Daily News for March 23, 2026

Today’s Takeaway

Climate warnings grow louder as record heat and impacts mount

The Tree Frog Forestry News
March 23, 2026
Category: Today's Takeaway

A new UN report may feel familiar, but unprecedented March heat and visible forest losses across the US underscore that climate change is real. In Wildfire news: insurers push Canada to federalize wildfire response; Nova Scotia is well positioned for the wildfire season; BC gears up with investments in Prince George and Merritt; a Saskatchewan fire chief says its budget is too low; and California fast-tracks 300 wildfire resilience projects.

In Business and Finance news: New Brunswick First Nation asks Supreme Court to hear case on Aboriginal title, private land; BC premier Eby to lead trade mission to China; Gorman announced Ashlee Cribb as CEO, as Nick Arkle transitions to Board chair; and Conifex Timber reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $11.4 million. Meanwhile: stocks swing on conflicting signals from Washington and Tehran, while fears of prolonged oil disruptions raise the risk of inflation.

Finally, Milwaukee mass timber project, billed as nation’s tallest, faces foreclosure.

Kelly McCloskey, Tree Frog News Editor

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Business & Politics

David Eby to lead B.C. trade mission to China

By Daisy Xiong
Business in Vancouver
March 19, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

David Eby announced Thursday he will lead a trade mission to China later this year — his first visit to the country since becoming BC’s premier in 2022. Speaking at a media event in Surrey, Eby said the trip is part of the province’s efforts to grow the economy. “[We will be] talking about issues like how to increase agricultural trade, how to increase energy trade for mutual benefit and to help grow the economy here in British Columbia,” he said. …Eby did not provide details on the timing of the trip, but said he plans to deliver a message that has been underlined by the war in Iran. “We are a stable jurisdiction, that when we build things, we deliver,” he said. …Since taking office, Eby has led trade delegations to Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Malaysia and India.

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Gorman Group announces CEO succession

Gorman Group
March 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ashlee Cribb and Nick Arkle

For 75 years, the Gorman Group has grown through strong leadership, long-term thinking, and a deep commitment to the people and communities we serve. More than a year ago, CEO Nick Arkle began working with the Board and Ownership group to plan for the company’s next chapter. …We are pleased to share that Ashlee Cribb will be joining the Gorman Group on April 1, 2026, and will assume the role of Chief Executive Officer on July 1, 2026, following a three-month transition alongside Nick. She will be based in West Kelowna, working closely with teams across all operations.

Ashlee brings more than 30 years of experience in the forest products and manufacturing sectors, with a track record of leading large, complex operations while maintaining a strong focus on people, customers, and product quality. Her experience spans both family-owned and publicly traded organizations, giving her a well-rounded perspective that aligns strongly with how we operate. …Nick will remain actively involved throughout the transition period, and after the three months he will continue to support the business in his new role as non-executive Chair of the Board. 

Additional coverage in Castanet, by Colin Dacre: New CEO announced at West Kelowna-based Gorman Group

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New Brunswick First Nation asks Supreme Court to hear case on Aboriginal title, private land

By David Ebner
The Globe & Mail
March 20, 2026
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Supreme Court of Canada is being asked to consider a clash between Aboriginal title and private land in a New Brunswick case that would have significant national implications. Last December, the New Brunswick Court of Appeal ruled that the Wolastoqey Nation could not seek a declaration of Aboriginal title over private property as part of its claim against the province. The decision was a sharp contrast to a lower-court ruling in BC last summer. After a trial that stretched five years, the BC Supreme Court declared that the Cowichan Tribes had Aboriginal title to about 800 acres in the Vancouver suburbs. In the Wolastoqey case, Justice Ernest Drapeau wrote that he was “unable to see” how Aboriginal title could co-exist with private land. He stated that a declaration of Aboriginal title over such land “would sound the death knell of reconciliation.” …The Wolastoqey are Tcalling on the top court to enter the fray to settle the legal uncertainty. [to access the full story a subscription is required]

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Finance & Economics

International Energy Agency head says global economy faces ‘major, major threat’ from Iran war

By Charlotte Graham-McLay
The Associated Press
March 23, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, United States, International

