Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Apply for a 2023 Sustainable Forestry Initiative Community Grant!

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

In case you missed it, SFI Community Grants are now available for projects that promote collaboration with the SFI Network and support local communities’ understanding of the value and benefits of sustainably managed forests. Community Grants are awarded for collaborative community-based projects, activities or events supporting SFI’s mission to advance sustainability through forest-focused collaborations, across the US and Canada.  All projects must be submitted by an SFI Implementation Committee (SIC) or non-profit organization.  If the proposal is submitted by a non-profit organization, the project must include an SFI Implementation Committee or SFI Certified Organization as an active project partner. Proposed SFI Community Grant Projects must specify how they will address and lead to positive outcomes in at least one of the SFI prioritiesThe proposal must be submitted via SFI’s Online Application Form by 11:59 pm Eastern Time on March 17, 2023.  

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There is no conspiracy in logging emissions

By John Mullinder, Author, Little Green Lies and Other BS
Wood Business – Canadian Forest Industries
February 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Two environmental groups recently teamed up to accuse the Canadian government and the forest industry of being involved in a cover-up of logging’s greenhouse gas emissions. Logging’s emissions, they claimed, were equivalent to those from the oil sands, and Canada needed to fess up. There is evidence that the groups did consult the two government departments with skin in the game: Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) and Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) but then decided instead to plough ahead, make their own assumptions, and calculate their own numbers. …In fact, there are no GHG emission numbers specific to logging. That’s because Canada does what all other countries in the United Nations do. …So, the real beef that U.S.-based Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and Nature Canada have is with the IPCC guidelines, not with Canada. …NRDC and Nature Canada should fess up themselves: there is no Canadian conspiracy. 

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Victoria traffic disruptions planned during ‘super-rally’ for old-growth logging activists

By Todd Coyne
CTV News Vancouver Island
February 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Activists opposed to old-growth logging in British Columbia are planning to converge on the B.C. legislature grounds for a “super-rally” Saturday, prompting a warning from Victoria police to expect traffic disruptions in the downtown core. Police are planning to close Douglas Street to traffic from Centennial Square to the legislature grounds between 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 p.m., when protesters plan to march to the government buildings. Additional police officers and surveillance cameras will be deployed downtown for the duration of the protest. …Dubbed the “United We Stand for Old Growth Forests! Declaration, March and Super-Rally,” the action is in response to the B.C. government’s failures to protect the province’s most at-risk old-growth forests from logging, according to a statement from the organizers.

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First Nations Studies student wins Skills Award for Indigenous Youth

University of Northern British Columbia
February 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Sarah Dixon

University of Northern BC student Sarah Dixon was honoured this past fall to have been selected as one of three recipients from across the country to receive a 2022 Skills Award for Indigenous Youth from the Forest Products Association of Canada and the Canadian Council of Forest Ministers. …The 22-year-old Bachelor of Arts student is from the Esk’etemc First Nation, within the Secwepemc Nation, and grew up in the communities of Esk’et (Alkali Lake) and Williams Lake. …It was while on a campus tour with OYEP that the seeds were first planted for pursuing her post-secondary studies at UNBC. …Dixon is also participating in a Forest Products Association of Canada project called Forestry for the Future which aims to amplify the stories of those furthering sustainability in the forest industry.

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Time for B.C. to fight fire with fire

By Joe Gilchrist, Bob Gray, Layne Clarke & Calvin Sandborn
The Globe and Mail
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Since 2016… billions of dollars have been lost to firefighting and property damage in British Columbia. Both timber supply and ecosystems have been devastated. Wildfire smoke now casts an eerie pall over B.C. summers. …Fire experts tell us that when industrial forestry abolished Indigenous-controlled burning, it set the stage for the recent catastrophic wildfires. …Part of the solution is to recognize ancient wisdom, and to “fight fire with fire.” Modern fire ecologists recognize this, and now widely prescribe controlled burning to create fire breaks and reduce forest fuels. …B.C. is now expanding prescribed burning, and has begun pilot projects with First Nations to restore cultural burning. But we lag far behind Australia and the United States. …While the BC Wildfire Service has limited programs… we urgently need to expand the training system. …Second, we need to reduce legal liability of certified prescribed-fire practitioners. [To access the full story, a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

