Daily News for July 13, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

Major US housing bill becomes law without Trump’s signature

The Tree Frog Forestry News
July 13, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

A major US housing affordability bill became law without President Trump’s signature. In other Business news: Mercer received a Nasdaq non-compliance notice; Hunt Forest Products begins shipments on new rail connection; International Paper temporarily suspends its Alabama mill; and the EPA requires hazardous chemical removal at shuttered Cosmo Specialty Fibers mill. Meanwhile: Numera Analytics says the Iran conflict has not derailed the global recovery; technology is changing homebuilding in BC; US homebuilders face shortage of skilled workers; Rebox Corp appoints Kyle Otting CEO; and the Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau elected a new board.

In Forestry news: the Trump administration narrows Endangered Species Act protections; Californians debate the Fix Our Forests Act; BC outdoor groups prioritize resource roads for recreation access; and a European report says timber producers face fibre supply challenges. Meanwhile: a new warning for tick-borne disease; and why doctors say we need to take wildfire smoke seriously. 

Finally, in case you missed it, we reintroduced political risk expert Robert McKellar, who helps forest sector leaders make sense of today’s relentless news cycle and focus on what really matters.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau’s 2026 Annual Member Meeting

Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau
July 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Members of the Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau from Canada, Europe, and the U.S. met at Spirit Ridge Resort in Osoyoos, British Columbia, during the last week of June for the PLIB Annual Meeting and semi‑annual Board session. Before the meetings began, members toured the Mercer Mass Timber glulam facility in Okanagan Falls, gaining a firsthand look at this long‑established operation. During the business session, the membership elected the 2026–2027 Board of Directors and welcomed new directors Valentina Wolfrum (Rettenmeier) and Natalie Peace (Weyerhaeuser). Members also heard from Jackson Morrill, President of the American Wood Council (AWC), who provided an update on AWC initiatives on sustainability, building codes and regulations, and PLIB’s collaborative efforts. Outside the meeting room, attendees enjoyed time together in the Okanagan Valley—golfing, visiting the Nk’Mip Desert Cultural Centre, and touring Nk’Mip Cellars.

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Rebox Corp Appoints Kyle Otting as CEO of North America’s Leading Once-Used Corrugated Box Business

By Rebox Corp.
PR Newswire
July 13, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

MONTREAL – Rebox Corp, North America’s largest buyer and seller of once-used corrugated boxes, announced the appointment of Kyle Otting as Chief Executive Officer, effective July 8, 2026. Otting succeeds Mark Young, who co-founded Rebox in 1990. This appointment comes as demand accelerates for the reusable packaging model Rebox pioneered: buying once-used corrugated boxes directly from businesses looking for incremental revenue compared to recycling, then reselling them to businesses seeking a lower-cost, more sustainable alternative to new boxes. Rebox manages the sourcing, quality control, and logistics — delivering easy, user-friendly solutions to its partners. Today, Rebox operates through more than 35 distribution centres across the U.S. and Canada, serving more than 2,000 businesses, including Fortune 500 companies. …Otting held leadership roles at IFCO Systems and CHEP USA before serving as CEO of two leading reusable packaging companies, 48forty Solutions and PLA Solutions. 

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Bienville Lumber Company sawmill begins commercial lumber shipments

By Dakota Smith
The Woodworking Network
July 10, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East, United States

TAYLOR, Louisiana Bienville Lumber Company, a partnership between Tolko Industries and Hunt Forest Products, has begun shipping lumber by rail following the opening of a new Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) rail connection, expanding the Louisiana sawmill’s distribution network to customers across North America. CPKC President and CEO Keith Creel joined Hunt Forest Products Chairman Trott Hunt, Tolko President and CEO Pino Pucci and other company leaders for the event at the Bienville Parish facility. …The mill produced over 160 million board feet of southern yellow pine lumber in 2024 and is looking to more than double that annual output in the next several years. …According to Tolko, the new rail line represents a significant logistics enhancement that strengthens the mill’s supply chain and broadens its ability to serve customers across North America.