Fatih Birol

The head of the International Energy Agency said Monday that the global economy faces a “major, major threat” because of the Iran war. “No country will be immune to the effects of this crisis if it continues to go in this direction,” Fatih Birol said. The crisis has had a worse impact on oil than the two oil shocks of the 1970s combined, and a worse effect on gas than the Russia-Ukraine war. …One major fear is that the war could knock out oil and gas production in the Middle East for a long time, which would mean high prices could last a while and cause inflation to rip higher. The US stock market has a history of bouncing back… as long as oil prices don’t stay too high for too long. …“Some of the vital arteries of the global economy, such as petrochemical, such as fertilizers, such as sulfur— their trade is all interrupted.

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Conifex Timber reports Q4, 2025 net loss of $11.4 million

By Conifex Timber Inc.
Globe Newswire
March 23, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC — Conifex Timber reported results for the fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2025. EBITDA* from continuing operations was negative $12.6 million for the quarter and negative $27.5 million for the year, compared to EBITDA of negative $2.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2024 and negative $13.6 million for the year. Net loss was $35.7 million or negative $0.87 per share for the year versus net loss in the preceding year of $29.8 million. …Our lumber production was 147.9 million board feet in 2025 reflecting an annualized operating rate of 62%. Lumber production in 2025 benefited from higher operating rates in the first half of the year but was impacted by curtailments and modified operating configurations in the second half of 2025 in response to lower lumber prices and higher duty deposit rates and tariff impositions. Lumber production in 2024 was 134.8 million board feet, reflecting an annualized operating rate of 56%.

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Markets rally, then pull back after Trump and Iran give conflicting reports of talks

By Steve Kopeck
NBC News
March 23, 2026
Category: Finance & Economics
Region: United States, International

US stocks were set to surge at the opening bell Monday, after President Donald Trump announced that he was postponing all military strikes on Iranian power plants for a 5-day period. Iranian state media responded to Trump’s post by saying the US president has “backed down” after Iran’s firm response. Iran’s semi-official Mehr news agency also relayed a message from the nation’s foreign ministry that, “there is no dialogue between Tehran and Washington.” S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures initially soared about 3% on Trump’s post, but those gains faded to about 1.6% after the statements from Iranian media. …Oil prices also fell about 5%, with U.S. crude oil trading down to around $92 per barrel around 8:15 a.m. ET. International Brent crude oil fell to around $105 per barrel. Initially, oil prices had plummeted 10% on Trump’s post.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Milwaukee mass timber project, billed as nation’s tallest, reportedly faces foreclosure

Multifamily Dive
March 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US East

The future of a Milwaukee high-rise once billed as “the tallest mass timber building in America” is in doubt after the general contractor sued the developer’s affiliates on March 6 for allegedly owing $11.3 million, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported. Fond du Lac, Wisconsin-based C.D. Smith Construction seeks the foreclosure sale of the parcel at 1005 N. Edison St. Madison, Wisconsin-based developer Neutral stopped construction of the 31-story, 357-unit apartment building in September, according to the newspaper. The contractor is suing Neutral affiliates The Edison SPE and The Edison Project LLC. In October, a city official told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that the project faced a $25 million funding gap. The suit names 11 other firms that have filed for unpaid bills connected to the development, including Chicago-based Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture. Neither C.D. Smith Construction nor Neutral replied to Multifamily Dive’s request for comment.

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Denmark’s Tallest Timber Tower Tests Circular Construction at Scale

By Petra Loho
Metropolis Magazine
March 20, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

In Denmark’s second-largest city, a former industrial harbor—now redeveloped as a mixed-use district— hosts a roughly 260-foot-tall building that confronts one of architecture’s hardest questions: can the high-rise, arguably the most carbon-intensive urban typology, be rethought as a circular, low-emissions system? Recently completed, TRÆ is now recognized as the nation’s tallest timber structure, with mass timber at the heart of a broader experiment in material reuse and construction logistics across its approximately 3.62-acre development. The project is conceived as a prototype for how dense urban construction might reduce its dependence on carbon-intensive materials. The name is the brief. In Danish, træ means tree, timber, and three. …T1 reaches 256 feet and is joined by two six-story volumes. All are structured with cross-laminated timber (CLT) slabs and glulam columns anchored by concrete cores. The hybrid system balances timber ambition with structural and regulatory demands.

