower Mainland are expected to reach upward of the 30° C mark, with temperatures feeling like 35° in parts Wednesday. Unsurprisingly, the service notes that several regions in the province broke new records for “their driest Junes.” “Average temperatures were one-to-two degrees warmer than normal for the Interior of B.C., while coastal conditions were close to average,” the service says. “Not only was it warm, but it was dry,” Matt MacDonald, the lead forecaster with the BC Wildfire Service, added. …It’s unlikely that people will be able to have an open campfire anytime soon, as the service adds more widespread fire prohibitions will be coming. There are various bans in place, including a campfire ban that covers most of the Coastal Fire Centre.

Read More

Government of Canada announces National Fire Equipment Cache in Banff National Park

By Parks Canada
Cision Newswire
July 6, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BANFF NATIONAL PARK, AB – Climate change is causing wildfires to become more frequent and more severe across Canada, threatening our health, economies, and wildlife. Parks Canada announced the upgrading of a National Fire Equipment Cache in Banff National Park, through the construction of a new facility that will act as a central equipment storage location and augment equipment reserves across the country. Specialized fire management equipment will be maintained in a state of readiness where it can be quickly deployed to Parks Canada administered places across Canada or shared with provincial and territorial partners through the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre (CIFFC).

Read More

Commercial thinning yields surprising forest benefits

By James Steidle, Stop the Spray
Prince George Citizen
July 4, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Last week, I was out on the logging roads east of town with a local guide outfitter, checking out the cutblocks.  We went out, camera in hand, to illustrate for people how logging practices and reforestation needed to change to help wildlife.  There was a big area near the Bowron River that was intensively logged in the 1980s, a smaller sibling to the massive Bowron Clearcut further south, where we were headed.  They made some big cuts, planted mostly pine, then they sprayed it.  …We had come expecting to find the result: a 30-35 year old pine plantation that we could complain about. You know the ones — monoculture pine farms, weird ecological anomalies in what should be mixed spruce country. …But we were in for a surprise.  One of the cutblocks we had come for, logged in 1989, sprayed twice, the last time in 1998, had been recently “commercially thinned.”

Read More

Community forest for Prince George?

By Cheryl Jahn
CKPG Today
July 4, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE – Prince George exists in the middle of an enormous forest and this city’s mayor wants to act on that. He hopes to create a community forest. “I would like to see the community forest large enough to go along with the other community forestry around this area. McBride, Mackenzie, Burns Lake. What we should be doing is putting all our resources together, to be able to attract some secondary manufacturer to add more value to the forest,” said Mayor Simon Yu. McBride has had a 60-thousand-hectare community forest since 2007. Even the College of New Caledonia has a community forest. “I think the mayor has got the right idea of where you would locate a community forest in the Prince George region. I wouldn’t know offhand, but I think the strength of the community forest is they are linked, as the name implies, to the community,” says Bruce Ralston.

Read More

Workers want wood kept in the Houston area

By Rod Link
Houston Today
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

People responding to a survey asking about the impact of Canfor’s closure of it sawmill here say the wood under licence to the company should stay in the area, regardless of whether the company builds a new facility or not. “Respondents express concern over the transportation of logs to other communities, potentially providing employment elsewhere while their own community grapples with a short of job opportunities,” indicates comments in the survey conducted by the District of Houston this spring. The survey, which resulted in a needs assessment of the local industrial workforce, queried the impact of the mill’s closure on citizens and what people needed to gain new employment or otherwise adapt. There were 133 respondents with approximately 80 per cent of that total living within Houston.

Read More

Wildfires threaten almost half of all public lands in B.C: report

By Wolf Depner
The Northern View
June 29, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Wildfires threaten almost half (45 per cent) of all public lands in B.C. and the direct cost of suppressing them averages $1 billion annually in Western Canada, with costs trending upward.  Those figures appear in a new report from the Forest Practices Board, B.C.’s independent watchdog for forest and range practices. The board audits forest and range practices on public lands and makes recommendations for one of the most important industries in the province, but one also facing threats from multiple directions.  Titled ‘Forest and Fire Management in BC: Toward Landscape Resilience’, the report calls for urgent changes to the management of forests.  Keith Atkinson, board chair, said fire prevention and suppression policies over the past century have led to a buildup of fuel in forests, contributing to the loss of natural firebreaks in some areas.