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NAHB Applauds Landmark Housing Bill Becoming Law

The National Association of Home Builders
July 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Bill Owens, chairman of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and a home builder and remodeler from Worthington, Ohio, issued the following statement after the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act was enacted into law: “NAHB applauds Congress and the Trump administration for delivering a bipartisan housing victory for the American people. Strong support in both chambers makes clear that housing affordability is a national priority. By reducing regulatory barriers, helping builders increase supply, and expanding opportunities for homeownership and rental housing, this landmark law is an important step toward easing the nation’s housing affordability crisis. We look forward to working with the administration and Congress to implement it.”

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EPA to force the removal of leaking acids from deteriorating pulp mill

By Conrad Swanson
The Seattle Times
July 11, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

ABERDEEN, Washington — Federal regulators will force the removal of toxic, highly corrosive chemicals from a defunct and leaking pulp mill along the Chehalis River, officials confirmed this week. Richard Bassett, the U.K. businessman who owns Cosmo Specialty Fibers, must start removing vast quantities of these chemicals from the site this month or the Environmental Protection Agency will step in and take over. The mill has been leaking hazardous chemicals for years now, Bassett defiant in the face of fines and demands from environmental regulators. …The long-struggling pulp and paper industry had dipped from the public and regulatory spotlight for years. But after the chemical tank ruptured at a Longview mill, people in and outside of the industry have demanded accountability. …The decision might kill any hopes of reviving the facility, which once made up the backbone of its hometown, Cosmopolis, in Grays Harbor County. [to access the full story a Seattle Times subscription is required]

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International Paper Temporarily Suspends Operations at its Pine Hill, Alabama, Mill

By INternational Paper
PR Newswire
July 9, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MEMPHIS, Tennessee  — International Paper proactively decided to temporarily suspend operations at its Pine Hill, Alabama, mill after a weather event damaged a critical roof at the facility. International Paper values the safety of its employees and contractors above all else and took this action out of an abundance of caution. The company is assessing required repairs and currently expects to resume manufacturing in August. The company is also working closely with customers to manage any potential impacts and appreciates the support of its employees, customers and stakeholders while working through this process safely. [END]

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Finance & Economics

Iran war has not derailed global recovery

Numera Analytics
July 13, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

Click to enlarge

The Iran war has introduced significant macroeconomic uncertainty, with elevated geopolitical instability and higher energy prices eroding consumer sentiment and delaying business investment. This has raised stagflation concerns, particularly for energy-importing regions, and contributed to renewed inflation pressures across developed markets (DM). Despite these headwinds, the global economy has proved resilient. Industrial production in DMs has expanded at a 4.5% annualized rate in recent months, even as retail sales growth softened on higher oil prices and weaker sentiment. The war’s impact has been cushioned by reduced oil dependence compared with past shocks, combined with powerful tailwinds from accelerating AI infrastructure spending and fiscal stimulus in major economies. We expect only a minor slowdown in DM GDP growth, moderating from 1.8% last year to 1.6% this year, and rebounding to 1.8% in 2027. The Eurozone faces the greatest pressure given its reliance on energy imports.

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Tariffs and policy uncertainty: the wild card in the 2026 wood products market

By Dustin Jalbert
RISI Fastmarkets
July 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

In 2025, trade policy added clear financial pressure, especially for Canadian sawmills. Average duties on lumber shipped to the US rose from 14% to 35% last summer. A 10% Section 232 tariff was then implemented in October. …This year, the picture is less about a single sharp increase and more about unresolved uncertainty. …The effects reach different parts of the market in different ways. Canadian mills face higher effective production costs due to increased duties and tariffs and industry rationalization, particularly in BC, is likely to continue. …US mill operators sit on the other side of this. They will likely continue to gain market share this year due to higher duties and protective measures, despite flat demand. Wholesalers, traders and importers are affected by tariff changes, shifting freight conditions and supply availability. …Secondary manufacturers and housing-linked buyers… most goods still face tariffs, placing further pressure on builder margins, including higher wood products prices. 