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Sawdust waste turned into fire-resistant building panels, could reduce construction waste

By Bojan Stojkovski
Interesting Engineering
March 22, 2026
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: International

SWITZERLAND — Across the global timber industry, vast quantities of sawdust are generated as a byproduct of processing wood. …Researchers at ETH Zurich have developed a method to transform this overlooked waste into durable, fire-resistant panels. By combining compressed sawdust with a mineral-based binder, the team has created a material suitable for interior walls and partitions. At the core of this new material is struvite, a mineral more commonly associated with wastewater treatment facilities than construction sites. While it is typically known for clogging pipes, struvite also possesses inherent fire-resistant properties. Its use, however, is far from straightforward: the mineral is highly brittle on its own, and achieving a uniform blend with wood particles presents a significant technical hurdle. ETH Zurich addressed this by using an enzyme derived from watermelon seeds to control how struvite crystals form and bind, resulting in a more stable material.

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Forestry

Insurers push Ottawa to federalize wildfire response as disaster costs surge

Western Standard
March 21, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Canada’s insurance industry is urging Ottawa to take direct control of wildfire management, warning that rising disaster costs and what critics describe as a reactive federal response demand a centralized national agency. Blacklock’s Reporter says in submissions to the House of Commons environment committee, the Insurance Bureau of Canada called on Parliament to create a federal emergency management body similar to the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency, arguing current systems are no longer adequate. “The trend is clear,” the Bureau wrote. “Canada has already entered an era of record-breaking natural disasters with no signs of slowing.” The proposal would mark a major shift from the current model, where provinces and territories lead wildfire response efforts through mutual aid agreements coordinated by the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, established in 1982.

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New $21M wildfire equipment depot opens in Prince George ahead of 2026 wildfire season

By Dave Branco
CKPG News Prince George
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Ravi Parmar

PRINCE GEORGE – British Columbia’s wildfire service is getting a major boost ahead of the 2026 fire season. A new, larger equipment depot in Prince George is now operational, and officials say it could make a critical difference when the next big fire breaks out in the north. The BC Wildfire Service (BCWS) has received $21 million in capital funding for this new depot. The facility, located on the Old Cariboo Highway, near the Prince George Airport, gives crews in northern B.C. a much bigger home base to work from. …The depot is stocked with trucks, pumps, hoses, structure-protection units and camp infrastructure, all pre-positioned so crews can move gear faster when fires ignite. It’s not just equipment. This year, the wildfire service hit a record of roughly 24-hundred applications for seasonal firefighter positions. That’s the second straight year for record applications to the BCWS.

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Merritt is gearing up for wildfire season, mayor says

By David Nadalini and Emma Crawford
City News Everywhere
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

©BCWildfireService

Another year, another wildfire season, and some B.C. communities are looking to get a head start before any major blazes. Merritt Mayor Mike Goetz says preparations in his community never really stop. “We are one of the very few communities that have a full-time Emergency Management Coordinator,” he said. “We also have a full-time EOC [Emergency Operations Centre] that is always ready to go, and we have a full-time training session for our ESS [Emergency Support Services] members.” The city communicates regularly with the local fire department, BC Wildfire Service (BCWS), BC Forestry, and the River Forecasting Centre, Goetz says. He says they have been working to streamline operations at their local airport to make sure fire resources are able to make their way to the area.

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Wildfire money in Saskatchewan budget isn’t enough: Candle Lake fire chief

By Gillian Massie
News Talk 650 CKOM
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

SaskLakes_Facebook

A fire chief who helped battle last year’s devastating wildfires says he doesn’t feel the funding in the Saskatchewan budget is enough to prepare communities for the upcoming fire season. Jim Arnold, chief of the Candle Lake fire department, helped defend the resort village from the flames as it was placed under a state of emergency last year. He said he’s expecting more of the same this summer. “I think this year is going to be another year that we’re going to have some forest fires, because we’ve got drought in the northern forest,” he said. The Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency will get $140 million in this year’s budget, an increase of $20 million over the year before. Finance Minister Jim Reiter defended the funding, saying the provincial government will respond if the flames becoming overwhelming this year.