Read More

Burial grounds, wild animals, and food for elders: What’s burning inside B.C.’s largest wildfire

By Betsy Trumpener
CBC News
June 29, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s largest recorded wildfire is burning through the traditional territory of three First Nations, destroying everything from graves to hunting grounds and culturally significant landmarks.  “It’s very heartbreaking. I’ve seen some of our people tear up and cry from that,” says Timber Bigfoot, a member of the Prophet River First Nation and the community’s land and environment manager.   He calls the Donnie Creek wildfire “catastrophic.” The fire is now bigger than Prince Edward Island.  It’s burning more than 100 kilometres away from the communities of both Fort St. John and Fort Nelson.  …The list of his community’s wildfire losses is long: Trappers’ cabins and trap lines. Hunting and fishing grounds. Archaeological sites and traditional trails. Rare diamond willow that’s gathered for ceremonial smudging. Cranberries, huckleberries and blueberries. Beaver, wolves, moose and elk.

Read More

What happens after the Donnie Creek wildfire, now larger than P.E.I., stops burning?

By Akshay Kulkarni
CBC News
July 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s largest wildfire on record now eclipses the entire area of Prince Edward Island, and experts say after it’s done burning, there could be a commercial rush for burnt timber that could further change the landscape for the worse. The Donnie Creek wildfire is burning over 5,715 square kilometres as of July 2, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service. Mike Flannigan, professor of wildland fire at Thompson Rivers University, said …the Donnie Creek wildfire has charred enough land to count as the fifth-worst fire season of all time in the province all on its own. “It will continue to burn for weeks and probably until the end of the fire season. It may actually burn through winter, smouldering in deeper organic layers, and then pop up”. …Flannigan said that, for fires as large as Donnie Creek, it’s best to let it burn out and let “Mother Nature do her thing.”

Read More

Shot fired across Chief Forester’s bow in latest wake up call

By James Steidl, Stop the Spray
The Alaska Highway News
July 1, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In a new special report, the BC Forest Practices Board is calling for a “paradigm shift” in how forests are managed to deal with catastrophic wildfire. “The path forward relies on an immediate response from the provincial government involving acceptance, alignment, and action from multiple government ministries,” states the report. Ending the war on deciduous tree species like aspen is made clear throughout the report. “Another example is that aspen stands burn at a lower intensity than conifer stands, but reforestation obligations currently prioritize establishing conifer stands,” it states. …The report points out new legislative changes that allow for BC’s chief forester, Shane Berg, to “consider preventing, mitigating and adapting to impacts caused by significant disturbances to forests and forest health, including wildfire.” …“I’m thankful the Forest Practices Board is finally taking the failure of forest management seriously,” says Steidle. “The war on deciduous, all the spraying, must stop. 

Read More

Fairy Creek: Inside the largest protest in Canadian history

By Andrew Chang
CBC News
July 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Two years after protests against old growth logging in Fairy Creek, B.C., activists are battling court cases and companies are feeling economic impacts. Andrew Chang and CBC’s Kieran Oudshoorn discuss the protest’s legacy. 

Read More

Quesnel, BC, turns to goats to help curb wildfire

By Winston Szeto
CBC News
July 2, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The City of Quesnel has been testing a unique way to help prevent wildfires by enlisting the help of 132 cashmere goats to graze on vegetation in the Fire Management Trails area for about a month, until mid-July, to see how livestock might help mitigate fire hazards. In 2021, the city opened the three-kilometre Fire Management Trails within the fuel management demonstration forest, adjacent to the Quesnel Airport, to educate residents about wildfire prevention. The 31-hectare forest was categorized as a high-risk wildfire area when Quesnel established its community wildfire protection plan in 2019. The plan aimed to reduce the threat of wildfires by selectively removing trees and grass while ensuring the long-term health of the forests. Erin Robinson, Quesnel’s forestry initiatives manager, said it’s the first time the city has involved the goats, which are from the Vahana Nature Rehabilitation in Kimberley, about 585 kilometres to the southeast.