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Lumber cost decreases offset by operating cost gains

By Tommy Osborne
CTV News
July 10, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Canadian lumber industry saw enormous price spikes during the pandemic years of 2020-2022, with costs close to triple what they are today for some products. … “We saw prices skyrocket during COVID, but so too did the cost to operate,” said Aspen Dudzic, the Alberta Forest Products Assocation’s communications director. “And interestingly, post-COVID, we saw the market prices for lumber go down, but the costs to operate have not come down in the same way.” Even though lumber costs have seen a huge drop in prices in a vacuum, why haven’t these cost savings been passed on to the consumer? …“The supply chain is really complex,” Dudzic said. “Nothing we do operates in a vacuum, so there’s a lot of other compounding costs that we have to look at, like inflationary pressures, upticks in fuel and energy prices. …Top of mind is the ongoing trade war with the US.

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The overlooked obstacle keeping America from building the homes it needs

By Amanda Macias
Fox Business
July 12, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

High mortgage rates aren’t the only reason homeownership remains out of reach for many Americans. Behind the scenes, homebuilders are grappling with an overlooked challenge — a shortage of skilled workers — that is slowing construction and making it harder to close the nation’s housing gap. Builders say the labor shortage is creating a ripple effect throughout the housing market, delaying projects, raising construction costs and limiting the number of new homes coming online at a time when demand continues to outpace supply. “Labor is one of the largest and most expensive inputs when it comes to home production and land development,” Jim Tobin, president and CEO of the NAHB. He said that every month, the construction industry is short by approximately 250,000 workers. …A recent NAHB report estimates builders will need roughly 723,000 new workers annually to keep pace with demand and help close the nation’s 1.5 million-home housing gap.

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Mercer International Faces Nasdaq Non-Compliance Over Bid Price

Globe and Mail
July 11, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

On July 9, 2026, Mercer International received a notice from Nasdaq staff that the company’s common stock had failed to meet the exchange’s minimum bid price requirement of $1.00 per share for 30 consecutive business days, triggering a formal non-compliance status under Nasdaq rules. The notification does not immediately affect the listing or trading of Mercer’s securities, but it places the company under an initial 180-day compliance period in which it must restore its share price to at least $1.00 for ten consecutive business days to avoid potential future delisting pressure. Mercer is working to regain compliance, though it acknowledges there is no assurance it can meet the requirement within the timeframe. The development… could influence investor sentiment and the company’s capital markets flexibility depending on its ability to achieve and sustain the mandated bid price threshold. [to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

From Forest to Frame: Technology is Changing Homebuilding in BC

By The Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship
The University of British Columbia
June 23, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada West

…emerging technologies like timber processing centres could help build homes faster and more affordably, particularly for multi-family dwellings. Timber processing centres, such as the Hundegger computer numerical control (CNC) machine, use remotely operated and automated saws and tools to transform timber into custom wood components used in, for example, building construction. …Value-added products like mass timber and prefabricated wood components for homes sourced from a variety of fibre types … are a big part of the vision for housing in the province. …In 2014, the Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship (FES) at UBC was the first site in North America to install a Hundegger Robot Drive timber processing centre. …FES industry workshops, like its hands-on Design for Manufacturing and Assembly (DFMA) workshop, expose forestry professionals to advanced techniques using tools like timber processing centres, inspiring industry members to think outside the box about how this technology could be applied in real-world contexts. 

