Daily News for February 21, 2025

Today’s Takeaway

Judge orders Canada to revisit glyphosate herbicide approval

Tree Frog Forestry News
February 21, 2025
Category: Today's Takeaway

Health Canada has been ordered to reassess the health risks of glyphosate amid evidence of evaluated risks. In related news: a New Brunswick professor says tree diversity is key; an Ohio professor links forest ecology to wildfires; Trump’s layoffs may raise the risk of wildfires; and Sweden looks to emission-free workplaces in forestry. Meanwhile: Trump’s cuts may impact building safety research; Vancouver opposes code change allowing single-staircase egress; and the latest news from FSC Canada.

In Business news: Canada’s business leaders want Ottawa to fight tariffs with tariffs; BC’s forest minister says US tariffs will be devastating; City of Hinton supports Alberta Forest Products Association’s advocacy plan; and Canadian and US builders brace for layoffs and tougher times. Meanwhile: Mercer and Boise Cascade report Q4, 2024 earnings.

Finally, can Canada challenge the tariffs, and how might the impacts vary by product and city?

Finally (again), a special thanks to everyone who complete our survey. And for those who haven’t – the deadline is today!

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News

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Business & Politics

Business leaders want Canada to fight U.S. tariffs with tariffs

KPMG
January 29, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

With a potential trade war looming between the U.S. and Canada, nine in 10 Canadian business leaders “wholeheartedly believe” that the federal and provincial governments “must stand firm in protecting Canada’s sovereignty and values” and that includes fighting tariffs with tariffs even if it hurts their business, finds a new survey by KPMG in Canada. Over eight in 10 want a targeted, dollar-for-dollar retaliatory response. “Our poll findings reveal that Canadian business leaders believe Canada must stand firm even if it means being caught in the crossfire,” says Benjie Thomas, Chief Executive Officer and Senior Partner, KPMG in Canada. …While 80 per cent are now preparing or bracing for a recession, 81 per cent are willing to endure the short-term pain of retaliatory tariffs if Canada can negotiate a fair deal that protects the country’s trade-based economy, independence and sovereignty. …KPMG surveyed 250 business leaders across Canada to gauge their reaction to Trump’s tariff threats and what actions, if any, they had already taken or were planning to take. 

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Canada can legally challenge tariffs, but will Trump fall in line with the ruling?

By Ian Bickis
The Canadian Press in Yahoo! Finance
February 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

If President Trump imposes tariffs on Canadian goods, experts say Canada has a strong case to challenge it under the Canada-US-Mexico free trade agreement. The question, though, is how quickly any decision may come through the process and whether the US would respect any decisions from the outcome. …The free trade agreement is a nation-to-nation agreement, so there’s no one else to appeal to. America’s past performance on adhering to trade decisions has been mixed. Areas of contention include… the long-running softwood lumber dispute. …Canada could also decide to challenge this round of tariffs at the WTO, as well as through CUSMA. Based on the rules of the treaty, Canada could launch a challenge which would prompt mandatory consultations within 30 days. If there’s no resolution through that step, the next would be to establish a dispute settlement panel. …Past cases have generally run around a year to a year and a half.

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B.C. Forests Minister appeals to southern neighbours in lumber dispute

By Wolf Depner
Comox Valley Record
February 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar

B.C.’s Forests Minister Ravi Parmar said his government will do everything to protect forestry workers in the face of new tariff threats, but also issued an appeal to politicians and others south of the border. “In our case, we are going to stand up for workers,” Parmar said Thursday morning (Feb. 20). “(To) our friends in the United States, we are looking to you to stand up to your president, because right now, when these duties go, when this tariff is in place, if it is in place, it going to mean that that for those who are most vulnerable, those that lost everything in wildfires and hurricanes, they may not be able to rebuild their home, they may not have insurance…they may have to pay even more because of duties and tariffs.” 

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Sea to Sky builder FraserWood Industries faces economic uncertainty

By Liz McDonald
Whistler Pique Magazine
February 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Sea to Sky Gondola in SquamishSQUAMISH, BC — Peter Dickson has owned FraserWood Industries, a Squamish-based timber manufacturer, since 1998. He has grown his business, earning contracts near and far, including the Sea to Sky Gondola service building and log cabins at Walt Disney World. One third of his business is exported to the US. …“The biggest problem is our American customers will be reluctant to sign moving forward with the uncertainty.” …David Girard sits on the government relations committee for the Sea to Sky Canadian Home Builders Association, and he said the tariffs would have an outsized impact on consumers and demand for Canadian products, and cause reduced employment. According to a recent survey by KPMG, 48% of Canadian companies contacted said they would invest or produce in the U.S. to retain American customers and reduce costs. But for FraserWood, that’s not an option.