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Oregon officials work ahead of wildfire season to reduce risk

Oregon Public Broadcasting
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Nearly $3 million is being invested into projects intended to lessen wildfire risk across Oregon. The Oregon State Fire Marshal’s office says $2.7 million are going towards what’s called community wildfire protection plans (CWPP.) There are over two dozen ready-to-go in 25 counties. They include fuel mitigation programs, defensible space projects, and home assessments. Alison Green, the public affairs director for the OSFM, said this is a new initiative. “Our office was very fortunate in 2021, the last biennium to actually get an investment to reduce risk to communities,” Green told KLCC. “For us to really have this money to lessen the risk, and protect people, this was such an amazing opportunity.” The funds are part of the OSFM’s Fire Adapted Oregon initiative, created by Senate Bill 762. …Green said the wildfire outlook for 2023 looks more typical than some of the more severe seasons in recent years.

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Audit of Lake Babine First Nation forest licence finds good practices

BC Forest Practices Board
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA – An audit of First Nations Woodland Licence N2I, held by the Lake Babine First Nation, has found compliance with British Columbia’s forestry legislation. “Our audit found that Lake Babine Nation complied with all requirements of the Forest and Range Practices Act and the Wildfire Act,” said Bruce Larson, acting chair of the Forest Practices Board. “We are pleased to see Lake Babine Nation participating in the forest economy and carrying out sound forest practices on their traditional territory.” The First Nations Woodland Licence is located north of Burns Lake and has three separate operating areas on the west side of Babine Lake. The licence provides the Lake Babine Nation with exclusive timber harvest rights within the 36,500-hectare area, with an allowable annual cut of 74,000 cubic metres.

Additional coverage in My Bulkley Lakes Now, by Logan Flint: Lake Babine Nation audit finds compliance with provincial legislation

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BC Timber Sales operations near Williams Lake pass audit

BC Forest Practices Board
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA – An audit of BC Timber Sales (BCTS) and timber sale licence holders (TSL holders) in the Cariboo Chilcotin business area, in the Cariboo Chilcotin Natural Resource District, has found compliance with British Columbia’s forestry legislation. “BCTS and TSL holders complied with requirements of the Forest and Range Practices Act and complied with almost all requirements of the Wildfire Act,” said Bruce Larson, acting board chair of the Forest Practices Board. “The one issue auditors found was that the TSL holders did not complete fire hazard assessments after logging. However, because they removed all logging debris that could pose a fire hazard as part of their standard procedures, this is considered an area to improve in the future.” The board examined forestry activities carried out between June 2021 and June 2022.

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Researchers seek public assistance as disease threatens Little Brown Bat

The Boundary Sentinel
February 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C.’s bats are threatened by a fungal disease headed towards the province from Alberta and Washington State. The Kootenay Community Bat Program, in collaboration with the Province of BC, are asking the public for help in the effort to detect and prevent the spread of White-Nose Syndrome (WNS). Residents are urged to report any bat activity observed in winter and any sick or dead bats found before May 31st. White-Nose Syndrome is a fungal disease that is harmless to humans, but has devastated North American bat populations. The fungus attacks bats while they are hibernating, appearing on their wings and faces to give an appearance of a white nose. Bats often wake to clean the fungus from their skin. This uses valuable energy, and finally the bats die from hypothermia and starvation. If anyone finds a dead bat or have sightings of winter bat activity, please report to the B.C. Community Bat Program online at www.bcbats.ca, via email at info@bcbats.ca or by calling 1-855-922-2287 (1-855-GOT-BATS).  

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Minister Guilbeault recommends emergency order to protect the critically at-risk spotted owl

The Wilderness Committee
February 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In a letter to the Wilderness Committee… Federal Minister of Environment and Climate Change Steven Guilbeault is recommending an emergency order to protect the at-risk species from imminent threats to its survival and recovery. Federal cabinet now needs to accept the minister’s recommendation for the emergency order to come into effect, after it consults affected First Nations. …The minister has determined that logging needs to be prevented in Spuzzum and Utzlius watersheds, within Spô’zêm Nation territory, as well as in a further 2,500 hectares of forest habitat critical to the spotted owl’s survival and at high risk of being logged within the next year. As the Minister has found there are imminent threats to spotted owl survival and recovery from logging, he must by law recommend an emergency order. If accepted, the emergency order would be the third ever to be approved by cabinet under the federal Species at Risk Act. 

