Daily News for April 02, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

US flags Canada on forced labour imports, widening the list of tariff options

The Tree Frog Forestry News
April 2, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

The US says Canada is failing to block goods made with forced labour despite Canada’s reporting requirements, widening the list of tariff options. In related news: the US Lumber Coalition takes aim at Canada’s softwood industry, AGAIN, while David Elstone and Russ Taylor set the record straight, AGAIN. Meanwhile: BC Premier Eby says changes to DRIPA are non-negotiable; FPAC’s Derek Nighbor welcomes tax credits for biomass projects; Canfor Southern Pine invests $10.5M in Alabama mill; US consumer confidence climbs, while mortgage rates rise; and the Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau (PLIB) grading training goes digital.

In Forestry news: companies seek standard metrics for reporting on nature-related impacts; the US is closing the Portland-based forest research station; a North Carolina court said the US Forest Service violated the Endangered Species Act; a conservation group is holding public hearings on the Tongass; and an Australian electric logging truck trial fails on costs. Meanwhile: a new study quantifies the timber contribution by Australia’s flying foxes – bats.

Finally, two Canadian forest sector icons are remembered: Ross Hay-Roe (PaperTree Letter) and Brian Welch (Olympic Forest Products).

And the Tree Frog is off on an Easter break—back Tuesday.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Special Feature

Share Your Voice: How You Can Support BC’s Forest Workers and Communities

Forestry is a Solution
April 2, 2026
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada West

In the face of significant challenges—from mill closures to tariffs and shifting global markets—one question we hear more than any other from people: “What can I actually do to help?” When the headlines are dominated by uncertainty, it can feel like the hurdles facing the forest industry are too large for any one person to influence. But there is a powerful way to make your voice heard and tell the provincial government it isn’t just an industry priority but a priority for every British Columbian that wants a resilient future.

That way is Forestry is a Solution. Forestry is a Solution is a province-wide initiative led by a broad coalition of workers, community leaders, and industry advocates. Every name added to the list strengthens our collective message of support for communities, workers and families who depend on BC forestry. It has never been easier:

  • Visit forestryisasolution.com
  • Sign the petition to show our collective strength.
  • Send a letter using the simple, automated tool to tell your MLA why this sector matters to you.

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Opinion / EdiTOADial

Setting the Record Straight – ONCE AGAIN – On The Softwood Lumber Trade between Canada and the United States

By David Elstone and Russ Taylor
Spar Tree Group and Russ Taylor Global
April 2, 2026
Category: Opinion / EdiTOADial
Region: Canada, United States

We find ourselves once again compelled to address the US Lumber Coalition‘s (USLC) inaccurate commentary about the Canadian softwood lumber trade with the US in their March 24 release, “Canadian Imports Are Being Replaced by US Production – A Direct Result of US Trade Law Enforcement & Section 232 Tariff”. …Since October 2025, combined US duties and tariffs, averaging 45.16%, during flat periods of US demand coupled with low prices has meant that Canadian mills cannot compete until prices move higher. Consequently, it was inevitable that the highest cost producing regions in Canada would reduce shipments to the US. The USLC is endorsing these trade penalties which are essentially a subsidy for US sawmills. …Market share decline since 2016 is not just a result of duties and tariffs. …BC is the main reason for reduced Canadian lumber exports to the US. With very high domestic log costs, BC has had the lowest sawmilling margins in North America since 2017, as such, it is difficult to accept the USLC claim that BC has “unfair prices… and dumps lumber in the US.”

…Canadian lumber production has always exceeded its consumption through much of the country’s modern history – Canada has a relatively small population and a vast forest resource. …The reality is that over the last 50 years, US lumber producers been not able to fully supply the US market demand. The huge gap between US production and consumption has ranged from a low of 12.0 billion board feet in 1990 to a high of 23.6 billion board feet in 2005 and was 12.7 billion board feet in 2025. The United States has benefited from a close trading relationship with Canada, especially through consistent access to economical and reliable lumber supplies. …That gap between US consumption and domestic supply exists today because US sawmills are operating close to full production – there is no “surplus production” without more logs, more workers, more capital – which are mostly domestic issues to effect any real change in production.