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Log bundles end up on Parksville Qualicum Beach beaches after rough weather conditions

Parksville Qualicum Beach News
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Several log bundles ended up on beaches in the Parksville and Nanoose Bay area after rough weather caused a log boom to break open at Mosaic Forest Management’s Northwest Bay waterfront facility last weekend. … “Shifting high winds pushed the logs into shallow water before crews could safely reach them,” Mosaic told the PQB News. “We responded as soon as we were alerted early Sunday morning, recovering 10 of the 19 bundles.” Mosaic says salvage crews are standing by to recover the remaining nine bundles, but the current weather system has hampered access to the shallow beach areas where they came ashore.

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Canadian working group plans to look at ways to improve recovery of forests after wildfires

CBC News
March 23, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A national organization is seeking people with experience in Canada’s forestry sector as they put together a working group that will examine ways to improve forest recovery following wildfires. Jessica Kaknevicius is the CEO of Forests Canada. She said last year the group reached out to tree planting organizations, to ask them how they are changing their planting practices after forest fires. “We got a lot of insight in terms of this kind of gap of knowledge with how should we be planting differently?” “That’s everywhere from looking at species selection, to looking at how densely are we planting, health and safety of planters, where are we planting, all those things,” she said. “From that dialogue last year, what really came about was the need to bring together a national working group to share best practices, identify gaps, to get better trees in the ground, and really focus on survivability.”

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Nova Scotia better positioned for wildfire season with lots of snow and new resources

By Evan Taylor
Surge 105.1
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©NovaScotiaGovnt

Nova Scotia is heading into wildfire season with improved moisture levels compared to last fall — but officials say the weeks ahead remain a critical period for fire risk. Scott Tingley, manager of Forest Protection with the Department of Natural Resources, says winter snow and rain helped offset dry conditions that developed late last year. “The snow and rain were certainly welcome over the winter — we needed it,” Tingley said. “We went through the fall in a significant rainfall deficit.” However, he says that benefit begins to fade as temperatures rise and snow cover disappears. “As that snow starts to disappear, the risk does start to increase,” he said. “One of our biggest risk periods is this time of year before things green up.” That “spring risk period” typically lasts until late May or early June, when vegetation begins to green up and moisture levels improve.

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California announces 300 wildfire projects fast-tracked in 300 days

By Gavin Newsom
Government of California
March 20, 2026
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

SACRAMENTO – Following Governor Newsom’s emergency proclamation on wildfire-prone forests last March, state agencies have coordinated to cut red tape and fast-track critical wildfire safety projects across the state, all while maintaining vital environmental safeguards. Over 300 projects across nearly 57,000 acres have been approved in the state in just 300 days. Through this streamlined process, projects are now being approved in as little as 30 days, saving a year or more of review and red tape for more complicated projects. Following a Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force’s Sierra Nevada Regional meeting on March 19, the Task Force shared an update on California’s progress to streamline permitting for wildfire projects, which has enabled a diversity of agencies, tribes, and organizations to move faster than ever before to deliver real results.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

The new UN climate report is boring … except when it’s not

By Andrew Freedman
CNN Climate
March 23, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

For more than 30 years, the United Nations World Meteorological Organization has told us how terrible things are getting with global climate change. Their annual “State of the Climate” report is a compendium of climate change facts and figures collected throughout the previous 365 days. It’s an authoritative look at the state of our global climate and its increasingly precarious condition. …This year’s edition, covering 2025, is out today. The findings are stark, even frightening. But, like every year, it also feels like a bit of a rehash. …The fact that the past 11 years were the hottest on record? Yawn. The announcement that greenhouse gases in the air are at unprecedented levels for all of human history? Wake me when you’ve got something new to report. …The findings should be jarring reminders of planetary vital signs flashing red. But similar observations were made last year … and the year before that.