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Prince George forum to discuss future of forestry sector

By Adam Berls
CKPG Today
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE — The future of forestry is going to be discussed at a forum next week and a group of speakers will be looking at how to increase sustainability and maximize job potential in the industry. The forestry sector has been dealing with many setbacks recently and there has been lots of discussion on the path going forward for the industry in British Columbia. James Steidle. …The Future of Forestry forum will take place on Tuesday February 28th at the Canfor Theatre at UNBC, starting at 6:30pm.

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Indigenous Forestry Scholarship Program Open for Applications

BC First Nations Forestry Council
February 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Snuneymuxw Territory (Nanaimo, B.C.) – The Indigenous Forestry Scholarship Program (IFSP) is an existing program that the Forestry Council, in partnership with the Ministry of Forests has developed. The program is designed to grow and connect Indigenous talent to BC Forest Sector Workforce opportunities. It is a work and study mentorship program that provides the opportunity for Indigenous students to access funding and enter into forestry-related training or educational programs plus a mentored summer work experience in their field. The program provides Indigenous students with: Tuition and living expenses scholarship; Paid summer work-term experience and one-on-one mentorship with a program partner; and Support from your local Indigenous Skills and Employment Training Program (ISETP) centre. Our work includes helping Indigenous students find appropriate pathways to work placements they are interested in, and providing continuous support to keep them on track towards their professional development and success.

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The Woodlot Communicator – Winter 2023

Federation of British Columbia Woodlot Associations
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In this issue of the Woodlot Communicator: Welcome Gord Chipman – New FBCWA General Manager Woodlotters and the Federation of BC Woodlot Associations are pleased to welcome Gord Chipman as their new General Manager. He takes over the reins from Brian McNaughton, who has tirelessly served for 22 years, ensuring the woodlot program was in good hands. Brian will still be sharing his knowledge through his company, Lone Tree Consulting, and will also be enjoying more time with his grandchildren! …The Association of BC Forest Professionals honours Al Waters – Retired RPF and Woodlotter Since 1970. Al has made a significant impact on the woodlot program, first as a Senior Woodlot Licence Forester in the Tenures Branch (1997-2003), and later as a manager of two woodlot licences near Quesnel.

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Accomplishments update highlights nature-based forestry solutions taking action on climate change

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
February 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC), together with the Office of the Chief Forester, the BC Ministry of Forests, and many project partners across the province of British Columbia, has released an accomplishments update highlighting the innovative nature-based forestry solutions taking real action on climate change. …The accomplishments update titled “Rising to the Climate Change Challenge,” shares details about the collaboration of provincial, national, and international partners to harness the power of forestry as a part of the global solution. …Since inception, FESBC has approved $261 million in funding for 305 projects through all eight regions of the province. …Throughout the province, 4.8 million cubic metres of wood has been put to efficient use in secondary forest products facilities instead of burning that wood in a cutblock. 

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B.C.’s forest loss can be seen from space

By Nathan Griffiths
Vancouver Sun
February 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

B.C. has lost so much tree cover over the past 20-plus years that you can see it from space.  It has lost more tree canopy since 2000 than any other province, driven largely by wildfires and forestry practices.  According to data from Global Forest Watch, an online forest monitoring platform, B.C. lost 86,000 square kilometres of tree cover from 2001 to 2021, roughly 2½ times the size of Vancouver Island. About 30 per cent of that loss was due to wildfires.   Scarring from clear cut logging can be seen on the hills near Nanaimo in 2020.   While some of the tree canopy will recover with time, it won’t won’t necessarily be the same forest that comes back. Logged old-growth forests, some of which were many thousands of years old, will never return, replaced instead with second-growth forests of a very different nature.