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Business & Politics

Unifor Forestry Council Executive meet to discuss stepping up campaign efforts

Unifor Canada
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Members of the Forestry Sector Council Executive Committee and Unifor leadership met March 27–29 to share bargaining updates and discuss the state of the industry. National President Lana Payne joined in a frank discussion about Unifor’s fight to put forestry on the national agenda and the efforts to implement a national industrial strategy for all key economic sectors: “It was very important that Unifor be a part of the Canada Forest Transformation Task Force. We have a dedicated focus on forestry right now and we need see real action to protect the forest industry today and for the next generations.” …Forestry council members also and discussed their own efforts to communicate Unifor’s forestry sector goals to local and provincial government representatives.

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U.S. says Ottawa failing to block imports made with forced labour as Washington weighs more tariffs

By Steven Chase
The Globe and Mail
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The US says in a new report that Canada is failing to stop foreign goods made with forced labour from entering its market, a finding that coincides with Washington’s probe into the matter, which could lead to more tariffs. The 2026 National Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade Barriers from the US government says it appears Canada is importing goods that cost less than they should because they were made with forced labour. It’s an early indication of how the US will rule on Canada. …US customs policy treats all goods from China’s Xinjiang region as though they were made with forced labour unless importers can provide “clear and convincing evidence” to the contrary. …Canada passed a law, the Fighting Against Forced Labour and Child Labour in Supply Chains Act in 2024 and requires government and businesses to annually report on steps they have taken. However, the US report said that Canada’s measures are not working. [to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

Related news In:

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Alcohol, ‘Buy Canadian’ policy flagged by U.S. as trade irritants: report

By Catherine Morrison
The Canadian Press in CTV News
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

OTTAWA — Provincial rules around alcohol and the federal government’s “Buy Canadian” policy have been flagged in a new report citing several trade irritants between Canada and the US. The annual document prepared by the Office of the US Trade Representative said market access barriers imposed by provincial liquor control boards “greatly hamper” exports of US wine, beer and spirits to Canada. …The report says U.S. companies have reported concerns about barriers in competing for contracts, including proving their Canadian subsidiary’s independence from a US parent company. Other issues listed in the report include delays with aircraft validation in Canada and high tariffs on U.S. dairy products. …Canada is still being slammed by Trump’s separate tariffs on industries like steel, aluminum, autos, lumber and cabinets. The Trump administration has launched investigations of a long list of countries, including Canada, citing forced labour in supply chains. 

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Forest Sector ready to seize the opportunity provided by new Biomass Investment Tax Credits

By Rebecca Rogers
Forest Products Association of Canada
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Finding uses for every part of a harvested tree can create renewable heat and electricity that will help power cleaner communities. Seeing Investment Tax Credits (ITCs) for biomass projects come into effect is a welcome, long-overdue step for Canada’s forest sector. After years of uncertainty, the measure offers a starting point to restore investor confidence. Biomass projects give new life to forest residuals — materials like bark, sawdust, and wood chips — by turning them into reliable, locally sourced heat and electricity. These biomass projects can modernize mill operations, sustain and grow jobs in rural and northern communities, and strengthen Canada’s position as a secure producer of renewable resources. Canada’s forestry industry directly employs almost 200,000 Canadians and supports an additional 200,000 jobs in transportation, maintenance, and manufacturing across the country. Hundreds of rural and northern communities depend on a strong forest sector.

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Premier Eby says changing DRIPA is ‘non-negotiable’ and will be pushed into law

By Wolfgang Depner
Canadian Press in Business in Vancouver
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

David Eby

VICTORIA — Changing British Columbia’s Declaration on the Rights of Aboriginal Peoples Act is “non-negotiable” and it will be pushed into law, Premier David Eby said on Wednesday. “We are working with chiefs to try to find a path forward,” Eby said at an unrelated news conference in Victoria. “We have to do it, and we will do it.” Eby’s statement comes ahead of his meeting with First Nations leaders on Thursday to discuss the amendments to the so-called DRIPA legislation, which was cited by First Nations in two landmark cases last year. The Cowichan Tribes Aboriginal title decision last August sparked concerns about implications for private land ownership, while the B.C. Court of Appeal added to the uncertainty in December when it found the province’s mineral claims regime was “inconsistent” with the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, a framework for the provincial legislation.