Read More

Alberta’s Backwoods Forestry Solutions expands from oil patch to logging for the forest industry

By Tony Kryzanowski
The Logging & Sawmilling Journal
June 30, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Alberta contractor Backwoods Forestry Solutions is switching gears, going from logging solely for the oil patch to logging for the forest industry. …Backwoods Forestry Solutions has taken on a logging contract with an Alberta forest company to supply 100,000 cubic metres of wood each year for five years, with the potential for another 50,000 cubic metres. According to Becker, the company is also in discussions with several other forest companies. Headquartered in Edmonton, this business endeavor is only one division of several operating under the Backwoods umbrella, and owned 100 per cent by the Alexis Nakota Sioux Nation situated near Gunn, Alberta, about 60 kilometres northwest of Edmonton. For nearly two decades, Backwoods was a partnership between the Alexis Nation and a private investor, but in 2021 they bought out their partner.

Read More

Forest Practices Board calls for government action to reduce catastrophic wildfire risk

BC Forest Practices Board
June 29, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA – A new report by B.C.’s Forest Practices Board is calling for urgent action by the provincial government to reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfire in British Columbia. The report, Forest and Fire Management in BC Toward Landscape Resilience, highlights an urgent need to change how B.C.’s forests and landscapes are managed. “Fire prevention and suppression policies over the past century have led to a buildup of fuel in our forests, and have contributed to the loss of natural firebreaks in some areas,” said Keith Atkinson, chair, Forest Practices Board. “These shifts, combined with forestry policies and climate-change effects greatly increase the risk of catastrophic wildfire. We’re already seeing the consequences this year, with its unusually early start and record-setting wildfires.” Provincial government data indicates that 45% of public land in BC is at high or extreme threat of wildfire. 

Additional coverage in the Ladysmith Chronicle, by Wolf Depner: Wildfires threaten almost half of all public lands in B.C: report

Read More

Multiple heat warnings in place for Ontario, Quebec

By Michael Lee
CTV News
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A multi-day heat wave is set to begin today in southern Ontario as other areas of the province and Quebec also deal with warm, humid conditions. Temperatures in southern Ontario could reach highs in the upper 20s or low 30s, with the humidex nearing the high 30s to low 40s, according to Environment Canada. The heat wave, which could last through to Thursday, will affect multiple regions in Quebec, with warnings in place for regions surrounding Gatineau and Montreal. Environment Canada has issued heat warnings for the Northwest Territories, as well as much of northern Ontario, where high temperatures could last tonight and potentially into Wednesday. …A number of severe thunderstorm watches are also in place for areas in southern Quebec, along with air quality advisories in the northern and central regions due to forest fires.

Read More

Sault Ste. Marie-based scientists developing wildfire satellite system

By Mike McDonald
CTV News
July 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Mark De Jong

Research scientists at the Great Lakes Forestry Centre in Sault Ste. Marie are among those working on a means to better detect and manager wildfires. The WildFireSat mission is an entirely Canadian initiative, which will use satellites to track wildfires across the country. “We’re really looking to provide fire intelligence to fire managers to give them better information about the fires and the landscape that should help them better plan and manage evacuations,” said Mark De Jong, a research scientist based at centre. …De Jong said getting up-to-the-minute information on wildfires is extremely important for fire managers, adding the WildFireSat system will get information to fire managers within 30 minutes… and will reduce the need to use aircraft to survey wildfires. The Canadian Space Agency, NRCan and Environment and Climate Change Canada are collaborating on the WildFireSat mission, which is set to launch in 2029.

Read More

Ontario will spare “no expense” when it comes to protecting residents from forest fires

By Jennifer Hamilton-McCharles
The Timmins Daily Press
July 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ontario will spare no expense when it comes to protecting its residents from forest fires, according to Nipissing MPP Vic Fedeli. …“The premier has said he will spare no expense period to protect our population from forest fires,” Fedeli said. “We’re sending every resource we have, we’re bringing resources from elsewhere here, so there’s no limit to what we will do to protect our citizens and forests.” The North Bay region remains under a total fire ban. And it doesn’t look like the region will get any reprieve from the heat for a little while longer. Environment Canada issued a heat warning for North Bay Monday. A multi-day heat event begins Monday and is expected to last into Thursday in some regions. …The hot and humid air can also bring deteriorating air quality and can result in the Air Quality Health Index approaching the high risk category.