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Your favourite brand of toilet paper may be cut from an important Canadian forest

By Natasha O’Neill
CTV News
February 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A U.S.-based non-profit advocacy group is pushing toilet paper manufacturers to stop using Canada’s boreal forest as a resource.  The Natural Resources Defense Council recently released a report on manufacturers that it says are using what it calls virgin forests — previously untouched forests (sometimes called old-growth forests) — as a resource for toilet paper.  CTVNews.ca reached out to the toilet paper manufacturers mentioned in the report to understand sustainability goals and how the industry is adapting to the changing climate. But experts say these big companies need to do more by shifting toilet paper away from forests to more sustainable options.  …The group claims the majority of popular brands in Canada and the U.S. are using wood fibre and pulp from the Canadian boreal forest, alleging that this practice leads to the destruction of ecosystems and decreases the carbon-capturing power of trees.

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Future of Forestry to be discussed in University of Northern BC forum

By Ted Clarke
Prince George Citizen
February 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

James Steidle

In the wake of sawmill curtailments and shutdowns and the permanent closure of Canfor’s pulp line at Prince George Pulp and Paper, a group of concerned stakeholders is gathering Feb. 28 at the University of British Columbia to discuss future of our forests and how they should be managed to increase sustainability and maximize job potential.  James Steidle, the organizer of the Future of Forestry in Our Region: A Community Conversation, says the forum is needed to inform the community about alternatives to existing forest practices and what should be done to protect species habitat, promote forest vitality and minimize the effects of logging.  “It’s not just about growing plantations for sawmills that are throwing everybody out of work,” said Steidle. “There’s other values there, there’s tourism, hunting, trapping and ranching to consider. We want to talk about tenure reform and talk about maybe getting a community forest for Prince George and alternatives to clear-cutting.

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Guest column: Poor information will cost taxpayers, says pro-logging group

By the Friends of the Municipal Forest
Cowichan Valley Citizen
February 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

North Cowichan’s tax base will continue to be depleted if elected officials proceed with a flawed study that sells short forestry revenues by 100 per cent while overstating gains from carbon credits.  Since the 1960s North Cowichan has been one of a handful of small municipally owned successful forest businesses. The small forest reserve balanced environmental, recreational, and economic interests until a small but very vocal group started demanding a stop to all timber harvesting.  The reserve, which covers 5,470 hectares, has the potential to generate more than $2.1 million annually in revenue for the municipality.  …The harvest rate is also 50 per cent less than the actual rate of growth which means the forest is growing faster than it is being harvested.  …So, a small group of community leaders, professional and retired foresters reviewed the report and found significant flaws and misleading conclusions.

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Forestry changes in B.C. don’t go far enough to protect against wildfire: expert

By Gordon Hoekstra
Vancouver Sun
February 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Changes introduced by the B.C. government to begin to give forest health priority over timber supply don’t go far enough to build up wildfire resilience, says a B.C. expert.  …A key measure is new forest landscape planning tables that will replace industry-led forestry plans.  Robert Gray, a wildfire ecologist with decades of experience in B.C., said the changes, while welcome, don’t specifically address wildfire resilience, which is also a critical issue for forest health, wildlife, biodiversity, watersheds and jobs.  …The forest landscape has to be transformed so that fire behaviour can be changed, said Gray, who has contributed to numerous academic papers on wildfire research and has written on the topic for the International Association for Fire Ecology, the Nature Conservancy and others.  The forest landscape can be made more fire resilient by methods that include logging, thinning and prescribed burns at low fire intensity, according to Gray and other researchers

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This February, So Far, Full of Forest Stewardship Portents and Prodigies

By John Betts
Western Forestry Contractors’ Association
February 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

So far, February has been an interesting month for forestry. Recent forums and announcements have provided more clarity and evidence for the transformation our government intends to forest policy and practice in British Columbia. Our WFCA conference at the beginning of the month anticipated some of this by focusing in part on the threats and opportunities we face in adapting to climate change and reducing the risk of natural disasters. Days after that the joined-at-the-hip Ministry of Forests and Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship held a multi sectoral forum on the implementation of the Old Growth Strategy Review (OGSR) recommendations. Also in this newsletter:

  • Latest Forecasts for Seedling Demand Released by MoF
  • 2022 Low Bid Auction Tree Planting Tenders Defy Inflation

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The Woodland Almanac

Federation of British Columbia Woodlot Associations
February 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

We’d like to congratulate Al Waters, RPF(Ret), who was acknowledged with the prestigious Distinguished Forest Professional award this year by the Association of BC Forest Professionals. …Gord Chipman reports – “In the past few months, I have been working closely with Brian McNaughton as I transition into my role as General Manager. As a result, there have been many introductions. I have met the Minister of Forests, the Associate Deputy Minister, the Timber Pricing Manager (actually Al is an old friend) and the Tenures staff in the Branch.” …After surveying over 100 woodlot licensees, conducting interviews, polls, participating in meetings, hosting workshops, and obtaining legal advice, the JTF developed the following recommendation. The FBCWA/WPDC Joint Task Force recommends the Federation of BC Woodlot Associations and the Woodlot Product Development Council develop a singularly governed entity to serve the needs of Woodlot Licensees in the Province of BC.