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Forestry

Why the ‘backbone’ of B.C. outdoor recreation access is in jeopardy, groups explain

By Glenda Luymes
Vancouver Sun
July 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

…As some resource roads across the province fall into disrepair … outdoor groups are working to save them. A survey created by the Outdoor Recreation Council of B.C. opened last week to understand which roads matter most for outdoor recreation. No one is suggesting that every metre of the 600,000 kilometres of resource roads across B.C. can be maintained, said Louise Pedersen, the council’s executive director. But creating an inventory is the first step in a process that could eventually include discussions with the B.C. government about saving the most important. …Many of the roads British Columbians use to access the backcountry were created by resource companies … said Monika Bittel, advocacy chairperson with the Federation of Mountain Clubs of B.C. When the projects wrap up, the company continues to hold liability for the road and must follow a process to decommission it. “Their mandate is not recreation,” she said.

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Inviting input on watershed plan for Goat River

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

People are invited to share their input and help guide the development of recommendations and long-term solutions for water supply and ecosystem health in the Goat River watershed. The Province of British Columbia, in partnership with yaqan nuʔkiy (Lower Kootenay Band) and the Regional District of Central Kootenay (RDCK), has launched a tripartite working group to address growing water-scarcity challenges in the Goat River watershed and develop recommendations for long-term water management in the Creston Valley. As part of the process, a survey will gather insights from community members, water users, farmers, industry and other interested parties about their vision for the Goat River watershed. The survey is available until Aug. 1, 2026. …The Goat River Watershed Collective Conversations Working Group brings together representatives from the Province, yaqan nuʔkiy and the RDCK. It will serve as a recommendation-making body, developing joint recommendations for consideration by yaqan nuʔkiy leadership, the RDCK board of directors and provincial ministries. 

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City of Powell River Council objects to forest ministry letter

By Paul Galinski
Coast Reporter
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

City of Powell River Council has directed staff to write correspondence to the ministry of forests, objecting to correspondence from the ministry regarding Powell River Community Forest’s new forest licence. …Acting mayor Cindy Elliot said the new BCTS plan came out with additional areas for planned forestry that overlapped the community forest’s new timber licence. …The response essentially says that they are not required to do what we asked and they would rather wait until the minister makes a decision before they change what they are doing.” …Councillor Rob Southcott said the community forest indirectly compensates for the loss of a lot of revenue from a major taxpayer due to the permanent curtailment of the paper mill. …“We don’t want BC Timber Sales coming in and starting to log in the area that we believe should be included in the community forest,” said Powell River Community Forest president Greg Hemphill

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Trump admin narrows Endangered Species Act protections

By Ian Stevenson
E&E News by Politico
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Doug Burgum

The Trump administration redefined how the federal government will interpret a key word in the Endangered Species Act, narrowing the protections afforded to wildlife in the bedrock environmental law. The move focuses on the word “harm” in the ESA, which prohibits injuring or killing any species that the federal government determines to be endangered or threatened. The Interior Department announced that the change had been finalized, but the regulation was not yet in the Federal Register. Under the change laid out last year, regulators with the Fish and Wildlife Service and NOAA Fisheries will no longer interpret “harm” of a protected species to include modifications to a plant or animal’s habitat that could be detrimental to its survival. Trump administration officials have argued that the more expansive interpretation — which has been in place nearly as long as the 1973 law — does not meet the original intent of the Endangered Species Act.

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Wildland firefighters say things are ‘basically as dry as they can get’ in Colorado’s forests, fueling erratic wildfire behavior

By Ryan Spencer
Sky-Hi News
July 11, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A historic drought is turning Colorado’s mountain landscapes into a tinderbox. After last winter’s record-low snowpack, wildland firefighters who continuously monitor indexes of weather and climate data to help predict wildfire risk and how conditions might affect fire behavior say they’re staring down unprecedented levels of dryness. “That lack of snowpack has had a very real impact on the fuels, the vegetation — specifically the large logs that are on the ground,” said Jim King, the fire behavior analyst for the Willow Fire burning near Leadville. “Those are 1,000-hour fuels. The way we measure those in this line of work, they’re just at the very peak. They’re basically as dry as they can get.” …King described how bone-dry logs in the dense forest near Turquoise Lake, along with high winds, contributed to 100-foot columns of flames and extreme fire behavior that at times threw “spots” …more than a half mile ahead of the blaze.