Read More

South Korean firefighters touch down in Ottawa as wildfires continue to rage

CBC News
July 2, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Some 150 firefighters from South Korea touched down in Ottawa Sunday afternoon as part of their journey to northern Quebec to fight dozens of wildfires still raging there. After a 13-hour flight, they were greeted at the Ottawa International Airport by dignitaries that included Treasury Board President Mona Fortier and Lim Woongsoon, South Korea’s ambassador to Canada. “Korea stands ready to be among the first to come to Canada when Canada is in need,” Lim said. …The firefighters will first stop in Maniwaki, Que., and spend two days receiving technical instructions, before being deployed in Lebel-sur-Quévillon, Que., roughly 800 kilometres northwest of Montreal. The town of approximately 2,000 people has already been evacuated twice in recent weeks due to the wildfire threat. …They’re expected to stay in Canada for about a month, Morin said.

Read More

How forest fire smoke in the Thunder Bay area is harming waterways

By Taylor O’Brien
CBC News
July 4, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

As Canada continues to battle relentless forest fires, Thunder Bay’s blue skies are sometimes turning grey with smoke from fires, both near and far. While the smoky air has created serious health risks for vulnerable groups, it is also putting the region’s already at-risk waterways in jeopardy. According to Robert Stewart, an associate professor in geography at Lakehead University, the majority of the area’s rivers are negatively affected by urbanization and storm water, but must now deal with the side effects of climate change. Stewart said particles in the air are essential to forming raindrops or creating different kinds of air masses and weather systems. But they’re likely being imbalanced by forest fire smoke and heat. …Stewart said the effects of forest fire smoke add another layer of impact to an already “disturbed” system. He said the repercussions make understanding the root source of contaminants in waterways more of a challenge.

Read More

How US wildfires have worsened in recent decades

By Emma Rubin and Emilia Ruzicka
The St. Louis Dispatch
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Wildfires are innate to forest ecosystems, clearing out dead debris and paving the way for new growth, but climate change has elongated dry seasons, increased temperatures, and widened the potential for large-scale wildfires. Beyond weather-related factors, the prevalence of insects like bark beetles damage trees and make them more prone to burning. Invasive vegetation such as cheatgrass also easily burns and contributes to spread. Trees, traditionally a storage vessel for carbon, release carbon immediately when burning and during decomposition. The EU’s Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service estimated that global wildfires in 2022 released 1,455 megatonnes of carbon emissions. Black carbon, or soot, can also travel beyond wildfire zones, absorbing sunlight and warming the earth further. Beyond the environmental threats, the widening reach of wildfires threatens the displacement of countless residents. Despite this, people continue moving to wildfire-prone areas, putting a growing population at risk of longer fire seasons and associated health risks.

Read More

USDA Forest Service Invests $188M to Keep Forests Working

US Department of Agriculture
June 29, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced a $188 million investment through President Biden’s Investing in America agenda to conserve some of the most economically and ecologically significant forestlands across the nation. The funding will support 34 projects to conserve more than 245,000 acres of working forests that are critical to rural economies in 22 states and one island territory, as part of the agency’s Forest Legacy program. $100 million of this funding comes from President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, which provides an additional $250 million for similar projects next year, and $88 million comes from the Land and Water Conservation Fund. …Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack… “As private forest landowners continue to face pressures to convert forests, the Forest Legacy program keeps working forests working.” For more on how the Forest Service works with states to conserve forestlands through this program, visit the Forest Legacy program.

Read More

Locked Down for Old-Growth Forests

By Alicia Santiago
The Eugene Weekly
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

On the morning of July 5, dozens of community members and organizers from Cascadia Forest Defenders protested outside of Sierra Pacific Industries (formerly Seneca timber) to stand in solidarity against timber sales. The protest took place outside gate four of SPI. Chants of “clearcuts? No way. Not ever. Not today,” took place while blocking the way of semi trucks and workers. Upon arrival, SPI workers told protesters where they could legally stand. After listening, protesters took place between the entrance gates of SPI just off SPI property. SPI operation trucks were blocked in by protesters who were locked down using a linked chain connecting three chairs between gates, singing about saving the future and acting now. …Riley Fields, a Cascadia Forest Defender, said it’s important to send a message to SPI that the community will do anything to stop the N126 sale and the sale of public forests and public lands. 