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Ontario invests $2.1 million in new trees

Northern Ontario Business
February 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Natural Resources and Forestry is handing $2.1 million  to Forests Ontario, a leading charity prompting sustainable forest and grasslands to support tree planting through its projects and programs. Forests Ontario said it has planted more than 41 million over 20,500 hectares of land across the province. …Forests Ontario said planting trees is the natural and best way to fight climate change. And there are economic benefits to be had. In the Ottawa Valley, 20 forest products mills in the area employ 2,200 people and generates more than $85 million in taxes.

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Black Ash Recovery Strategy causing concern

By Elisa Nguyen
Fort Frances Times
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ontario — A provincial recovery strategy to protect the endangered Black Ash tree, has caused concerns for forestry stakeholders. Ian Armstrong, at Boundary Waters Forest Management Corporation, said that while he agrees that a strategy to protect Black Ash is needed, he compared the current one to placing a “glass dome” over northwestern Ontario, restricting movement of the forest industry and restricting private landowners. The government declared Black Ash as an endangered species in the province of Ontario due to an Emerald Ash Borer infestation… The Black Ash Recovery Strategy prohibits harming, harassing, possessing, transporting, trading, and selling of live or dead Black Ash, under the Endangered Species Act. Several restrictions will be enforced on both private and Crown land where Black Ash is present, such as protection for entire wetland sites in which one or more Black Ash trees are present, and a 28-meter reserve applied on each individual Black Ash tree.

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US Dept of Agriculture Invests More than $48.6 Million to Manage Risks, Combat Climate Change

The US Department of Agriculture
February 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) will invest more than $48.6 million this year through the Joint Chiefs’ Landscape Restoration Partnership for projects that mitigate wildfire risk, improve water quality, restore forest ecosystems, and ultimately contribute to USDA’s efforts to combat climate change. This year, the USDA… will invest in projects, including 14 new projects, bringing together agricultural producers, forest landowners, and National Forest System lands to improve forest health using available Farm Bill conservation programs and other authorities. …“These projects, and the $930 million of investments being made across 21 landscapes in highest-risk firesheds in the western U.S., speak to our commitment to improve forest health and resiliency across the nation’s forests to reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfire,” said Forest Service Chief Randy Moore. …The Partnership promotes cross-boundary work needed to increase the scale of our wildfire risk reduction efforts to protect people and communities, critical infrastructure, water supplies, and ecosystems from extreme wildfire.”

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A fifth of California’s Sierra Nevada conifer forests are stranded in habitats that have grown too warm for them

By Rob Jordan, Stanford University
Phys.Org
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The conifer tree native to lower elevations of California’s Sierra Nevada mountain range finds itself in an unrecognizable climate. A new Stanford-led study reveals that about a fifth of all Sierra Nevada conifer forests are a “mismatch” for their regions’ warming weather. The paper highlights how such “zombie forests” are temporarily cheating death, likely to be replaced with tree species better adapted to the climate after one of California’s increasingly frequent catastrophic wildfires. “Forest and fire managers need to know where their limited resources can have the most impact,” said lead author Avery Hill. “This study provides a strong foundation for understanding where forest transitions are likely to occur, and how that will affect future ecosystem processes like wildfire regimes.” …The study’s first-of-its-kind maps paint a picture of rapidly changing landscapes that will require more adaptive wildfire management.