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1000+ records fall in brutal March heat wave

By Dennis Mersereau
The Weather Network
March 22, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States

An unprecedented March heat wave that unfolded across western North America this week broke hundreds of monthly records from Mexico to British Columbia. Friday saw the United States’ all-time March temperature record shattered by several degrees. Numerous heat records even fell across portions of Canada. An extremely powerful ridge of high pressure centred over the US Southwest built summerlike heat across the western half of the U.S. and much of northern Mexico, with unseasonably warm readings even eking across the border into Canada. The scope and severity of this heat wave is unprecedented in modern records for this time of year. It’s almost certainly the most extreme North American heat wave since the infamous heat dome event of 2021. Nearly 700 monthly high temperature records have fallen over the past seven days across the western and central United States. 

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Climate change is already happening in Colorado. Here are 10 signs we can see right now.

By Michael Booth
The Colorado Sun
March 22, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

COLORADO — Here is just a sampling of things happening right now in Colorado that we can’t attribute solely to climate change, but that we know will be happening more and more often precisely because of climate change. …State Forester Matt McCombs calls it “an end of innocence,” as he travels the state warning people of the unstoppable demise of beloved forest tracts. …The looming, climate-related loss of Colorado’s entire band of ponderosa forest truly worries Gent and his birding colleagues. …Matt McCombs is an eternal optimist about the collective: the gathering and harnessing of human intelligence and ingenuity in adapting to threats. But as the state forester, he knows too much about the looming death of Colorado’s entire ponderosa forest to be optimistic about the individual: This majestic specimen in front of him is doomed, and he points at a small eruption of sap to prove it. 

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Strengthen Energy Security: Add 10 Million Tonnes of Pellets in the EU

By Gustav Melin, Bioenergy Europe
EURACTIV
March 23, 2026
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: International

In this opinion article, Gustav Melin, Chairman of Working Group Industry, Bioenergy Europe and WTS AB, BKtech Group, explains how adding 10 million tonnes of sustainable pellets by 2030 would cut fossil gas dependence, strengthen EU energy security, and support stable renewable heat supply. …Europe must accelerate the transition away from fossil fuels, particularly imported fossil gas. The European Union still spends enormous sums every year on gas imports from outside the EU. This dependence exposes Europe to geopolitical risks, price volatility, and supply disruptions. Reducing fossil gas use must therefore be a central part of Europe’s long-term energy strategy. One of the most practical and immediately available solutions is to increase the use of sustainable bioenergy. Unlike fossil gas, bioenergy can largely be produced within Europe using resources from forestry, agriculture, and bio-based industries. Expanding bioenergy reduces the need for imported fossil fuels and strengthens Europe’s energy security.

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Health & Safety

Malfunctioning belt sander, sawdust causes explosion at Ohio moulding facility

By Dakota Smith
The Woodworking Network
March 20, 2026
Category: Health & Safety
Region: US East

HOLMES COUNTY, Ohio Six people were injured following a dust explosion and fire at a moulding facility in Holmes County on Tuesday, according to local emergency officials. According to a Facebook post reporting the incident, East Holmes Fire & EMS responded at 12:43 p.m. at Holmes Custom Moulding, where crews reported a structure fire accompanied by an explosion. First units arrived within one minute and requested additional ambulances after identifying multiple burn victims. …Six patients were treated at the scene and transported to area hospitals… Preliminary information indicates the explosion was caused by sparks from a malfunctioning belt sander entering a sawdust collection system. The ignition of wood dust led to an explosion that caused extensive damage to the building, including the dust collection system and sawdust silos.

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Forest History & Archives

Iconic steam donkey at Campbell River museum receives sled restoration

By Robin Grant
The Campbell River Mirror
March 20, 2026
Category: Forest History & Archives
Region: Canada West

Campbell River’s iconic and rare 1916 steam donkey, which has been showcased at the museum since 2004, is set to receive some restoration work. Thanks to the generosity of local volunteers and community partners – including BC Timber Sales, Night Train Contracting, and Discovery Crane – the machine is receiving a brand-new yellow cedar sled to ensure it remains stable and safe for future demonstrations. “Every year during Labour Day, we fire up the steam donkey and bring it to steam to showcase its historic role in the logging industry,” says Sandra Parrish, executive director with the Museum at Campbell River. …There are very few restored steam donkeys left on the coast, and fewer still that can actually be brought up to steam, making it a unique piece of logging history, Parrish noted.

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