Read More

Why protecting forests means reduced emissions at global scale

By Northern Arizona University
Prescott eNews
July 6, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Scott Goetz

A recent study that uses 3D satellite imagery collected by technology on the International Space Station found that worldwide protected forests have an additional 9.65 billion metric tons of carbon stored in their aboveground biomass compared to ecologically similar unprotected areas—a finding that quantifies just how important protected areas are in our continued climate mitigation efforts. The study, published in Nature Communications by researchers at the University of Maryland (UMD), Northern Arizona University, University of Arizona, Conservation International and more, demonstrates the importance of protecting existing plant life, especially forests, in the global fight against climate change. “This research is vitally important for documenting the value of protected areas… for the climate benefits provided by forests, which sequester carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and fix it into aboveground biomass,” said Scott Goetz, a professor at NAU and co-author of the study.

Read More

Forest Service to invest over $18 million to reduce wildfire risk in Utah

By Paul Nelson
KUTV.com
July 4, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SALT LAKE CITY — The Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest is getting a massive amount of money to reduce the risk of wildfire. The USDA Forest Service is reportedly investing over $18 million over the next few years to clear out potential fuels at the ground level. Forestry officials said with the population rising and people living closer to the forests, the need to clear out this land is higher than ever. Families by the dozens made it to the campgrounds in Big Cottonwood Canyon. …The USDA added Uinta-Wasatch-Cache to its list of landscapes on the National Wildfire Crisis Strategy in early 2023, according to the forest’s website. This plan is aimed at protecting watersheds, recreational areas and wildlife by getting rid of fuels and upgrading fire safety measures in roughly 1.1 million acres of land in Utah, which includes about 868,000 acres of forest service land.

Read More

We’ve got it all wrong about sequoias and wildfire

By Chad Hanson, director, John Muir Project
Los Angeles Times
July 4, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

As my colleagues and I hiked through the Nelder giant sequoia grove south of Yosemite National Park recently, we could barely believe our eyes. In 2017, the Railroad fire swept through nearly all of the Nelder Grove, burning lightly in most areas but very intensely in the portion where we walked, about six years after the fire. The naturally regenerating giant sequoia forest was so vigorous and lush that, in many places, we had to pull the stems of young sequoias apart just so we could walk between them. There were hundreds of them on almost every acre — many of them already 8 or 9 feet tall. It was a remarkable sight because, in that particular location, the Railroad fire burned hot, killing trees, including about three dozen mature sequoias. This high-intensity fire patch is isolated; it’s nearly half a mile from the grove’s nearest remaining live, mature sequoias. 

Read More

Move over, emerald ash borer. There’s another insect killing Fort Collins trees

By Miles Blumhardt
The Coloradoan
July 4, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

…Ralph Zentz, city of Fort Collins assistant forester, said spruce trees are suffering from the spruce ips hunteri beetle, a native beetle found in the mountains that began invading the city a couple years ago. Zentz said the city is seeing the second big wave of the ips beetle in the last 40 years, resulting in the city identifying about 200 infected spruce trees. Why are spruce trees dying now despite all the moisture we had this spring? Zentz said drought, especially in 2021 when the city saw scant moisture August through the end of December, set the stage for the beetles to invade. He said a windy and dry summer and fall in 2021, coupled with people shutting off irrigation systems and not watering their spruce trees over the winter, allowed the insects to attack the stressed trees. Zentz said properly watered spruces push the beetles out when they tunnel into the bark.

Read More

Federal court halts illegal logging to save grizzly bears

By Mike Garrity, Alliance for the Wild Rockies
Missula Current
July 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Thanks to a successful court challenge by the Alliance for the Wild Rockies, over 10,000 acres of grizzly bear habitat in northwestern Montana will not be decimated by commercial logging. In late June, our lawsuit in a federal district court in Montana halted a large-scale logging project in endangered grizzly bear habitat to protect the small, isolated, and imperiled Cabinet-Yaak grizzly bear population from further harm. …The Court ruled the project is illegal because the government did not analyze the cumulative impacts on grizzly bears from concurrent logging and road-building on public lands, state lands, and private lands in the area. …The Court acknowledged that this population is “uniquely vulnerable,” and it found the government’s analysis “factually false” because the government “assumed, contrary to the evidence before them, that the non-federal lands do not provide habitat for grizzly bears. 