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Insurance Group Invests $25M in New California Wildfire Innovation Fund

By California State Automobile Association Insurance Group
Business Wire
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

WALNUT CREEK, California — CSAA Insurance Group announced a $25M commitment to the California Wildfire Innovation Fund, a climate-solutions strategy that aims to decrease the severity and frequency of catastrophic wildfire by supporting forest restoration-related economic development. The California Wildfire Innovation Fund was developed by CSAA Insurance Group in partnership with Blue Forest, the non-profit behind the Forest Resilience Bond, which deploys private capital to finance forest restoration projects for wildfire prevention. CSAA Insurance Group was one of the Forest Resilience Bond’s first investors. …Alongside a financial return, the California Wildfire Innovation Fund is expected to deliver numerous environmental, economic and social benefits, including: climate and ecological resilience… community safety… job creation… and positive health outcomes. For more information about the California Wildfire Innovation Fund and Blue Forest Asset Management, visit Blue Forest.

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Oregon officials work ahead of wildfire season to reduce risk

By Brian Bull
Oregon Public Broadcasting
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Nearly $3 million is being invested into projects intended to lessen wildfire risk across Oregon. The Oregon State Fire Marshal’s office says $2.7 million are going towards what’s called community wildfire protection plans. There are over two dozen ready-to-go in 25 counties. They include fuel mitigation programs, defensible space projects, and home assessments. Alison Green, the public affairs director said this is a new initiative. …The funds are part of the OSFM’s Fire Adapted Oregon initiative, created by Senate Bill 762. Oregon had its worst wildfire season in 2020. Meanwhile, Green said the wildfire outlook for 2023 looks more typical than some of the more severe seasons. She added while it’s still early… “we’re hoping that it’s a more traditional fire season, a little bit later into the summer, versus some of the ones that we’ve seen in the past that were starting in May.”

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Federal agency proposes California spotted owl protection

By Olga Rodriguez
The Associated Press in ABC News
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SAN FRANCISCO — Federal wildlife officials announced a proposal to classify one of two dwindling California spotted owl populations as endangered after a lawsuit by conservation groups required the government to reassess a decision not to protect the brown and white birds. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed that California spotted owls that have their habitats in coastal and Southern California be protected under the Endangered Species Act. That population “does not have a strong ability to withstand normal variations in environmental conditions,” which led the agency to propose listing it as endangered, wildlife officials said. The other California spotted owl population, which lives in Sierra Nevada forests in California and western Nevada, would be classified as threatened, the agency said. The habitat of the medium-sized brown owl… is under serious threat from current logging practices and climate change, including increased drought, disease and more extreme wildfires.

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Forest activist blocks logging in Freshwater, California

By Jackson Guilfoil
Eureka Times-Standard
February 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Freshwater California — On Sunday, an anti-logging activist suspended himself via nets and rope in a contraption called a sky pod in a thicket of trees located in Freshwater in an effort to prevent Humboldt Redwood Company from cutting down the trees.  The activist, Aristotle, also began a hunger strike in order to protest the planned logging and said via a news release from Lost Coast Forest Action that he was taking supplements that would allow him to live without food for months. His location ground the planned logging to a halt, and a spokesperson for Humboldt Redwood Company said they were evaluating how to respond. …John Andersen, a spokesperson for Humboldt Redwood Company, said that he did not know how much money his company was losing per day, but he said the harvest plan covers approximately 1% of the Freshwater watershed and would not affect nearby threatened species, such as the northern spotted owl.

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New Bureau of Land Management forest plan in Southern Oregon speeds up wildfire prevention. But it has its critics

By Roman Battaglia
Oregon Public Broadcasting
February 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A controversial forest management project in Southern Oregon’s Applegate Valley recently gained approval from the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.  Called the Late Mungers project, the BLM says it’s designed to make forests more resistant to extreme wildfire.  That’s accomplished through 830 acres of commercial logging and 7,500 acres of prescribed fire and smaller tree thinning. It’s the first example of the BLM’s Integrated Vegetation Management plan, which speeds up community review in order to do those things faster.  BLM District Manager Elizabeth Burghard said since releasing a draft of the project proposal almost a year ago, they’ve been integrating more site-specific analysis, and trying to get as many eyes on the project as possible.  …But the project continues to face backlash from environmentalists, including the Applegate Siskiyou Alliance and the Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center.