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Fire crews extinguish structure fire at abandoned Somass mill building

By Susie Quinn
Alberni Valley News
March 31, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Another suspicious fire has hit the Somass Lands on Port Alberni’s uptown waterfront, this time the remaining mill building. The call came in just before 9 a.m. on Tuesday, March 31. … Locked fire hydrants adjacent to the building presented another challenge, Port Alberni Fire Dept. Chief Mike Owens said. “It’s an old, historic industrial property; there are a number of places where the water main has been compromised,” he added. The city’s water works department arrived promptly and activated the hydrants. …Owens said crews immediately deemed the fire as suspicious because the sawmill is abandoned and there is no electricity run to the building. …The two mill buildings and a pair of silos were left standing after the city purchased the mill from Western Forest Products in 2021… When the city partnered with Matthews West developers, the thought was to possibly incorporate parts of the three buildings into a new master plan for the area.

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Canada’s New Softwood Lumber Subsidies Exceed C$2 Billion – Solely to Prop Up Canada’s Massive and Harmful Excess Lumber Exports

By Zoltan van Heyningen, Executive Director, U.S. Lumber Coalition
The US Lumber Coalition
April 2, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Washington, D.C. – Canadian federal and provincial governments have announced over C$2.1 billion worth of new taxpayer-funded subsidies for the Canadian forestry sector in the last seven months in response to the enforcement of U.S. antidumping and countervailing laws and imposition of President Trump’s Section 232 tariff measures. “Responding to U.S. trade law enforcement by doubling down on Canada’s unfair trade practices is both reprehensible and counterproductive,” stated Zoltan van Heyningen, Executive Director of the U.S. Lumber Coalition.  “The continuation of dumping practices supported and sustained by growing Canadian taxpayer-funded subsidies for the softwood lumber industry will only result in higher antidumping and countervailing duties in the future, as the ongoing trade case captures today’s unfair trade behavior.“As services are being cut by Prime Minister Carney and Canada’s provincial governments because of budget constraints, Canadian taxpayers would do well to understand that subsidies provided to Canadian softwood lumber companies, many of whom are investing their resources in the United States, will be collected by the U.S. government in the form of antidumping and countervailing duties that end up in the U.S. Treasury,” added van Heyningen.

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U.S. Forest Service to close Portland headquarters, research station, open Salem office

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Capital Chronicle
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

The U.S. Forest Service plans to close a century-old Portland-based forest research station and a regional U.S. Forest Service headquarters but open a new federal office in Salem in a massive restructuring of the federal agency. The movements are part of a broad plan Forest Service officials announced Tuesday to move the agency operations westward, including shifting headquarters in Washington, D.C., to Salt Lake City. Officials will also close all nine regional Forest Service offices across the country, including the Northwest office in Portland, and consolidate seven state-based research stations, including the 100-year-old Pacific Northwest Research Station, also in Portland, into a single research station in Fort Collins, Colorado. Smaller Forest Service research and development facilities in Corvallis and La Grande that are associated with the Pacific Northwest Research Station will remain open.

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Canfor Southern Pine to invest $10.5 million in Mobile County, Alabama

By Gracie King
WKRG News 5
April 1, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MOBILE COUNTY, Alabama — A lumber company is set to make a multi-million dollar investment into its Port City location. According to a release, a subsidiary of Canfor Southern Pine, New South Lumber Company Inc., is investing $10.5 million in the Mobile County location. The company will be adding “a new dual-path continuous dry kiln.” This move aims to increase efficiency and drying capacity, as well as provide room for growth in the future. “This investment reinforces the company’s commitment to maintaining and strengthening its existing workforce and ensuring the long-term sustainability of the operation,” said Canfor Southern Pine Inc. President Lee Goodloe. Construction is set to begin in April and be completed in June.

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Finance & Economics

US Consumer Confidence Climbs Despite Oil Price Surge

By Fan-Yu Kuo
NAHB Eye on Housing
April 1, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

US Consumer confidence in March rose to a three-month high as consumers’ improved view of current business and labor market conditions outweighed weaker future expectations. Despite the increase, consumers remained concerned as inflation expectations surged to a seven-month high due to the Iran war and job worries from economic uncertainty. The labor market differential remained narrow and reached its second lowest level since February 2021.This is consistent with recent job reports showing fewer job openings and slower hiring. …Consumers’ assessment of current business conditions improved in March. The share of respondents rating business conditions as “good” increased by 1.5 percentage points to 21.9%. …Consumers were more pessimistic about the short-term outlook. …The share of respondents expecting “more jobs” fell. …The Conference Board also reported the share of respondents planning to buy a home within six months. The share of respondents planning to buy a home fell slightly to 5.7% in March. 