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Council supports advocacy for Alberta Forest Products Association

By Tyler Waugh, The Hinton Voice
Alberta Forest Products Association in LinkedIn
February 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Hinton Town Council will add its voice in support of the Alberta Forest Products Association (AFPA) advocacy efforts. Nicole Galambos of the AFPA – of  which both West Fraser and Mondi are members – appeared as a delegation before council with a presentation called Trade Barriers and Albert’s Forest Industry. “Today [there are] some pressing trade challenges facing our sector, particularly some of the softwood lumber duties and tariffs, in addition to emerging US trade barriers and global competition,” Galambos told council, asking for their help. …AFPA suggested there are six steps the Government of Alberta can take to support the forest industry, the first of which is advocate for Alberta forest products in the US. The second is keep Alberta’s regulatory costs low, with Galambos pointing out that high costs have led to mill closures in BC. The third is … a Build With Alberta Wood Act similar to those in BC and Quebec.

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As Trump flags timber tariffs soon, B.C. minister says impact would be ‘devastating’

Canadian Press in Victoria Times Colonist
February 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA — B.C.’s Forests Minister Ravi Parmar says the expectation of more duties and additional tariffs piled onto Canadian softwood lumber would “absolutely be devastating” for the country’s industry. Parmar says the government expects the U.S. Commerce Department will issue anti-dumping duties by Friday of as much as 14 per cent, on top of the current 14.4 per cent duty. It comes after U.S. President Donald Trump told media on Air Force 1 that his administration was eyeing a 25 per cent tariff on lumber some time around April. Parmar says he knows many forestry workers are going to be worried about their jobs and he’ll continue to fight for them. He says the extra tariffs are “very likely” and Canada should take Trump at his word. …He said provincial and federal governments need to continue to make the case that while such tariffs hurt Canadians, they will also hurt Americans.

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Builders brace for tough times with high interest rates and looming tariff hikes

By Austin Denean
ABC 13 News
February 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Construction of new homes plummeted in January as builders face a challenging financial environment to start and finish projects with high interest rates and uncertainty over tariffs that could increase costs for supplies. …Median prices on existing homes have soared over $400,000 over the last several years and monthly mortgage payments remain elevated with interest rates hovering around 7%. …Trump has not enacted some of the most expansive tariffs he suggested on the campaign trail but has still been aggressive with using them in his foreign trade policy. There is a 25% tariff on foreign steel and aluminum… There is also potential for 25% tariffs on all Canadian and Mexican products, which could hit homebuilders especially hard. …Tariffs on Canada and Mexico were of particular concern to homebuilders and NAHB sent a letter to the administration asking it to put exemptions on building materials.

Additional coverage in Politico, by Katy O’Donnell: ‘Enormous fear’: Housing industry braces for Trump tariffs, workforce cuts

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Finance & Economics

Tariff impact on forest products will vary and be wide ranging

By Kevin Mason, Managing Director
ERA Forest Products Research
February 20, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States

If Canada is hit with 25% tariffs… the trade impacts for the forest products sector will be wide ranging. …Lumber is the most talked about commodity with respect to tariffs, largely due to the size of the market but also the fact that tariffs would be in addition to duties which are already being paid and are set to rise come August. The US can’t supply its own lumber demand and will have to continue to import Canadian lumber. Prices will rise. …The US is even more reliant on OSB from Canada. …In softwood, ~70% of demand is met by imports and in hardwood the proportion is even higher, at 89%. Canada is the largest softwood pulp supplier to the US, representing 74% of imports; a 25% tariff on Canadian goods would inevitably result in higher costs for US customers that produce paper, packaging and tissue. There are no easy near-term substitution options.