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Keystone of recreation within species conservation

By Jamie Hinrichs, US Forest Service
The South Tahoe Now
February 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Nevada — Rumor has it that outdoor recreation and species conservation are at odds. …However, a collaboration between the Forest Service and a destination ski resort is turning that stereotype on its head to protect a keystone tree — the whitebark pine. Heavenly Mountain Resort spans the California-Nevada border in South Lake Tahoe. With 7,050 acres of national forest land on the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit and the Humboldt –Toiyabe National Forest, it operates under a special use permit. In many ways, this permit fosters a unique relationship between the Forest Service and the resort, one which also has significant benefits for the local economy. …“Although there is high visitation in this concentrated area, the Forest Service and Heavenly work together to protect sensitive species,” said Cecilia Reed, Mountain Resorts Manager. The ongoing, collaborative efforts to protect the whitebark pine illustrate the symbiosis of those two goals.

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Extra funding will be provided to Colorado for fighting wildfires

By Patrick Huston
BollyInside
February 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The federal government is providing $37 million to Colorado to safeguard the environment and reduce the likelihood of wildfires. The Biden Administration revealed on Thursday that it is increasing spending for wildfire prevention. This year, the Forest Service intends to concentrate on 16,000 acres. Investment assistance is provided via the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act and the Inflation Reduction Act. “We’ve known what we wanted to do for a very long time, but we haven’t had the money to achieve it. This money is generational. And we are aware that in order to lower the community’s danger of wildfire, we must collaborate with partners to determine the best locations and times to carry out this activity “said Frank Beum, a regional forester for the Forest Service. The Forest Service’s 10-year wildfire catastrophe strategy includes all of this. The initiative received more than $18 million and looked after 11,000 acres last year.

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Natural success: Forestry data startup moves to New Jersey as it takes next steps in growth

By Brett Johnson
ROI-NJ
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

The seed of Jerseyan Peter McHale’s forestry data startup was planted when he overheard a colleague, Matthew Carpenter, discussing his chess-playing robot. Today, they’ve got a novel business model: The use of artificial intelligence tools similar to those used in self-driving vehicles to capture and process the data hidden in forest canopies. In their view, the idea could boost the timber industry’s bottom lines while also addressing climate change. Their company, Gaia AI, which was spun out of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, recently moved from Massachusetts to New Jersey. They’re bringing the backing of investors with them, after recently concluding a $3 million pre-seed funding round. McHale was in Sweden visiting with some of the largest timber companies in the world, and said the industries rooted in the forestry sector are excited about what the now Newark-based startup has to offer.

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Pisgah, Nantahala plan done: Forest service still seeking feedback, logging fears remain

By Andrew Jones
Asheville Citizen-Times
February 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

ASHEVILLE – The long-awaited approved final version of a plan that will define the future for a huge swath of Western North Carolina forests is not good news for conservation advocates, but it’s also not a surprise.  The U.S. Forest Service Feb. 17 announced the revised version of a management plan for the Nantahala and Pisgah forests has been finalized and is live on its website.  The 361-page plan “is a framework to address incredibly complex challenges like climate change and inv  asive species, impacts from development on adjacent private lands, and high levels of visitor use,” according to James Melonas, forest supervisor of the National Forests in North Carolina.  …But many organizations advocating for a plan more oriented toward conservation, especially of old-growth forests, are condemning the plan and say they offered what they saw as opportunities for consensus but were ignored by the Forest Service.

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Forest Plan Fails Pisgah-Nantahala National Forest

By Will Harlan
Center for Biological Diversity
February 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

ASHEVILLE, N.C.— The U.S. Forest Service released the Pisgah-Nantahala National Forest Plan today, quadrupling logging and reducing protections for the most visited national forest in the country. The Forest Service disregarded a record-setting 36,000 public comments supporting more and stronger protections for the 1.1-million-acre national forest and ignored the will of a crowd of more than 400 people who rallied outside the Forest Service headquarters last fall urging the agency to safeguard more of the forest. “The Forest Service flat-out refused to listen to the public and consider easy, win-win solutions that were widely supported,” said Will Harlan, a scientist at the Center for Biological Diversity. “Instead it’s pursuing its own hyper-aggressive logging agenda that sentences the forest to decades of conflict, litigation, and community resistance.” The newly released Pisgah-Nantahala Forest Plan is… a map that determines which parts of the forest will be logged and which will be protected.