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Iran Conflict Reverses Decline in Mortgage Rates

By Catherine Koh
NAHB Eye on Housing
April 2, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States

Mortgage rates, which dipped below 6% in February, climbed back up to end the month just under 6.4%. According to Freddie Mac, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.18% in March, 13 points (bps) higher than February. The average 15-year rate also increased by the same amount to 5.56%. Despite the recent increase, both rates remain lower than a year ago by 47 bps and 27 bps, respectively. The rebound in mortgage rates was driven primarily by movements in the 10-year Treasury yield, which jumped 11 bps to 4.24% as tensions in the Middle East escalated. The ongoing Iran conflict has disrupted oil markets, pushing oil prices higher and reigniting fears that inflation could pick up again. Amid this uncertainty, the Federal Reserve held the federal funds rates unchanged at 3.5% to 3.75%. They revised their inflation expectations higher from 2.4% last December to 2.7% but maintained that one rate cut is still possible in 2026.

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US Wood Industry: The Rise of High-Performance Engineered Wood

By Felipe Martinez
Mexico Business News
April 1, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

The landscape of the United States wood products industry in 2026 is being shaped by evolution from commodity lumber toward high-performance engineered wood systems. …While traditional sawmills have faced a turbulent consolidation period, the emergence of mass timber, specifically glulam and cross laminated timber, have created a high-growth sector that is increasingly more independent from the traditional volatility of the single-family residential market. …On the supply side, the wood industry is navigating a period of restructured supply and capacity following a series of significant mill closures in recent years. …Looking ahead to 2027 and beyond, as new mills come online, the industry is poised to move engineered wood products and mass timber from a niche specialty to a standard building practice. The core business challenge for the next 24 months will be the development of a more robust domestic supply chain that can support American builders amid logistics disruptions. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

AF&PA raises cost concerns as EPR expands in US

The American Forest & Paper Association
April 26, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

As more U.S. states consider extended producer responsibility (EPR) laws, the American Forest & Paper Association warns the policy could raise the cost of everyday goods, Midland reports. EPR raises costs for American families because it shifts recycling expenses onto manufacturers. Global studies show when there are new regulatory fees, prices for packaged items increase. EPR works like a consumption tax. It ultimately increases the overall cost of groceries, household goods and paper products. As a result, Americans will feel the impact when shopping at the grocery store and for everyday necessities, according to AF&PA. EPR will increase costs without improving paper recycling. …Extended Producer Responsibility requires companies to pay for collecting, recycling and disposing of their products. That’s true even for materials like paper that are already widely and successfully recycled today.

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Lumber grading training goes digital – the Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau debuts an online learning portal

The HBS Dealer
April 1, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

As with any other natural resource, building with wood starts with ensuring each piece is up to snuff. And while there are machines to help vis-a-vis bots spotting knots, human eyes and judgement remain essential.  To help expand that human portion of the grading project, the Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau (PLIB) has rolled out the Fundamentals of Lumber Grading. The online portal offers training modules designed to get lumberyards and mills up to speed on the basics of grading lumber, though PLIB says the course is an “ideal training tool for anyone involved in buying, selling or trading lumber.”  The course also may be useful for architects, engineers, specifiers or code officials. Really, anyone who wants to acquire the skills needed to sort the “wheat from the chaff” regarding what constitutes code-compliant boards. PLIB’s curriculum covers National Grade Rule standards for studs, light framing, structural light framing, and joists and planks.

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Timber industry pushes for wood to reshape construction future in Denmark

Interior Daily
April 2, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

DENMARK — The timber industry is intensifying efforts to expand the use of wood in construction, with a new action plan aiming to raise its market share to 20% by 2030. Launched under the “TiB 2.0” initiative by industry body Træ i Byggeriet, the strategy seeks to accelerate adoption by addressing key barriers, including restrictive building regulations, entrenched industry practices and limited knowledge of wood’s capabilities. Lauritz Rasmussen, head of the organisation’s secretariat, said the initiative builds on growing interest in timber as a sustainable building material but acknowledges progress has been too slow. He stated that “all reason dictates that we should use more wood for the climate, the environment and for the qualities for which wood is recognized”. The plan focuses on increasing visibility, improving documentation and promoting knowledge-sharing to influence decision-makers. Leadership changes also form part of the strategy, with Per Thomas Dahl of CLT Denmark appointed as the new chairman.