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A Wildfire Bill Is Splitting Northern California Over the Shasta-Trinity Forest

Active NorCal
July 10, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A bill pitched as a shield against catastrophic wildfire is dividing Northern California over the future of forests like the Shasta-Trinity. The Fix Our Forests Act has lawmakers and conservationists lining up on opposite sides, each claiming the region’s safety is at stake. Supporters argue the legislation cuts through bureaucratic delay, speeding approval for the controlled burns and vegetation-thinning projects meant to reduce fire risk. One provision would let electric utilities holding permits or easements clear vegetation near power lines on federal land without a separate timber sale, a change backers say removes a needless bottleneck. Rep. David Gallagher, who recently won a special election to represent the district, framed the bill as essential in an era of nearly year-round fire seasons, and the measure has drawn support from figures including Gov. Gavin Newsom and Sen. Alex Padilla.

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European forests are growing, but the timber industry relies on imports

En.ilsole24ore.com
July 12, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

ITALY — The good news is that European forests continue to grow: according to the 2025–2026 Annual Report of the European Organisation of the Sawmill Industry (EOS), a body representing around 80 per cent of European sawn timber production, European forests now cover over 232 million hectares, equivalent to 35.4% of the continent’s land area, and over the last 35 years they have expanded by more than 23 million hectares, with an average increase of around 665,000 hectares each year. At the same time, Europe’s forest stock has reached 38.3 billion cubic metres, an increase of around 45% compared with 1990. Yet – and this is the less positive news – the availability of raw materials for the timber industry remains one of the main challenges to the sector’s competitiveness and to Europe’s sustainability objectives, as emerged from the Forestry-Timber General Assembly organised in Bologna by Filiera Legno (an association representing almost 600 companies in the timber industry). 

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Health & Safety

A ‘rapidly rising’ tick-borne disease is making rounds in Canada. It’s not Lyme disease.

By Christl Dabu
CTV News
July 13, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

©Govt of BC

Canadians exploring the outdoors this summer are being warned about threats other than Lyme disease from tick bites as cases rise. While Lyme disease is the most common concern about ticks, health officials are increasingly worried about another tick-borne disease called anaplasmosis. Experts reported their concerns about the “rapidly rising” incidents of anaplasmosis, the second most common disease spread by the arachnids in Canada, in an article published Monday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ). Blacklegged ticks, which transmit Lyme disease and anaplasmosis through bites, have spread in many provinces, researchers noted. No statistics were provided on the number of anaplasmosis cases nationally in the report. …Symptoms can include fever, weakness, headache and gastrointestinal distress. Anaplasmosis can damage vital organs, causing hospitalization from health problems such as myocarditis, encephalitis, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and acute renal failure, though they are less common and death is rare, experts say.

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‘One of the biggest public health threats’: Why doctors say you need to take wildfire smoke seriously

By Andrew Johnson
CTV News
July 10, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Smoke from two major wildfires burning in British Columbia’s Fraser Canyon is leading to air quality warnings across parts of the province, with an emergency physician warning the health effects extend far beyond watery eyes and a scratchy throat. “It is considered to be one of the biggest public health threats that we face,” said Dr. Courtney Howard, who is also the president-elect of the Canadian Medical Association. … “The particulate matter in smoke that’s less than 2.5 microns can go all the way down into our lungs, and the ultrafine particles can actually cross over into our bloodstream,” she said. …Howard said scientists are only beginning to understand the long-term health effects of repeated wildfire smoke exposure because the research is still limited. “We don’t have good evidence on the long-term outcomes yet,” she said. But a small number of studies, according to Howard, have suggested possible links with high rates of brain cancer and lung cancer.