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Chemical signals from fungi tell bark beetles which trees to infest

By Freda Kreier
Science News
February 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Fungi may help some tree-killer beetles turn a tree’s natural defense system against itself. The Eurasian spruce bark beetle has massacred millions of conifers in forests across Europe. Now, research suggests that fungi associated with these bark beetles are key players in the insect’s hostile takeovers. These fungi warp the chemical defenses of host trees to create an aroma that attracts beetles to burrow. This fungi-made perfume might explain why bark beetles tend to swarm the same tree. As climate change makes Europe’s forests more vulnerable to insect invasions, understanding this relationship could help scientists develop new countermeasures to ward off beetle attacks. …This ability of bark beetles to overcome the powerful defense system of conifers has led some scientists to wonder if fungi might be helping. …Combining pheromones with fungi-derived chemicals might be the secret to entice more beetles into traps, making them more effective.

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Carbon uptake in tropical forests withers in drier future: Study

By John Cannon
Mongabay
February 23, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

A new study incorporating satellite data on organic material, or biomass, in tropical forests with experimental data about the effects of temperature and precipitation suggests that forests may lose substantial amounts of carbon by the end of the 21st century. Even with low continued carbon emissions, tropical forests, especially those in the southern Amazon, could lose between 6.8 and 12% of their aboveground carbon. With higher emissions, they could lose 13.3 to 20.1% of their carbon stores. The results highlight the need to reduce global temperatures rapidly to maintain the healthy forests best able to sequester carbon from the atmosphere. The team reported their findings Feb. 6 in the journal Nature Climate Change.

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Forestry workers’ union to discuss support plan with ministry

Radio New Zealand News
February 22, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The union representing forestry workers will meet with the Ministry of Social Development on Thursday to develop a support plan for the Cyclone Gabrielle recovery.  First Union assistant general secretary Louisa Jones said nearly 500 workers were unable to work in areas which remained inaccessible or unstable.  She hoped the meeting would form the basis of a plan to help contractors until work could resume.  …Prime Minister Chris Hipkins told Morning Report he could not rule out forestry companies being included as a part of the government’s $50 million support package announced on Monday.  Meanwhile, Tolaga Bay farmer Bridget Parker said out-of-work contractors had been turning up at her property to help clean up the damage after hectares of forestry slash and silt crashed into her kiwifruit orchard. …There is palpable anger in flood-affected communities after Cyclone Gabrielle caused logs and silt to clog farms, rivers, and beaches for the third time in the last year.

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Suburban bushland restored with 150 types of native trees by retired entomologist over 10 years

By Michelle Gately
ABC News, Australia
February 17, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Bob Newby

The land opposite Bob Newby’s house looks like any other slice of suburban bush.   But if you venture off the concrete footpath towards the creek, you’ll find some rustic tracks and dozens of trees in varying stages of growth.  “When I retired, I thought I needed to have something to keep myself occupied,” Mr Newby said.  “I had been watching for a long time the decrease in habitats, the falling levels of biodiversity.  But it was more than just planting some trees and now he’s a proud OGRE — that’s Old Guy Restoring Ecosystems.  Mr Newby’s career as an entomologist gave him a unique insight when it came to choosing species that would bring more birds, bugs and butterflies to his neighbourhood in north Rockhampton, central Queensland.  A decade later, the area has become a training ground for conservation students and an example of how communities can restore suburban bushland.

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Some in forestry sector ‘won’t recover’ from Cyclone Gabrielle

By Benn Bathgate
New Zealand Stuff
February 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: International

NEW ZEALAND — Forestry jobs are almost certain to be lost after Cyclone Gabrielle smashed a swathe through Tairāwhiti, Hawkes Bay, Coromandel and Northland regions – almost 30 per cent of the country’s forestry plantation. According to Forest Industry Contractors Association chief Prue Younger, who lives in Napier, while it’s too early to assess the full extent of the damage to the sector, there will be job losses. “Some contractors will have lost their livelihoods this week,” she said. …Forestry Owners Association president Grant Dodson also said it was too early to put a cost to the devestation, but that “forestry has been heavily impacted across the area of the cyclone”. He said processing plants were closed, and that issues around road access would impact “hundreds it not thousands of forestry workers”. …Dr Tim Payn​, principal scientist at Scion said they are working with the sector on the Resilient Forests Research programme…

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