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BC economies ‘less exposed’ to potential US tariffs

By Courtney Dickson
CBC News
February 20, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada

BC cities, in general, would be among the least vulnerable in Canada if U.S. President Donald Trump follows through on tariff threats, according to new data from the Canadian Chamber of Commerce. That isn’t to say that British Columbia wouldn’t suffer: the chamber’s chief economist, Stephen Tapp, says those tariffs would be recessionary for the whole country. …The chamber’s Business Data Lab looked at Statistics Canada information from 41 cities. …Kamloops ranked 40th out of 41 cities, would be the second-most resilient in the event the U.S. does impose tariffs on Canadian goods, according to the chamber’s calculations. New report says Sudbury would be most resilient city in Canada in the face of U.S. tariffs. …Nanaimo is not far behind Kamloops. Saint John tops list of Canadian cities with most to lose in U.S. tariff war. Calgary is Canada’s second most vulnerable city.

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Mercer International reports Q4, 2024 net income of $16.7 million

By Mercer International Inc.
GlobeNewswire
February 20, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, International

NEW YORK — Mercer International reported fourth quarter 2024 net income of $16.7 million compared to a net loss of $87.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2023 and a net loss of $17.6 million in the third quarter of 2024. Q4 revenues were $488 million, down from $502 million in Q3, 2024 but up from $470 million in Q4, 2023. Mr. Juan Carlos Bueno, CEO, stated: “In the fourth quarter of 2024, softwood pulp prices remained strong, decreasing slightly from recent record prices.” …Hardwood pulp prices in China and North America decreased in the fourth quarter of 2024 as the market absorbed capacity increases from earlier in the year. …Lumber sales realizations increased, driven by modestly higher prices in the U.S. market, while in Europe, prices remained stable. 

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B.C. construction industry warns of increased costs as Trump talks tariffs against lumber

CBC News
February 20, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The looming trade war with the United States has sparked uncertainty in B.C.’s housing market, with developers worried that the already sky-high cost of new construction is about to be driven up even further. Carla Guerrera, CEO of Purpose Driven Developments, said the threatened U.S. tariffs are making it difficult to anticipate prices for things like appliances and plumbing fixtures, making it impossible for builders to project final costs and keep projects on track. “Right now, we and our partners are frantically trying to look at where we can source Canadian products and divert away from some of the U.S. suppliers,” she said. There are tens of thousands of active housing projects at various stages of development in B.C., all now grappling with the uncertainty, not to mention the potential viability of projects planned for the future.

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Boise Cascade reports Q4, 2024 net income of $69 million

By Boise Cascade Company
Business Wire
February 20, 2025
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, US West

BOISE, Idaho — Boise Cascade reported fourth quarter net income of $68.9 million on sales of $1.6 billion. For the full year 2024, Boise Cascade reported net income of $376.4 million on sales of $6.7 billion. …Wood Products’ sales, including sales to Building Materials Distribution (BMD), decreased $30.0 million, or 7%, to $419.7 million for the three months ended December 31, 2024, from $449.7 million for the three months ended December 31, 2023. The decrease in sales was driven by lower sales prices for LVL and I-joists and plywood, as well as lower I-joist sales volumes. These decreases were offset partially by higher LVL and plywood sales volumes. 

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Canadian Wood renews sponsorship with international furniture designers

By Dakota Smith
Woodworking Network
February 20, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, International

High Point, N.C. After a successful first year, British Columbia wood expert Canadian Wood has renewed its Corporate Partner sponsorship with the International Society of Furniture Designers (ISFD). During the Spring Market, furniture designers are invited to discover the potential of B.C.’s softwoods at the Canadian Wood Showroom & Information Center on the sixth floor of the historic Radio Building on the corner of Commerce and Main. Canadian Wood uses environmentally friendly forest products from British Columbia. They are a preferred resource for furniture designers and manufacturers seeking information and support for using sustainable wood products from B.C. forests. Canadian Wood will share with ISFD members the benefits of using beautiful, resilient, and versatile Western Hemlock and Douglas-Fir in their work. These woods are popular because of their natural beauty, durability, and strong environmental reputation. They are affordable alternatives over traditional hardwood species and are ideal for traditional and contemporary home furnishings.