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Forest Fires

Evacuation alert for East Kootenay wildfire, Brunswick Creek fire grows: officials

The Canadian Press in Global News
July 12, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BC Wildfire Service

Dozens of properties in British Columbia’s East Kootenay region are under an evacuation alert as another out-of-control wildfire burns. The Regional District of East Kootenay placed 72 properties in the Premier Lake area under an evacuation alert after the Lussier River fire grew Saturday. It’s the latest B.C. wildfire notice asking people to be prepared to flee since twin blazes near Boston Bar in the Fraser Canyon evacuations. Information from the BC Wildfire Service shows one of the two fires has grown since Friday. …The wildfire service is also asking the public to stop behaviours that could hinder their work. An overnight statement from the agency says that since Highway 1 reopened Saturday, between Boston Bar and Jackass Summit, drivers have been speeding through the fire zone and even stopping to film the ongoing firefighting efforts.. … a drone was also seen flying near the Brunswick Creek wildfire while emergency aircrews were fighting the blaze.

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Highway 1 reopens in Fraser Canyon, but twin wildfires remain out of control

By Simon Little
CBC News
July 11, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada West

©BC Wildfire Service

Officials reopened Highway 1 through British Columbia’s Fraser Canyon on Saturday, but warned that active wildfire operations continue in the area. The route had been closed since July 7, as the Brunswick wildfire complex near Boston Bar expanded rapidly in size. As of Saturday morning, the Brunswick Creek wildfire on the west side of the canyon was burning at 28.36 square kilometres and the Ainslie Creek wildfire on the east side was burning at 158.47 sq. km. Both fires remain out of control, and multiple evacuation orders and alerts remain in effect. …while Highway 1 had reopened, there was only one lane active in each direction… No stopping is permitted in the wildfire zone, and drivers are urged to watch for signage and crews. [Prior to the closure] “we had issues with numerous folks pulling over at pullouts to take pictures and videos of the fire,” said B.C. Wildfire Service fire information officer Julia Caracni.

Additional coverage in CBC News: Wildfire sparks East Kootenay evacuation alert, weather helps firefight near Boston Bar

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Huge fire rages in Fontainebleau forest near Paris

Associated Free Press in RTL Luxembourg
July 13, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: International

Firefighting aircraft battled to contain a wildfire raging in a forest south of Paris for a second day on Monday, with the blaze forcing some residents from their homes as the region baked in a latest heatwave. French officials rushed two firefighting planes to the Paris region Sunday, after a fire erupted south of the French capital, disrupting traffic during a busy summer travel weekend and piling more misery on a region sweltering through its latest heatwave. The fire, which officials described as “very virulent” and of “exceptional scale”, began late afternoon in the sprawling Fontainebleau forest about 60 kilometres (40 miles) south-east of the capital, a onetime royal hunting preserve that today is dotted with quiet villages. It had raced across 800 hectares and was still spreading, officials said early Monday, causing the partial closure of the A6 highway, the country’s main north-south artery.

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Warning over ‘extremely high’ South West wildfire risk

BBC News
July 10, 2026
Category: Forest Fires
Region: International

People in the South West are being reminded never to light a fire or barbecue in forests or woodlands, as the third heat wave this summer creates “extremely high-risk conditions”. The wildfire risk has been raised to red this weekend, with Forestry England saying the hot, dry start to summer had made it easy for fires to ignite and get out of control. An amber heat health alert was issued for the South West earlier this week until 21:00 on Sunday. Forestry England said the Met Office had issued the extreme wildfire alert alongside it. Forestry England area manager Katy Mansell says forest fires “put lives at risk, destroy habitats, kill wildlife and put our emergency services in harm’s way”. …Forestry England said fires could travel at huge speed above ground and through soil – caused by cigarette butts or disposable barbecues.

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