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Forestry

Global Forestry Companies Gather in Tokyo to Pursue Forestry Natural Capital Accounting

EIN Presswire in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
April 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, International

TOKYO — Leaders from the global forestry sector met last week in Tokyo to advance the Forestry Natural Capital Project, where they collectively identified metrics to measure and report the seven chosen ecosystem services provided by sustainable managed forests. This project… prioritised the seven ecosystem services to use for this pilot: carbon, habitat and biodiversity, water quality and quantity, air quality, recreational, and sustainable timber supply. The Tokyo session concentrated on defining how these services can be consistently measured and valued across geographies and forestry management systems. The project, an initiative of the International Sustainable Forestry Coalition (ISFC)… aims to develop a consistent natural capital accounting approach for the forestry sector, enabling companies to report nature-related impacts and dependencies in a way that is credible, comparable, and relevant for investors and policymakers. …The project brings together 18 forestry organisations managing more than 23 million hectares across 38 countries.

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Yukon First Nation declares caribou herd to be ‘living ecological person’

By Chloé Dioré de Périgny and Francis Tessier-Burns
CBC News
April 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

©Yukon Govt

The Ross River Dena Council has declared the Finlayson caribou herd to be a “living ecological person with inherent rights”. The First Nation says those rights include the right to exist and thrive throughout its natural range; the right to ecological protection; the right to be free from destructive industrial activity; and the right to representation and legal protection. …The First Nation’s decision comes as Vancouver-based BMC Minerals has been working for years to open the Kudz Ze Kayah mine on RRDC’s traditional territory. …It’s not the first time a group has pushed for a natural entity to be recognized as having legal rights. …However, according to Stepan Wood, the Canada Research Chair in Law, Society and Sustainability, it would be the first time a group of animals receives the recognition. …he says the concept of an “ecological person” is a “novelty.”

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Conservation group holds ‘public hearings’ on Tongass roadless rule as federal process moves ahead

By Jonson Kuhn
Alaska News Source
April 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – The federal government isn’t holding public meetings on a rule that could reshape logging across the nation’s largest national forest — so a conservation group is doing it instead. The Southeast Alaska Conservation Council is hosting a series of community “public hearings” this month on the Tongass National Forest’s roadless rule. …The group plans to collect public testimony and submit it directly into the federal record as the US Forest Service weighs potential changes to those protections. Nathan Newcomer, SEACC’s Tongass campaigner, said the group stepped in after learning the Forest Service had no plans to hold its own public meetings. …The Forest Service is expected to publish a draft environmental impact statement on the roadless rule — a step that would open a formal public comment period. Newcomer said that the window is expected to last 30 days and could begin as soon as late April.

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Forest Service plan violates Endangered Species Act, judge rules

By Johnny Casey
Asheville Citizen Times
April 2, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US East

ASHEVILLE – A federal court ruled March 31 that the U.S. Forest Service violated the Endangered Species Act in creating its 2023 Nantahala-Pisgah Forest Management Plan by relying on a faulty analysis, according to an April 1 news release from the nonprofit Defenders of Wildlife. In a “major victory for wildlife,” the ruling issued by Chief U.S. District Judge Martin Reidinger in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, effectively voids the plan — which took 10 years to create — and prohibits the U.S. Forest Service from relying on the plan to guide forest management. The original complaint was filed April 18, 2024 by the Southern Environmental Law Center … against the U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. …Will Harlan, the Center for Biological Diversity’s southeast director, called the ruling “a massive victory for wildlife,” and said the decision could have ripple effects across how national forests are managed nationwide.