Read More

As California fire season begins, debate over wildfire retardant heats up

By Hayley Smith
Los Angeles Times
July 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

…some environmental groups are taking aim at a commercial fire retardant… Phos-Chek, that neon-pink goo that airplanes dump over wildfires, is a sticky slurry of ammonium phosphate designed to coat vegetation and other fuels to deprive advancing flames of oxygen. Fire authorities swear by the product, calling it indispensable. But critics argue that officials are overlooking the product’s ecological risks. Studies have shown the retardant can harm plants, fish and other species, including steelhead trout and Chinook salmon. It can also act as a fertilizer that grows more vegetation, which can later act as fuel for fires. “Fire retardant has more adverse effects on endangered species than any other thing the federal government does, and there’s not even a close second,” said Andy Stahl, executive director of Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics, an advocacy group that recently sued the U.S. Forest Service over its use of aerial retardant.

Read More

Pathogen discovered as a cause of mysterious disease killing Arkansas pine trees

By Andrew Mobley
ABC News 7
July 5, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

LITTLE ROCK — The investigation into a mysterious ailment killing Arkansas pine trees has yielded some answers. The increasing occurrences of the strange affliction in recent months have experts scrambling to understand the phenomenon. “What we determined is what we labeled as a decline scenario. Multiple damage agents, multiple issues are causing the trees to decline and subsequently die,” said Chandler Barton, a Division Forester with the Arkansas Department of Agriculture. Whatever is slowly killing Arkansas’ pine trees seems to have spread deeper into the state, alarming private landowners and those in the timber industry. …Recently, samples of affected trees tested positive for a virulent fungus. “We did get confirmation for Brown Spot Needle Blight, which is a disease that has also been observed in Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana for several years in Loblolly Pine,” said Michael Blazier, Dean of the College of Forestry at the University of Arkansas at Monticello.

Read More

A federal program that’s helped protect Maine forests reaches milestone with new project

By Charlie Eichacker
Maine Public
July 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Conservation groups joined state and federal officials in Rangeley late last week to celebrate the climate and ecological benefits of a large-scale forest conservation project in western Maine. Its completion also marked a milestone for a federal program that made the project possible — and that’s played an important role in protecting Maine forests. In May, the state completed the purchase of a 6,578-acre parcel near Mt. Abraham known as Perham Stream that was previously managed by a timber company, so that it could be put into conservation. Not far away, another 7,062 acres around the Quill Hill recreation area was put into a conservation easement. Much of the land will remain open to some timber harvesting. At the celebration this week, Gov. Janet Mills said those two parcels amounted to the largest conservation project completed by her administration.

Read More

Inclusion Council National Action Plan Is Underway

The US Endowment for Forestry and Communities
June 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Greenville, SC – In the summer of 2022, the U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities announced the formation of the U.S. Forest and Wood Products Inclusion Council, a group whose vision is to create equitable workplaces where people feel valued, safe, and that they belong, so that all people can sustain and benefit from forests. The council has made significant strides towards inviting the sector into a broader conversation related to attracting new talent, closing workforce gaps, and engaging the opportunities of diversity, equity, and inclusion head-on. …With ongoing financial support from the Endowment, plus a sizable investment from the USDA Forest Service, the Inclusion Council has announced two requests for proposals for partners to contribute to achieving these goals. 

Read More

Report links paper giant Royal Golden Eagle to Indonesia deforestation despite pledges

By Hans Nicholas
Mongabay
July 4, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

A new investigative report alleges that the supply chain of one of the world’s largest producers of wood pulp and products, Royal Golden Eagle, is tainted with wood from deforestation in Indonesia. The allegation comes despite the company having adopted a no-deforestation policy since 2015. The report also reveals a chain of offshore shell companies pointing to RGE’s control of a new mega-scale pulp mill in Indonesia’s North Kalimantan province. This new mill threatens large-scale deforestation once it’s in operation, due to its huge demand for wood, the report says.

Read More

Tasmania expands native logging harvest area as other states wind back

By Adam Holmes
ABC News Australia
July 3, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

As Victoria and Western Australia prepare to end native forest logging, Tasmania has expanded the area available for immediate harvesting — with the state government enthusiastically backing the industry. While some forests have been spared, environmental groups say Tasmania’s public forestry company, which trades as Sustainable Timber Tasmania (STT), is adding more forests out of the public eye in remote areas. A further 1,000 hectares of native forest faces logging in Tasmania. They include a significant increase in remote Central Highland forest where old growth is more common, and in the takayna/Tarkine which conservationists have lobbied to be given national park status. STT updated its three-year schedule on July 1, showing the native forestry coupes available for logging at short notice.

Read More