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City of Vancouver staff oppose single-staircase residential buildings due to safety risks

By Kenneth Chan
The Daily Hive
February 20, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Government of British Columbia recently approved and enacted changes to the BC Building Code to enable just a single staircase for new small multi-unit residential buildings. However, in response to Vancouver City Council’s approved directive requesting City staff to consider similar changes to the separate Vancouver Building Code, City staff are strongly opposing such a flexible allowance, primarily due to safety concerns. This negative recommendation to City Council takes into account critical feedback previously provided by fire rescue departments in BC during the provincial government’s consultation on its proposed changes. The provincial government’s new regulations enable residential buildings up to six storeys — designed for no more than 24 residents per floor — to have just one egress staircase. Previously, such buildings with three or more storeys required at least two egress staircases.

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Trump administration drops work on stronger building codes for disasters

By Lauren Sommer
NPR News
February 20, 2025
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States

For the past 25 years, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has helped develop building codes, the construction standards that help houses survive hurricanes, wildfires and earthquakes. Now, the Trump Administration has ordered that to stop. …FEMA is dropping out of the latest effort to improve building codes. …The recommendations FEMA submitted were filed with the International Code Council, an independent association that develops building codes used by states and local governments. The proposals FEMA is retracting its involvement from focus on helping homes survive strong winds, seismic shaking and rising floodwaters. …The ICC convenes experts and stakeholders in the building industry to review and improve building codes every three years, and is developing a new set of standards now. After they’re approved, many local and state governments across the country adopt the codes, which set the mandatory construction rules in their communities.

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Forestry

Forest Stewardship Council News and Views

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
February 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

In the February newsletter you’ll find these stories and more:

  • FSC Canada 2025 Events
  • Chestnut Carbon‘s restoration project becomes first US-based project certified for biodiversity verified impact with the FSC 
  • Go Transit NOC prioritises sustainable materials and FSC-certified wood
  • Extension of the consultation period until February 24 for the review of FSC Risk Assessments in Canada and French version is coming soon
  • Webinar for FSC forest managers: Introducing the revised ecosystem services procedure

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The federal government must revisit its approval of glyphosate, court says

By Nick Murray
The Canadian Press in CTV News
February 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

OTTAWA — The federal government has been ordered to reassess its 2022 approval of a popular weed-killer after a Federal Court judge ruled ­this week the original approval was unreasonable. Justice Russell Zinn gave Health Canada six months to reassess the health risks of glyphosate after the agency failed to show it considered new scientific evidence identifying new or elevated risks associated with the herbicide when it renewed the registration for a product containing it. …Monsanto, has faced multiple lawsuits in the US with multi-million-dollar awards to the plaintiffs, while others have been overturned. …The US Environmental Protection Agency reported in 2020 there were no risks to human health from current uses of the herbicide, but its assessment was overturned. …While the Federal Court’s ruling didn’t speak to the health risks of glyphosate, Zinn said Health Canada failed to show any evidence that it evaluated the new studies.

Additional coverage in the Delta Optimist, by Stefan Labbé: Judge rejects Health Canada’s ‘trust us’ approach in glyphosate pesticide approval

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Thunder Bay Fire Rescue ready for 2025 wildfire season

By Matt Prokopchuk
The Thunder Bay News Watch
February 19, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

THUNDER BAY — Thunder Bay’s fire chief says the local service is taking steps to be as prepared as possible for a wildfire on the city’s doorstep, as the region is likely to become increasingly susceptible to forest fires. David Paxton said with disastrous wildfires over the past decade, it’s something fire departments are taking seriously. …Paxton said that means the department is actively reviewing its capabilities around things like value protection, where firefighters identify and use heavy sprinklers and other specialized equipment to attempt to defend critical infrastructure against an encroaching fire. …Referring to lessons the local department can take from high-profile disasters, Paxton said clear messaging and communication, as well as early awareness and preparedness, are key.

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Tree diversity is the key to forest survival

By Zack Metcalfe
The National Observer
February 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — Anthony Taylor is an associate professor with the University of New Brunswick specializing in the relationship between forestry and climate. He demonstrated the link between tree diversity and carbon sequestration in a 2023 paper published in the journal Nature, comparing these two metrics on 406 sample plots across the country. …Taylor has been expanding his research into the domains of drought and wildfires, both of which will become more common in coming decades. Here too, he’s found the diversity of trees in a given forest is a good indicator of how well they’ll weather a warming world, not only absorbing carbon, but holding onto it. …Maintaining a natural blend of coniferous and deciduous species in Maritime forests, therefore, would mean sequestering more carbon and suppressing more wildfires, but as Taylor outlined, regional forest management practices have been pushing in the opposite direction for decades.