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Australia’s flying foxes offer valuable services & deserve better reputation

By Megan Strauss
Mongabay
April 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International

©iNaturalist Australia

AUSTRALIA — Each night, a dark cloud of flying foxes, or fruit bats, moves through the skies of eastern Australia. With a meter-wide wingspan, they transport large quantities of pollen and rain down seeds in their poop, helping establish new trees. A new study in Scientific Reports provides the first economic valuation of the ecosystem services provided by flying foxes in Australia, focusing on their significant contribution to the timber industry. Recent fires and heat stress events have led to colony loss and a dramatic drop in bat numbers; more than 80% of some populations have been wiped out amid extreme heat events. …Flying foxes can travel thousands of kilometers per year, spreading pollen and seeds over large distances, making their economic value immense. …Study author Alexander Braczkowski said that Australia’s flying foxes “may be responsible for generating between AUD $271 million and $955 million annually for the Australian timber industry through their pollination services alone.”

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Forestry company parks electric truck despite spike in diesel prices

By Selina Green and Josh Brine
ABC News Australia
April 1, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: International
featured image for Fennell Forestry commissions world’s 2nd electric log truck

© 2026 Innovatek Ltd.

A 2.5-year trial of an electric truck in the forestry industry has concluded, with the truck now parked. The trial found while the vehicle was able to do the job, it wasn’t cost effective compared to diesel-powered trucks, even with high fuel prices. The company and experts are calling for government to do more to incentivise the electrification of heavy vehicles. An electric truck trial in South Australia’s south-east has shown the vehicles are fit for some use in the forestry industry, but are not financially viable — even with diesel prices soaring. Fennell Forestry launched a trial using a truck converted from using diesel to electric power in early 2023, using the vehicle to transport logs from forests to sawmills. Managing director Wendy Fennell said the vehicle was able to perform the job with enough torque and capacity to tow the large loads. However, she said there we some issues, particularly with the cost proposition.

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Health & Safety

Remembering Ross Hay-Roe

ERA Forest Products Research
April 2, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Ross Hay-Roe left this world on March 24, 2026, with his two children by his side, after three long years of living each day without the love of his life, Lee, as his constant companion. …After graduating high school, Ross studied Aeronautics at Cal Tech in Calgary and moved to Toronto where Ross worked on the Avro Arrow.  His career as an Aeronautical Engineer ended abruptly the day the Canadian Government shut down the program in 1957. Ross made his way back to Edmonton where he studied commerce at the University of Alberta, later achieving the CFA (Chartered Financial Analyst) designation. Moving back to Toronto, Ross began working as a sell-side equity analyst focusing on the Forest Products industry. Moving around to various firms, Ross developed a great reputation in the industry… Ross and Lee helped to start an independent investment research shop called Equity Research Associates. Given the level of insight and critical thinking Ross brought to his analysis, his viewpoints were highly sought after. Ross expanded the firm’s forest products coverage and eventually sold the business, which now operates as ERA Forest Products Research.

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Celebration of a Life Well Lived — Brian Bruce Welch

BC Truck Loggers Association
April 2, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

Brian Bruce Welch passed away suddenly and unexpectedly on January 5, 2026. His loss is felt by all who knew him, and he will be remembered for his dedication to career, family, and friends. …Brian worked for years as a commercial fisherman… When terra firma called, Brian was welcomed by father Bruce E. Welch to formally join the family business, thus becoming the fourth generation to help carry forward the legacy of Olympic Forest Products Ltd, which operated continuously between 1932 and 2026 and was at one point amongst the top BC coastal forestry industry operators. Brian’s long career in the forest industry reflected both pride in family history and commitment to strengthening business for the future, often despite significant industry wide challenges and hurdles. …In 1988 Bruce Welch appointed Brian President of Olympic Forest Products Ltd, Bruce assuming the role of Chair for what had become a group of companies. Following family tradition, Brian served on the TLA board in 2002 and 2003, chairing the Industrial Committee and serving on the Worker Health & Safety Committee.

Vancouver Sun Obituary: Brian Bruce Welch Obituary

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WorkSafeBC April 2026 public hearing on proposed regulatory amendments

WorkSafeBC
April 2, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada West

WorkSafeBC is holding a virtual public hearing on proposed amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation. The virtual public hearing will be streamed live on April 21, 2026, in two sessions. The first will take place from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and the second from 3 to 5 p.m. Further information on how to view or participate in the virtual public hearing will be provided closer to the hearing date. These details will be posted on worksafebc.com and communicated by enews. …Public hearings provide stakeholders an opportunity to comment on proposed regulatory amendments. We welcome your feedback on these amendments either by written submission or by participation in the virtual public hearing. Written submissions will be accepted until 4:30 p.m. on Friday, April 24, 2026.

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