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Environmental nonprofit says Trump cuts could threaten Oregon’s spotted owl population

By Anthony Macuk
KGW8 News
February 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

PORTLAND, Ore. — An environmental nonprofit is sounding the alarm over the federal funding cuts and hiring freeze instituted by President Donald Trump’s administration, which it said could threaten the population of Oregon’s endangered spotted owl. The widespread layoffs and cuts instituted by the Trump administration have set off a series of protests across the country and around Portland, some of which have focused specifically on the thousands of U.S. National Parks and Forest Service workers who have been fired. The Northwest Forest Plan and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) require the endangered owl population to be monitored, but the Center for Biological Diversity said in a news release that the federal freeze means the monitoring “either won’t occur or will be greatly reduced.”

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We’re Having Fewer Forest Fires – And That’s a Big Problem

By University of Colorado at Boulder
SciTechDaily
February 21, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Fewer wildfires occur in North American forests today than in past centuries, but this decline has increased the risk of more intense wildfires, according to a study published in Nature Communications. While it may seem unexpected, frequent low-intensity surface fires help maintain forest health by naturally reducing fuel buildup over large areas. Researchers from the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder and the U.S. Forest Service’s Rocky Mountain Research Station compared wildfire frequency across two periods: 1600 to 1880 and 1984 to 2022. Using data from 1,850 tree-ring records in historically burned areas, they assessed past fire activity and compared it with modern fire perimeter maps from Canada and the United States. The findings show modern-day fires are much less frequent than they were in past centuries, despite recent record-breaking fire years, such as 2020. 

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How Trump’s mass layoffs raise the risk of wildfires in the US West, according to fired workers

By Martha Bellisle and Claire rush
Associated Press
February 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SEATTLE — The termination letters that ended the careers of thousands of U.S. Forest Service employees mean fewer people and less resources will be available to help prevent and fight wildfires, raising the specter of even more destructive blazes across the American West, fired workers and officials said. The Forest Service firings …are part of a wave of federal worker layoffs, as President Donald Trump’s cost-cutting measures reverberate nationwide. Workers who maintained trails, removed combustible debris from forests, supported firefighters and secured funds for wildfire mitigation say staffing cuts threaten public safety, especially in the West, where drier and hotter conditions linked to climate change have increased the intensity of wildfires. …U.S. Rep. Kim Schrier, a Washington state Democrat, said on the social platform X that the Forest Service layoffs are already hurting the state, “and it is only going to get worse. Fire season is coming.”

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Wildfire ecology: Examining the environmental destruction of the Los Angeles fires

By Alex Semancik
Ohio University News
February 20, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Brian McCarthy

…The southwestern U.S. is usually synonymous with drought, but Ohio University Professor of Forest Ecology Brian McCarthy, says wet conditions this spring actually made matters worse for the January Los Angeles wildfires. McCarthy …uses a combination of experimental and observational studies to understand the population dynamics and community ecology of forests. “Southern California experienced a rather wet spring this year. This gave rise to the germination of a large number of herbaceous plants resulting in a thick luscious vegetation,” said McCarthy. “As part of the natural cycle of this region of the country, these plants then died at the end of the growing season and left an enormous amount of highly flammable fuel on the ground in the autumn.” …With fires becoming more frequent and volatile, McCarthy believes a key to mitigating damage from future wildfires is to prepare buildings and land and change the way we develop.

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Health & Safety

Major initiative for emission-free workplaces in forestry

Svenska Cellulosa Aktiebolaget SCA
February 21, 2025
Category: Health & Safety
Region: International

Creating emission-free workplaces in Sweden’s forestry is a crucial part of the forestry industry’s efforts to contribute to the climate transition. SCA, along with parts of the forestry sector, is now collaborating with Komatsu Forest, Luleå University of Technology, the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, and the Forestry Technical Cluster to tackle the challenge. Achieving zero emissions in forestry’s often remote and constantly changing workplaces is a significant challenge. It requires a holistic approach that encompasses logistics, forest machinery, and work execution. To meet these challenges, Komatsu Forest, Luleå University of Technology, the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sveaskog, Holmen, SCA, and the Forestry Technical Cluster have initiated a four-year collaborative project. “The goal is to jointly explore the technical and market possibilities for emission-free forestry workplaces,” says Magnus Bergman, Head of Technology and Digitalization at SCA Skog.

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